- Source: Yurii Andrukhovych
Yurii Ihorovych Andrukhovych (Ukrainian: Юрій Ігорович Андрухович, born March 13, 1960 in Stanislav, Ukrainian SSR) is a Ukrainian prose writer, poet, essayist, and translator. His English pen name is Yuri Andrukhovych.
Andrukhovych is a representative of the Stanislav phenomenon, a group of Ivano-Frankivsk postmodernist writers and co-founder of the poetic group Bu-Ba-Bu.
Biography
In 1982 Andrukhovych graduated with a degree in editing from the Ukrainian Printing Institute in Lviv.
In 1985, Andrukhovych co-founded the Bu-Ba-Bu poetic group, which stands for «burlesque, side-show, buffoonery» (Ukrainian: бурлеск, балаган, буфонада) together with Oleksandr Irvanets and Viktor Neborak.
Andruhovych's works have been translated and published in Poland, Germany, Canada, Hungary, Finland, Croatia (separate books), United States, Sweden, Spain, Russia‚ Austria (separate publications).
Translations of Yurii Andrukhovich's works into foreign languages were published by the following publishing houses: Wydawnictwo Czarne (Poland), Suhrkamp Verlag (Germany), Knihovna Listů, Fra, Vĕtrné Mlyny (Czech Republic), BAUM, Kalligram, Absynt (Slovakia), József Attila Kör, Ráció, Gondolat (Hungary), Polirom, ALLFA (Romania), Klio (Serbia), Cankarjeva Založba (Slovenia), Fraktura (Croatia), "Парадокс" (Bulgaria), "Македонска реч" (North Macedonia).
Family
Yuriy Andrukhovych is the father of the Ukrainian writer Sofia Andrukhovych.
Political views
Andrukhovych writes in Ukrainian and is known for his pro-Ukrainian and pro-European views. In his interviews, he said that he respected both the Ukrainian and Russian languages and claims that his opponents do not understand that the very survival of the Ukrainian language is threatened. During the 2004 presidential elections in Ukraine he signed, together with eleven other writers, an open letter in which he called Sovietic Russian culture: "language of pop music and criminal slang".
Literary work
To date, Andrukhovych has published five novels, four poetry collections, a cycle of short stories, and two volumes of essays, as well as literary translations from English, German, Polish, and Russian. Some of his writings for example, The Moscoviad and Perverzion were carried out in a distinct postmodern style. A list of some of his major works includes:
The Sky and Squares (Небо і площі, 1985), a book of poems
On the Left, Where the Heart Is (Зліва, де серце, 1989), a cycle of short stories
Downtown (Середмістя, 1989), a book of poems
Exotic Birds and Plants (Екзотичні птахи і рослини, 1991), a book of poems
Recreations (Рекреації, 1992), first novel
The Moscoviad, (Московіада, 1993), a novel
Perverzion (Перверзія, 1996), a novel
Disorientation on Location (Дезорієнтація на місцевості, 1999), a book of essays
My Europe (Моя Європа, 2001), a book of essays co-authored with the Polish writer Andrzej Stasiuk
Twelve Rings (Дванадцять обручів, 2003), a novel
Songs for the Dead Rooster (Пісні для мертвого півня, 2004), a book of poems
The Day Mrs Day Died (День смерті Пані День, 2006), an anthology of Ukrainian translations of American poetry from the 1950s and 1960s
The Devil's Hiding in the Cheese (Диявол ховається в сирі, 2006), a book of essays
The Secret. Instead of a Novel (Таємниця. Замість роману, 2007), a novel made up of interviews
"Majdan! Ukraine, Europa", 2014, collection of essays with Yaroslav Hrytsak and others (in German).
"Lovers of Justice", (Коханці юстиції, 2017), a novel
Radio Night, (Радіо Ніч, 2020), a novel
Andrukhovych's poetry was set to music by the Ukrainian bands "Mertvyi Piven" (The Dead Rooster) and "Plach Ieremii" (Jeremiah’s Lament), and by the Polish group Karbido.
Awards and honors
For his literary writings and activity as a public intellectual, Andrukhovych has been awarded numerous national and international prizes, including the following:
2001 — Herder Prize, German international award.
2005 — Special award of Erich Maria Remarque Peace Prize.
2006 — Leipzig Book Award for European Understanding, German international literary award.
2006 — Angelus Award, Polish international literary award. Andrukhovych was the first winner of this award.
2014 — Hannah Arendt Prize, German human rights award.
2016 — Goethe Medal, German international award.
2017 — Vilenica International Literary Prize, Slovenian international award.
2022 — Heinrich Heine Prize, presented by the German city of Dusseldorf.
Andrukhovych is a member of the editorial board of Ukrainian periodicals Krytyka and Potyah 76. He is also a juror for the Zbigniew Herbert International Literary Award.
See also
List of Ukrainian literature translated into English
List of Ukrainian-language writers
References
External links
Virtual card Archived April 17, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
Who is who – Andrukhovych Yurii (from internet-magazine Vgolos) (in Ukrainian)
Biography from the international literature festival berlin Archived March 2, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
Yurii Andrukhovych essays in Dzerkalo Tyzhnia Archived February 21, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
Selected poetry by Andrukhovych in Ukrainian
Encyclopedia of modern Ukraine about Yurii Andrukhovych, v.1
Website celebrity-birthdays.com about Yurii Andrukhovych
Biography page for Andrukhovych at the website of his German publisher, Suhrkamp
The information page on Andrukhovych at the website of the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press, which published the English translation of his first novel, Recreations
Andrukhovych's acceptance speech for the Leipzig Book Prize for European Understanding
An Open Letter from Twelve Apolitical Writers about Choice and the Elections
Author's reading of selected poetry and prose extracts, and interview in Ukrainian and English at the Kennan Institute, USA, 2009
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Irma Vitovska
- Yurii Andrukhovych
- Sofia Andrukhovych
- Arvo Pärt
- Zoltán Kodály
- Pancho Vladigerov
- Svetlana Alexievich
- Zbigniew Herbert
- Imre Kertész
- Andrzej Wajda
- Wisława Szymborska