Karel van het Reve: Difference between revisions
m Robot - Removing category Male translators per CFD at Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2015 December 23. |
→External links: add category using AWB |
||
Line 68: | Line 68: | ||
[[Category:20th-century translators]] |
[[Category:20th-century translators]] |
||
[[Category:Male essayists]] |
[[Category:Male essayists]] |
||
[[Category:20th-century essayists]] |
Revision as of 11:20, 29 August 2016
Karel van het Reve | |
---|---|
Born | Amsterdam, Netherlands | 19 May 1921
Died | 4 March 1999 Amsterdam, Netherlands | (aged 77)
Occupation | Writer, translator, literary historian |
Karel van het Reve (19 May 1921 – 4 March 1999) was a Dutch writer, translator and literary historian, teaching and writing on Russian literature.
He was born in Amsterdam and was raised as a communist. He lost his 'faith' in his twenties and became an active critic and opponent of the Soviet regime. With his help, work of dissident Andrei Sakharov was smuggled to the west, and his Alexander Herzen Foundation published dissident Soviet literature.
He is considered to be one of the finest Dutch essayists, his interests ranging from the fallacies of Marxism to nude beach etiquette. His works include a history of Russian literature, 2 novels and several collections of essays. In 1978, Karel van het Reve delivered the Huizinga Lecture, under the title: Literatuurwetenschap: het raadsel der onleesbaarheid (Literary studies. The enigma of unreadability).
His brother, Gerard Reve, was a prominent prose writer.
External links
- Media related to Karel van het Reve at Wikimedia Commons
- 1921 births
- 1999 deaths
- Dutch atheists
- Dutch essayists
- Dutch literary critics
- 20th-century Dutch novelists
- Male novelists
- Dutch male writers
- Dutch translators
- Dutch anti-communists
- Netherlands–Russia relations
- Writers from Amsterdam
- P. C. Hooft Award winners
- 20th-century translators
- Male essayists
- 20th-century essayists