Ismail KADARE
BIOGRAPHY

Ismail Kadare (b. 1936) is at present the only Albanian
writer to enjoy a broad international reputation. His talents
both as a poet and as a prose writer have lost none of their
innovative force over the last three decades. Born and raised
in the museum-city of Gjirokastra, Kadare studied in the Faculty
of History and Philology at the University of Tirana and subsequently
at the Gorky Institute of World Literature in Moscow until 1960
when relations between Albania and the Soviet Union soured. He
had begun his literary career in the 1950s as a poet with verse
collections such as the modest Frymëzimet djaloshare,
Tirana 1954 (Youthful inspiration) and Ëndërrimet,
Tirana 1957 (Dreams) which gave proof not only of his 'youthful
inspiration' but also of talent and poetic originality. His influential
Shekulli im, Tirana 1961 (My century), helped set the
pace for renewal in Albanian verse. Përse mendohen këto
male, Tirana 1964 (What are these mountains thinking about),
is one of the clearest expressions of Albanian self-image under
the gruesome years of the Hoxha dictatorship. Kadares poetry
was less bombastic than previous verse and gained direct access
to the hearts of the readers who saw in him the spirit of the
times and who appreciated the diversity of his themes. He soon
became widely admired among the youth of Albania for his verse.
With candidness and sincerity, Kadare contributed in particular
to the evolution of love lyrics, a genre traditionally neglected
in Albanian literature.
In the sixties, Kadare turned his creative energies increasingly
to prose, of which he soon became the undisputed master and by
far the most popular writer of the whole of Albanian literature.
He was thus the most prominent representative of Albanian literature
under the dictatorship of Enver Hoxha and, at the same time,
its most talented adversary. His works were extremely influential
throughout the seventies and eighties and, for many readers,
he was the only ray of hope in the cold, grey prison that was
communist Albania.
At the end of October 1990, a mere two months before the final
collapse of the dictatorship, Ismail Kadare left Tirana and applied
for political asylum in France, a move which, for the first time,
gave him an opportunity to exercise his profession with complete
freedom. His years of Parisian exile have been productive and
have accorded him further success and recognition, both as a
writer in Albanian and in French. He has published his collected
works in ten thick volumes, each in an Albanian-language and
a French-language edition, and has been honoured with membership
in the Académie des Sciences Morales et Politiques. |