April 26, 2007 - Hungarian Cultural Center, New York

GYÖRGY KONRÁD in CONVERSATION

A reading and discussion abouth György Konrád's new book:
A Guest in My Own Country: A Hungarian Life

published in English

Organized by:
The Hungarian Cultural Center, The Appeal of Conscience Foundation,
PEN World Voices, and the Hungarian Consulate General New York

Photos: Gabriella Gyorffy

György Konrád was born in Berettyóújfalu into a Jewish family. He experienced the siege of the capital by the Russians and was nearly killed by Hungarian Nazis. Konrád's parents survived their imprisonment, but his father's shop was socialized in the late 1940s and they had to leave their house.

In 1956 Konrad participated in the Hungarian Uprising. He was a teacher at general gymnasium in Csepel and editor of the magazine Életképek, but the publication never appeared. From 1965 he was a sociologist at Budapest Institute of Urban planning. In 1973 he had a collision with the political system and lost his position. When Konrád was given permission to travel abroad, he became a frequent visitor to the West. In 1990 Konrád was elected president of International P.E.N., the first Central European to hold this position. He was appointed in 1997 President of the Art Academy in Berlin. Konrád has received several awards, including Herder-Prize (1984), Europaean Essay Prize (1985), Maecenas Prize (1989), and Mančs-Sperber Prize (1990).

György Konrád is the author of The Case Worker and The Invisible Voice, among many other widely translated books.

A Guest in My Own Country recalls the life of one of Eastern Europe’s most accomplished modern writers. Offering lively descriptions of both his private and public life in Budapest, New York, and Berlin, Konrád reflects on his survival during the final months of World War II and his role in the Hungarian Uprising, the notion of "internal emigration" - the fate of many writers who, like Konrád, refused to leave the Eastern Bloc under socialism - and other complexities of European identity. The scholar and critic Ivan Sanders has said, "Konrád's prose was never so luminous as in these moving yet clear-eyed and forthright recollections of his wartime childhood, his youth and early manhood under Communism, and of his life as a writer in the 'soft dictatorship' and after."

Source: Hungarian Cultural Center

Ivan Sanders moderator, György Konrád, Paul Hecht actor and
László Jakab Orsós director of Hungarian Cultural Center NY

GYÖRGY KONRÁD

Actor Paul Hecht read experts from the book

Paul Hecht’s career has included theatre, television, film, and radio. Born in London, Mr. Hecht was a founder of The Actors Company Theatre and was nominated for a Tony in 1968 for Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead.

The evening was moderated by Ivan Sanders

Ivan Sanders is a translator and literary critic. He was born in Budapest and has lived in the United States since 1956. Presently Mr. Sanders is an Adjunct Professor at Columbia University.

Professor Tibor Frank and Konrád's wife Judit Lakner, writer, editor

László Jakab Orsós, Ivan Sanders,  Ágnes Heller,
György Konrád, and Judit Lakner

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