Elfriede Jelinek is a Nobel Prize winning Austrian novelist and playwright
@Nobel Prize Winner in Literature, Life Achievements and Facts
Elfriede Jelinek is a Nobel Prize winning Austrian novelist and playwright
Elfriede Jelinek born at
Jelinek married Gottfried Hüngsberg on 12 June 1974. As Gottfried lives in Munich and she in Vienna, Jelinek has to travel between the two cities often enough. The couple does not have any children.
Elfriede Jelinek was born on October 20, 1946, in Mürzzuschlag, Austria to a Czech Jewish father and a Roman Catholic Viennese mother. The family later shifted to Vienna and set up their home in the city.
She was mostly brought up by her mother, Olga Ilona née Buchner, a scion of a rich Viennese family. Olga worked as a personal manager in a large firm and had ambitious plans for her daughter.
Her father, Friedrich Jelinek, was a chemist with a middle class background. During the Second World War, he escaped persecution mainly because he worked in a strategically important production unit. However, many of their relatives died in the holocaust. Later, her father became psychologically unbalanced and Elfriede had to look after him.
In Vienna, Elfriede attended a Roman Catholic school and found the environment very restrictive. At the prodding of her mother, who wanted her to become a musician, she took lessons in organ, piano and recorder. Later, she also learned to play guitar, violin and viola.
After passing out from school in 1964, Elfriede took admission in Vienna Conservatory, now known as University of Music and Performing Arts. Simultaneously, she also enrolled at the University of Vienna to study art history and theatre.
Although Elfriede Jelinek made her literary debut with the publication of the poetry book titled ‘Lisas Schatten’ her writing soon took up a new direction. As she came in contact with student movements that swept through Europe during the 1970s, her writing became socially critical.
In 1970, Jelinek published her second work, a satirical novel titled ‘wir sind lockvögel baby’ (We Are Decoys Baby). Since then, she has penned twelve novels and more than thirty plays. In addition, she also has another book of poem published.
These works are deeply rooted in Austrian tradition and literature and at the same time, are centered on current issues. In all, they are a clear reflection of Jelinek’s political as well as social views.
For example, her initial works targets the capitalist consumer society and its propensity to treat human beings as commodity. From the early 1980s, she is more vociferous about oppression of women in a patriarchal society. Then from the end of 1980s, she began to attack Austria’s fascist past and anti Semitic present.
Apart from writing, Jelinek was also actively involved in politics. She was a member of the Communist Party of Austria from 1974 to 1991. Later she became a household name in Austria because of her strident opposition to Jörg Haider's Freedom Party.
’Die Klavierspielerin’ or the Piano Teacher, first published in 1983, is one of the major works of Elfriede Jelinek. It is also the first to be translated in English. It talks about a sexually and emotionally repressed piano teacher, who enters into a sadomasochistic relationship with her student. In 2001, the book was adapted for a French-Austrian film.
’Lust’, first published in German in 1989 and translated in English in 1992, is another well-known book by the author. It talks about a woman who was sexually abused on daily basis first by her husband and then by an outsider. Ultimately, she drowns her son in a nearby stream.