سر الفوز بجائزة نوبل في الادب على مدى التاريخ؟ دراسة
اهلا وسهلا بكم في دراسة جديدة ،، ضمن مجموعة الدراسات التي نجريها هنا لاستكشاف سر الطاقة الابداعية في اعلى حالاتها والعبقرية والانجاز العالي دعونا نبحر في البحث في سير حياة الفائزون في جائزة نوبل في الادب على مدى التاريخ لنتعرف هل هناك عوامل مشتركة فيجمعت بينهم وربما ساهمت في دفعهم باتجاه الانجاز العبقري الذي اهلهم للفوز في جائزة نوبل؟ - هل لليتم دور مهم في فوز هذه المجموعة من الادباء بجائزة نوبل؟ - هل هناك حوادث صادمة مأساوية في طفولتهم؟ - ما طبيعة هذه الطفولة؟ وسوف نستخدم لهذا البحث القائمة المنشورة على اداة البحث وكيبيديا وهي كما تشاهدون قائمة محايدة والعامل الوحيد الذي يميزها ويجمع بين افرادها انهم كانوا قد فازوا بجائزة نول للادب. لكن لا بد ان نذكر بأن اللجنة المشرفة على اختيار الفائزين بهذه الجائزة تقوم على هذا الاختيار لعدة اعتبارات ونحن لا نعرف تحديدا هذه الاعتبارات والمقاييس وقد يكون روعة الكتابة عامل مهم للكن لا بد ان نذكر بأن اللجنة لطالما اتهمت بتحيزها لفئات معينة وعلى اعتبار انها تغلب احيانا الاعتبارات السياسية. على كل حال دعونا لا نستبق الاحداث ونبحر سويا في رحلة الاستكشاف هذه لنتعرف على السر الذي يوصل الى جائزة نوبل كما هو لدى افراد عينة " الفائزون باجئزة نوبل للاداب"؟؟؟؟؟؟؟؟؟؟؟ . وعلى امل في حال انجاز هذه الدراسة ان ننتقل الى دراسة عينات اخرى . القائمة المذكورة مدرجة علىالرابط ادناه: والرابط باللغة الانجليزية: تعالوا نتعرف سويا ما الذي اوصلهم لهذا الانجاز الدولي المهم ؟ ما الذي اوصلهم الى جائزة نوبل؟ الفائزون على مدار التاريخ 1901 رينه سولي برودوم http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sully_Prudhomme 1902 تيودورمومسن http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodor_Mommsen 1903 بيورنستيرنبيورنسون http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bj%C3%B8rnstjerne_Bj%C3%B8rnson 1904 فردريك ميسترال ، http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fr%C3%A9d%C3%A9ric_Mistral 1904 خوسيه إتشيغاراي http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jos%C3%A9_Echegaray 1905 هنريك سينكيفيتش http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henryk_Sienkiewicz 1906 جوزويه كاردوتشي http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giosu%C3%A8_Carducci 1907 روديارد كبلنغ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudyard_Kipling 1908 رودلف أوكن Rudolf Christoph Eucken 1909 سلمى لاغرلوف http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selma_Lagerl%C3%B6f 1910 بولفون هايس http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Heyse |
رينه سولي برودوم من ويكيبيديا، الموسوعة الحرة ولد رينه سولي برودوم (بالفرنسية:René François Armand) في باريس في 16 مارس سنة 1839 وتوفي في 6 سبتمبر 1907. حياته بدأ سولى برودوم حياته بدراسة العلوم فحصل على دبلوم الهندسة غير أن الشعر كان هوايته الأساسية، وبالرغم من اهتماماته العلمية فقد ظل يتابع الحركة الأدبية، وفى ذلك الوقت كان الصراع على أشده بين البرناسية الناشئة وبين أنصار الرومانسية، وقد انحاز سللى برودوم إلى البرناسيين ونشر سلسلة من الدواوين الشعرية منها (مقطوعات وقصائد) عام 1865، و(التجارب) عام 1866، (اعتكافات) عام 1869، و(فرنسا) عام 1874، (الحنان الباطل) عام 1875. وسرعان ما أصبح برودوم الشاعر الرسمى لجماعة البرناسيين، وقد شجعه فيكتور هوجو. أنتخب سولى برودوم في عام 1881 عضوا في الأكاديمية الفرنسية متحصلا على المقعد رقم 24، ونال جائزة نوبل عام 1901 وبذلك كان أول من نال جائزة نوبل في الأدب، وقد رصد قيمة الجائزة التي حصل عليها لإنشاء جائزة للشعر. وفاته توفى سولى برودوم في عام 1907 ببلدة شاتينيه، وقد نشر في أواخر أيامه عدة أعمال في الفلسفة والنقد منها (التعبير عن الفنون الجميلة) عام 1890 و(وصية شعرية) عام 1900. قائمة أعماله الشعر
Early Life: Prudhomme attended the Lycée Bonaparte, but eye trouble interrupted his studies. He worked for a while in the Creusot region for the Schneider steel foundry, and then began studying law in a notary's office. The favourable reception of his early poems by the Conférence La Bruyère (a student society) encouraged him to begin a literary career. Death At the end of his life, his poor health (which had troubled him ever since 1870) forced him to live almost as a recluse at Châtenay-Malabry, suffering attacks of paralysis while continuing to work on essays. He died suddenly on 6 September 1907, and was buried at Père-Lachaise in Paris. == رمد An attack of ophthalmia then interrupted his studies and necessitated an entire change in the course of his career. The scientific habit of mind, however, which he had derived from these years of technical study never left him; and it is in the combination of this scientific bent, with a soul aspiring towards what lies above and beyond science, and a conscience perpetually in agitation, that the striking originality of Sully Prudhomme's character is to be found. == Inspired at first by an unhappy love affair, he published fluent and melancholic verse in volumes beginning with Stances et pomes (1865), - لا يوجد ذكر لوالديه في اي سيرة. - اصيب بمرض في العين جعلته يغير تخصصه. - اصيب برمد في العين. - يعتقد ان قصة حب فاشلة كانت هي السبب وراء كتابة الشعر وهو في بداياته حزين. مجهول الطفولة من حيث الوالدين لكنه حتما مأزوم بسبب مرض العين والذي اجبره على تغيير تخصصه. مأزوم. |
تيودور مومسن
من ويكيبيديا، الموسوعة الحرة تيودور مومسن (بالألمانية: Theodor Mommsen) هو كاتب وعالم أثار وصحفي وسياسي ومؤرخ ألماني ولد في 30 نوفمبر 1817 لرجل دين دنماركي وتوفي في 1 نوفمبر 1903. درس في جامعة كيل حيث تخصص في التاريخ والحقوق والفيلولوجيا. Christian Matthias Theodor Mommsen (30 November 1817 – 1 November 1903) was a German classical scholar, historian, jurist, journalist, politician, archaeologist,[1] and writer generally regarded as the greatest classicist of the 19th century. His work regarding Roman history is still of fundamental importance for contemporary research. He received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1902,[2] and was also a prominent German politician, as a member of the Prussian and German parliaments. His works on Roman law and on the law of obligations had a significant impact on the German civil code (BGB). Life Mommsen was born in Garding in Schleswig in 1817, and grew up in Bad Oldesloe, where his father was a Lutheran minister. He studied mostly at home, though he attended the gymnasium Christianeum in Altona for four years. He studied Greek and Latin and received his diploma in 1837. As he could not afford to study at Göttingen, he enrolled at the University of Kiel in Holstein. Mommsen studied jurisprudence at Kiel from 1838 to 1843, finishing his studies with the degree of Doctor of Roman Law. During this time he was the roommate of Theodor Storm, who was later to become a renowned poet. Together with Mommsen's brother Tycho, the three friends even published a collection of poems (Liederbuch dreier Freunde). Thanks to a royal Danish grant, Mommsen was able to visit France and Italy to study preserved classical Roman inscriptions. During the revolution of 1848 he worked as a war correspondent in then-Danish Rendsburg, supporting the German annexation of Schleswig-Holstein and a constitutional reform. Having been forced to leave the country by the Danes, he became a professor of law in the same year at the University of Leipzig. When Mommsen protested against the new constitution of Saxony in 1851, he had to resign. However, the next year he obtained a professorship in Roman law the University of Zurich and then spent a couple of years in exile. In 1854 he became a professor of law at the University of Breslau where he met Jakob Bernays. Mommsen became a research professor at the Berlin Academy of Sciences in 1857. He later helped to create and manage the German Archaeological Institute in Rome. In 1858 Mommsen was appointed a member of the Academy of Sciences in Berlin, and he also became professor of Roman History at the University of Berlin in 1861, where he held lectures up to 1887. Mommsen received high recognition for his academic achievements: the medal Pour le Mérite in 1868, honorary citizenship of Rome, and the Nobel prize for literature in 1902 for his main work Römische Geschichte (Roman History). (He is one of the very few non-fiction writers to receive the Nobel prize in literature.[3]) At 2 a.m. on 7 July 1880 a fire occurred in the upper floor workroom-library of Mommsen's house at Marchstraße 6 in Berlin.[ After being burned while attempting to remove valuable papers, he was restrained from returning to the blazing house. Several old manuscripts were burnt to ashes, including Manuscript 0.4.36 which was on loan from the library of Trinity College, Cambridge;[8] There is information that the Manuscript of Jordanes from Heidelberg University library was burnt.[9] Two other important manuscripts, from Brussels and Halle, were also destroyed.[ Mommsen was an indefatigable worker who rose at five to do research in his library. People often saw him reading whilst walking in the streets. Mommsen had sixteen children with his wife Marie (daughter of the publisher and editor Karl Reimer of Leipzig). Their grandson Theodor Ernst Mommsen (1905-1958) became a professor of medieval history in the United States. Two of the great-grandsons, Hans Mommsen and Wolfgang Mommsen, are prominent German historians. == Theodor Mommsen was born in Garding, Schleswig, but he grew up in Oldesloe (now Bad Oldesloe), a spa in Holstein 45 kilometers from Hamburg. His father, Jen Mommsen, was a Protestant minister. Sophie Krumbhaar, his mother, came from Altona. Bcause there was no money to send Theodor and his brothers Tycho and August to school, they received their early education at home. Mommsen's father encouraged his sons to read German classics, Latin texts,and such authors as Victor Hugo, Byron, and William Shakespeare. His only formal schooling Mommsen received at the Gymnasium Christianeum at Altona, where he came into contact with literary romanticism and became a radical liberal. - لا يعرف شيء عن والديه سوى ان والده كان راهب لوثري مجهول الطفولة. |
بيورنستيرن بيورنسون
من ويكيبيديا، الموسوعة الحرة بيورنستيرن بيورنسون (Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson) وهو كاتب وروائي وشاعر نرويجي، ولد في مدينة كيفن 8 ديسمبر 1832 وتوفي في مدينة باريس 26 ابريل 1910 ويعتبر علم من أعلام الأدباء النيروجيين وشغل في مسيرة حياته منصب قائد الحركة الوطنية النرويجية؛ وأول مؤلفاته كانت Synnove Solbaken عام 1857 وأصبح مدير مسرح برجن في ما بعد وكتب كلمات النشيد الاوطني النرويجي ينت سنة 1863 و 1864؛ تحصل على جائزة نوبل في الأدب عام 1903 حياته أعماله
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson (8 December 1832 – 26 April 1910) was a Norwegian writer and the 1903 Nobel Prize in Literature laureate. Bjørnson is considered as one of The Four Greats (De Fire Store) Norwegian writers; the others being Henrik Ibsen, Jonas Lie, and Alexander Kielland.[1] Bjørnson is celebrated for his lyrics to the Norwegian National Anthem, "Ja, vi elsker dette landet".[2] [Childhood and education Bjørnson was born at the farmstead of Bjørgan in Kvikne, a secluded village in the Østerdalen district, some sixty miles south of Trondheim. In 1837 Bjørnson's father, who was the pastor of Kvikne, was transferred to the parish of Nesset, outside Molde in Romsdal. It was in this scenic district that Bjørnson spent his childhood. After a few years studying in the neighboring city Molde, Bjørnson was sent at the age of 17 to Heltberg Latin School (Heltbergs Studentfabrikk) in Christiania to prepare for university. This was the same school that trained Ibsen, Lie, and Vinje. Bjørnson had realized that he wanted to pursue his talent for poetry (he had written verses since age eleven). He matriculated at the University of Oslo in 1852, soon embarking upon a career as a journalist, focusing on criticism of drama.[ == Bjørnson was born at the farmstead of Bjørgan in Kvikne, a secluded village in the Østerdalen district, some sixty miles south of Trondheim. In 1837 Bjørnson's father, who was the pastor of Kvikne, was transferred to the parish of Nesset, outside Molde in Romsdal. . After a few years studying in the neighboring city Molde, Bjørnson was sent at the age of 17 to Heltberg Latin School (Heltbergs Studentfabrikk) in Christiania to prepare for university. This was the same school that trained Ibsen, Lie, and Vinje. Bjørnson had realized that he wanted to pursue his talent for poetry (he had written verses since age eleven). He matriculated at the University of Oslo in 1852, soon embarking upon a career as a journalist, focusing on criticism of drama. - لا يعرف شيء عن والديه سوى ان والده كان راهب - ولد في قرية صغيرة منعزلة. عاش طفولته في منطقة ذات مناظر طبيعية. - ارسل في سن 17 الى مدرسة للتحضير للجامعة وهي نفس المدرس التي درس فيها اسبن يبدو انه عاش طفولة متزمة في بيئة دينية وفي قرية منعزلة لكن ذات طبيعة جميلة، وغادر العائلة وهو في سن 17 ليدرس في مدرسة بعيدة عن العائلة . الارجح ان نعتبره مجهول الطفولة. مجهول الطفولة. |
فردريك ميسترال من ويكيبيديا، الموسوعة الحرة فردريك ميسترال (8 سبتمبر 1830 - 25 مارس 1914) أديب، مسرحي وشاعر فرنسي حائز على جائزة نوبل للآداب (بالتقاسم مع خوسه إتشغاراي). قاد عملية إحياء اللغة الأوكسيتانية (لغة أهل بروڤانس) لغويا وأدبيا في القرن التاسع عشر. وكان شخصية مهمة في حركة فليبريج Le félibrige التي هدفت إلى إحياء ثقافة بروڤانس. أنهى ميسترال دراسة الحقوق في إيكس Aix-en-Provence، عاصمة بروڤانس القديمة، لكنه لم يشتغل في هذا المجال بل كرّس حياته لكتابة الشعر. يعتبر أهم شعراء بروڤانس. كتب العديد من الكتابات في لغة بروڤانس، منهن قصيدة "Mireio" (الحصاد) عام 1859 التي أعدت لتكون أوبرا كما نشر العديد من دواوين الشهر وقاموسا بالإضافة إلى ترجمة لسفر التكوين. مؤلفته ميرايو كانت ملحمة شعبية بلغة بروڤانس وتعتبر من روائع الأدب العالمي. بعد عامين من نشرها حاز على جائزة الأكاديمية الفرنسية. عام 1867 نشر قصيدة كالندو. كتابه جزيرة الذهب حوى مجموعة من القصص والقصائد. عام 1904 حاز على جائزة نوبل للآداب. وقد عللت الجنة ذلك "بسبب عفويته المنعشة، قريظه الرائع والفني الذي يعكس، بأمانة تامة، المناظر والحياة القروية في موطنه وأيضا بسبب نشاطه كباحث للغة بروڤانس". Frédéric Mistral (Occitan: Frederic Mistral, 8 September 1830 – 25 March 1914) was a French writer and lexicographer of the Occitan language. Mistral won the Nobel Prize in literature in 1904 and was a founding member of Félibrige and a member of l'Académie de Marseille. He was born in Maillane in the Bouches-du-Rhône département in southern France. His name in his native language was Frederi Mistral (Mistrau) according to the Mistralian orthography or Frederic Mistral (/Mistrau) according to the classical orthography. Mistral's fame was owing in part to Alphonse de Lamartine who sang his praises in the fortieth edition of his periodical "Cours familier de littérature", following the publication of Mistral's long poem Mirèio. He is the most revered writer in modern Occitan literature. Alphonse Daudet, with whom he maintained a long friendship, devoted to the "Poet Mistral" one of his "Lettres de mon moulin", in an extremely eulogistic way. Several schools bear Frédéric Mistral's name. Biography Mistral was the son of wealthy landed farmers (François Mistral and Adelaide Poulinet, both of whom were related to the oldest families of Provence: Cruvelier, Expilly, Roux (originally Ruffo, from Calabria), themselves very closely related to each other; Marquis d'Aurel). Mistral was given the name "Frederi" in memory “of a poor small fellow who, at the time when my parents were courting, sweetly ran their errands of love, and who died shortly afterward of sunstroke.” Mistral did not begin school until he was about nine years, and quickly began to play hooky, leading his parents to send him to a boarding school in Saint-Michel-de-Frigolet, run by a Monsieur Donnat. After receiving his bachelor's degree in Nîmes, Mistral studied law in Aix-en-Provence from 1848 to 1851. He became a champion for the independence of Provence, and in particular for restoring the “first literary language of civilized Europe” -- Provençal. He had studied the history of Provence during his time in Aix-en-Provence. Emancipated by his father, Mistral resolved: “to raise, revive in Provence the feeling of race ...; to move this rebirth by the restoration of the natural and historical language of the country ...; to restore the fashion to Provence by the breath and flame of divine poetry”. For Mistral, the word race designates “people linked by language, rooted in a country and in a story”. For his lifelong efforts in restoring the language of Provence, Frédéric Mistral was one of the recipients of the 1904 Nobel Prize for Literature. The other winner that year, José Echegaray, was honored for his Spanish dramas. They each received one-half of the total prize money. Mistral devoted his winnings to the creation of the Museum at Arles, known locally as "Museon Arlaten". The museum is considered to be the most important collection of Provençal folk art, displaying furniture, costumes, ceramics, tools and farming implements. In 1876, Mistral was married to a Burgundian woman, Marie-Louise Rivière (1857–1943) in Dijon Cathedral (Cathédrale Saint-Bénigne de Dijon). They had no children. The poet died on 25 March 1914 in Maillane, the same village where he was born. == French poet and Provençal patriot, who shared with the Spanish dramatist José Echegaray the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1904. Mistral received the prize for his contributions in literature and philology. Mistral called himself 'humble écolier du grand Homère', a humble student of Homer – his passionate odes to sun, to his native Provençe, and its people, had much in common with the mediaeval troubadour poetry, but the literary language of the troubadours should not be confused with Modern Provençal. Frédéric Mistral was born in Maillaine, a village in the Rhone Valley of southern France. The family had lived on their own land from one generation to the next. Mistral's father, a prosperous farmer and a former soldier in the French Revolution, was left widower by his first wife. At the age of fifty-five he married Estève Poulinet, the daughter of the mayor; Frédéric was their only son, born on the 8th of September 1830. "Although our neighbors scorn us as "frog-eaters," the people of Maillane have always believed that there is no prettier village under the cope of heaven," Mistral wrote in his book of memoirs. - ابن فلاح وجندي سابق ماتت زوجته الاولى وتزوج الثانية وعمره 55 عام وانجبت هذا الطفل فقط. - التحق في المدرسة وعمره 9 سنوات. - قضى طفولته مع الرعيان والمزارعين والحصاده. - لا يوجد تفاصيل عن والديه ومتى ماتا، وحتى لو افترضنا ان والده ظل حيا حتى سن الخامسة والسبعين فذلك يعني انه ولده في ذلك السن كان 20 عام ولا بد ان للفرق في السن اثر عظيم. - اهم عامل يبدو له اثر على عبقريته هو دراسته في مدرسة داخليه. مجهول الطفولة لكنه مأزوم من ناحية الفرق في السن مع والده ولطبيعة الحياة التي عاشها مع الرعيان ثم المدرسة الداخليه كلها عناصر مؤثره لكننا سنعتبره .. مجهول الطفولة. |
خوسيه إتشيغاراي
وكيبيديا خوسيه إتشيغاراي هو عالم رياضيات إسباني ولد في 19 ابريل 1832 وتوفي في 14 سبتمبر 1916. حصل على جائزة نوبل في الأدب لسنة 1904 مع فردريك ميسترال José Echegaray y Eizaguirre (April 19, 1832 – September 14, 1916) was a Spanish civil engineer, mathematician, statesman, and one of the leading Spanish dramatists of the last quarter of the 19th century. Along with the Provençal poet Frédéric Mistral, he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1904, making him the first Spaniard to win the prize. His most famous play is El gran Galeoto, a drama written in the grand nineteenth century manner of melodrama. It is about the poisonous effect that unfounded gossip has on a middle-aged man's happiness. Echegaray filled it with elaborate stage instructions that illuminate what we would now consider a hammy style of acting popular in the 19th century. Paramount Pictures filmed it as a silent with the title changed to The World and His Wife. His most remarkable plays[citation needed] are Saint or Madman? (O locura o santidad, 1877); Mariana (1892); El estigma (1895); The Calum (La duda, 1898); and El loco Dios (1900). The Echegaray street named after him in Madrid is famed for its Flamenco taverns == Spanish politician, writer, and mathematician, the leading dramatist of the last quarter of the 19th century. Along with poet Frédéric Mistral, he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1904. Echegaray began to write plays at the age of forty-two. His style changed little during his career. Echegaray's works are noted for their high degree of technical skill and their ability to keep audiences engaged despite relatively simple and melodramatic plots.
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هنريك سينكيفيتش
وكيبيديا (Henryk Sienkiewicz) (فولا أوكجييسكا، 5 مايو 1846 - فيفي، 15 نوفمبر 1916) كاتب بولندي تحصل على جائزة نوبل في الأدب لسنة 1905 . Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Sienkiewicz (Polish pronunciation: [ˈxɛnrɨk ˈadam alɛˈksandɛr ˈpʲus ɕɛŋˈkʲevʲit͡ʂ]; also known as "Litwos" [ˈlitfɔs]; May 5, 1846 – November 15, 1916) was a Polish journalist and Nobel Prize-winning novelist. A Polish szlachcic (noble) of the Oszyk coat of arms, he was one of the most popular Polish writers at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, and received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1905 for his "outstanding merits as an epic writer." Born into an impoverished noble family in Russian-ruled Poland, Sienkiewicz wrote historical novels set during the Rzeczpospolita (Polish Republic, or Commonwealth). Many of his novels were first serialized in newspapers, and even today are still in print. In Poland, he is best known for his historical novels "With Fire and Sword", "The Deluge", and "Fire in the Steppe" (The Trilogy) set during the 17th-century Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, while internationally he is best known for Quo Vadis, set in Nero's Rome. Quo Vadis has been filmed several times, most notably the 1951 version. [Life Sienkiewicz was born in Wola Okrzejska, a village in eastern Poland, that was part of the Russian Empire at the time. His was an impoverished noble family, on his father's side deriving from Tatars who had settled in Lithuania.His family used the coat of arms Oszyk. He was also descendant from the German Jauch family. His parents were Józef Sienkiewicz (1813–1896) and Stefania (née Cieciszowska), (1820–1873). Wola Okrzejska belonged to the writer's maternal grandmother, Felicjana Cieciszowska. He was baptized in the neighbouring village of Okrzeja in a church founded by his great-grandmother. His family moved several times and in the end settled in Warsaw in 1861. In 1858, Henryk began secondary school in Warsaw. He did not receive very good grades but he was good at liberal arts. Because of the hard financial times, the nineteen-year-old Sienkiewicz took up a job as a tutor in the Weyher family in Płońsk. During this period he probably wrote his first novel, Ofiara (Sacrifice). He also worked on his publicized novel Na marne (In Vain). In addition, he finished his extramural classes in secondary school and in 1866 received the secondary school diploma. According to his parents' wishes, he passed the examination to the medical department at Warsaw University. After some time, he resigned and took up law studies. He ended up transferring to the Institute of Philology and History where he acquired a thorough knowledge of literature and Old Polish. In 1867 he made his first attempts in literature and wrote a rhyming piece Sielanka Młodości, which he submitted for publication in Tygodnik Ilustrowany (Illustrated Weekly) but it was rejected. In 1869 Sienkiewicz debuted as a journalist. Przegląd Tygodniowy (The Weekly Review) printed his review of a play, and Tygodnik Ilustrowany printed his essay about Mikołaj Sęp-Sarzyński. Sienkiewicz also wrote for Gazeta Polska (The Polish Gazette) and Niwa under the pen name "Litwos". In 1873 he started to write a column "Bez tytułu" ("Without a Title") in Gazeta Polska and in 1875 the series called "Chwila obecna" ("The Present Moment"). From 1874 he took care of the literary section of Niwa. He wrote the novel Na marne (In Vain, 1871) and then Humoreski z teki Woroszyłły, Stary Sługa (The Old Servant, 1875), Hania (1876) and Selim Mirza (1877). The last three works are referred to as the Little Trilogy. Sienkiewicz also visited his relative Jadwiga Łuszczewska (known as "Deotyma") and the actress Helena Modrzejewska, as their dinner parties were very popular. In 1876 he went to the United States with Helena Modrzejewska. He stayed for some time in California. During this period he wrote Listy z podróży (Letters From a Journey), which were published in Gazeta Polska and received wide recognition. He also wrote Szkice węglem (Sketches in Charcoal) in 1877. The trip to the USA inspired him to write the following works: Komedia z pomyłek (A Comedy of Errors, 1878), Przez stepy (1879), W krainie złota (1880), Za chlebem (For Bread, 1880), Latarnik (Lighthouse Keeper, 1881) Wspomnienia z Maripozy (1882), and Sachem (1883). In 1878 Henryk Sienkiewicz returned to Europe. First, he stayed in London and then went to Paris for a year. In France he had got a chance to familiarize himself with naturalism, a new trend in literature. In the article "Z Paryża" ("From Paris"), written in 1879, he expressed a positive opinion on this trend. He stated that, "For a novel naturalism was in fact a brilliant, indispensable and perhaps the only step forward." Two years later he changed his mind and became more critical about this movement. He expressed his opinions on naturalism and writing in general in the following published works: O naturaliźmie w powieści (Naturalism in the Novel, 1881), O powieści historycznej (Historical novel, 1889), and Listy o Zoli (Letters about Zola, 1893). His stay in America and his letter-writing published in Polish newspapers resulted in national recognition and interest. Bolesław Prus in his article entitled "Co p. Sienkiewicz wyrabia z piękniejszą połową Warszawy", published in Kurier Warszawski in 1880, nicely showed the popularity of the writer. "As he was back from America, almost every lady took tall and handsome men for Sienkiewicz... Finally, when I noticed that every man has got hair like Sienkiewicz and all of the young men, one by one, grow a royal beard and try to have a statuesque and swarthy face, I realised that I wanted to meet him personally... From the corner where I sit, I can see that the room is almost exclusively crowded with the fair sex. Some men, who were there to amuse ladies or to write reports, spent so much time in the company of women that they started to talk in the feminine." In 1879, in Lviv, Sienkiewicz gave a lecture, "Z Nowego Jorku do Kalifornii" ("From New York to California"). In 1880, at the Bazar Hotel in Poznań, he read his novel, Za chlebem (For Bread), and later in Warsaw two papers on naturalism in literature. In Szczawnica, on his way back to Lviv in 1879, he read a paper about his stay in America. This was also where he first saw his future wife, Maria Szetkiewicz (1854–1885). When he discovered that the whole Szetkiewicz family was going to Venice, Sienkiewicz went there too and met Maria. They married on 18 August 1881, at Theatre Square in a church of the Community of Canonesses (the church no longer exists). They had two children, Henryk Józef (1882–1959) and Jadwiga Maria (1883–1969). The marriage did not last long, however, because Maria died on 18 August 1885. In 1882 he worked with Słowo (The Word, a daily newspaper with a conservative and szlachta tendency). Initially he was the editor-in-chief. He also wrote a play, Na jedną kartę (A Single Page), which was later staged at Lviv and Warsaw (1879–81). In 1880 Sienkiewicz wrote a historical novella, Niewola tatarska (Tartar Captivity), and began work on another historical novel, Ogniem i Mieczem (With Fire and Sword). In a letter of February 1, 1884, to Stanisław Smolka, editor of the Kraków newspaper Czas, Sienkiewicz wrote: "With regard to the great novel, it will probably be titled Wilcze gniazdo (The Wolf's Nest). It takes place during the reign of King Jan Kazimierz, during the Cossack revolt." The novel Wilcze gniazdo appeared in installments in Słowo from May 2, 1883, to March 1, 1884, under the title Ogniem i mieczem (With Fire and Sword). It also ran simultaneously in the Kraków newspaper, Czas. In With Fire and Sword, he portrayed German mercenaries in a positive manner, in contrast to the Teutonic Knights. With Fire and Sword was enthusiastically received by readers (as were the next two volumes of the Trilogy) and won national recognition for the author. Many readers wrote to Sienkiewicz, asking about the next adventures of their favorite characters. In 1879 a street in Zbarazh (one of the settings in With Fire and Sword) was named after Sienkiewicz; in 1900 its citizens would not permit building works on the church grounds, believing that it was the place where Pan Podbipięta (a fictional character in With Fire and Sword) was buried. The novel was also adapted for the stage. In 1884 Jacek Malczewski exhibited tableaux vivants inspired by With Fire and Sword. The novel also garnered some criticism. It was pointed out, not without reason, that some of the historical facts and events were misrepresented and distorted. He began writing the second volume of his Trilogy – Potop ("The Deluge"); according to Sienkiewicz the title was supposed to indicate the deluge of masses of people trying to stop the Swedish invasion.[citation needed] Potop was printed in Słowo (from 23 December 1884 to 2 September 1886). The novel quickly became a best-seller and it established Sienkiewicz's position in society. While Sienkiewicz was writing Potop, his wife, Maria Szetkiewicz, died of tuberculosis so it was a difficult time for the writer. After Maria's death, Sienkiewicz went to Constantinople (through Bucharest and Varna) from where he was writing reports. After his return to Warsaw the third volume of the Trilogy, Pan Wołodyjowski (Fire in the Steppe) appeared. The novel was published in Słowo from May 1887 to May 1888. The Trilogy made Henryk Sienkiewicz the most widely read and known Polish novelist. Stefan Żeromski wrote in his Diaries: "In the Sandomierz area I witnessed myself that everybody, even those who usually do not read, were asking about The Deluge." Sienkiewicz was given 15 thousand rubles in recognition of his achievements from an unknown admirer who signed himself as Michał Wołodyjowski (the name of the character in the Trilogy). Sienkiewicz used this money to open the scholarship fund (named after his wife) designed for artists endangered by tuberculosis. - الفقر والتنقل تبدو ابرز العوامل التي طبعت طفولته. وموت زوجته في وقت لاحق. مأزوم . . |
جوزويه كاردوتشي
وكيبيديا (Giosuè Carducci) (بييتراسانتا، 27 يوليو 1835 - بولونيا، 16 فبراير 1907) شاعر إيطالي من عاءلة غنية قي مدينة بيسكرا . تحصل على جائزة نوبل في الأدب في سنة 1906 . بدأ في الكتابة عند سن الثالثة عشرة .بسبب المرض لم يستطع التنقل لتسلم الجائزة شخصيا . Giosuè Alessandro Giuseppe Carducci (Italian pronunciation: [dʒozuˈɛ karˈduttʃi]; 27 July 1835 – 16 February 1907) was an Italian poet and teacher. He was very influential [1] and was regarded as the official national poet of modern Italy.[2] In 1906 he became the first Italian to win the Nobel Prize in Literature Biography He was born in Valdicastello (part of Pietrasanta), a small town in the Province of Lucca in the northwest corner of the region of Tuscany. His father, a doctor, was an advocate of the unification of Italy and was involved with the Carbonari. Because of his politics, the family was forced to move several times during Carducci's childhood, eventually settling for a few years in Florence. From the time he was in college, he was fascinated with the restrained style of Greek and Roman antiquity, and his mature work reflects a restrained classical style, often using the classical meters of such Latin poets as Horace and Virgil. He translated Book 9 of Homer's Iliad into Italian. He graduated in 1856 from the Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa and began teaching school. The following year, he published his first collection of poems, Rime. These were difficult years for Carducci: his father died, and his brother committed suicide. In 1859, he married Elvira Menicucci, and they had four children. He briefly taught Greek at a high school in Pistoia, and then was appointed Italian professor at the university in Bologna. Here, one of his students was Giovanni Pascoli, who became a poet himself and later succeeded him at the university. Carducci was a popular lecturer and a fierce critic of literature and society. His political views were consistently opposed to Christianity generally and the secular power of the Catholic Church in particular.
he said in his later years.[3] This anti-clerical revolutionary zeal is prominently showcased in one famous poem, the deliberately blasphemous and provocative "Inno a Satana" (or "Hymn to Satan".) The poem was composed in 1863 as a dinner party toast, published in 1865, then republished in 1869 by Bologna's radical newspaper, Il Popolo, as a provocation timed to coincide with the 20th Vatican Ecumenical Council, a time when revolutionary fervor directed against the papacy was running high as republicans pressed both politically and militarily for an end of the Vatican’s domination over the papal states.[4] In 1890 he met future writer and poet Annie Vivanti, with whom he started a love affair. Carlo Emilio Gadda reported that "Carducci used to travel with a suitcase in which he kept a huge pair of Annie Vivanti's panties... every once in a while, he opened the suitcase, took out the panties, sniffed them and got intoxicated from them."[5][6] In 2004, the uncensored letters between her and Carducci were published.[5][7] While "Inno a Satana" had quite a revolutionary impact, Carducci's finest poetry came in later years. His collections Rime Nuove (New Rhymes) and Odi Barbare (Barbarian Odes) contain his greatest works.[8] He was the first Italian to win the Nobel Prize in Literature, in 1906. He was also elected a Senator of Italy.[9] Although his reputation rests primarily on his poetry, he also produced a large body of prose works.[10] Indeed, his prose writings, including literary criticism, biographies, speeches and essays, fill some 20 volumes.[11] Carducci was also an excellent translator and translated some of Goethe and Heine into Italian. He died in Bologna at the age of 71. He was an atheist. - يتيم الاب في سن 21 او ربما اقل. - انتحار اخوه في نفس السنة . |
روديارد كبلنغ وكيبيديا (1865 - 1936) "Rudyard Kipling" كاتب وشاعر بريطاني ولد في الهند البريطانية. من أهم أعماله "The Jungle Book" "كتاب الأدغال"1894. مجموعة من القصص، تحوي قصة"ريكي تيكي ريڤي" ،و "قصة كيم" 1901 "عبارة عن مغامرة". وكما ألف العديد من القصص القصيرة. منها الرجل الذي اصبح ملكا 1888. و له العديد من القصائد، مثل : "قصيدة مندالي" 1890 و"قصيدة چانجا دين" 1890 و"قصيدة إذا" ويعتبر كبلينغ من أكبر مؤلفين القصص القصيرة، وتعد الروايات التي تصب في معين أدب الأطفال من كلاسيكات وروائع الادب العالمي, تبرز في رواياته موهبته السردية المضيئة.كان كبلنغ من أعظم الروائيين في الأدب الإنجليزي حيث أنه يكتب النثر والشعر معا. وفي اواخر القرن التاسع عشر ومطلع القرن العشرين قال عنه هنري جيمس: ((لقد هالني كبلينغ بعبقريته الفياضة التي لم أشهد لها في الحياة مثيل )) حصل هذا الكاتب على جائزة نوبل في الأدب سنة 1907 وبذلك يكون هو أصغر حائز على جائزة نوبل، وأول كاتب باللغة الإنجليزية يحصل عليها. تغيرت سمعة كبلينغ مع مرور الوقت مع تبدل الأحوال السياسية والاجتماعية ونتيجة لذلك تفاوتت الارآء من حوله في القرن العشرين.أطلق جورج أوريل عليه اسم "نبي الإمبراطورية البريطانية" غير أنه أعترف لاحقا بأحترامه البالغ لكبلينغ ولأعماله. Rudyard Kipling was born on 30 December 1865 in Bombay, in the Bombay Presidency of British India to Alice Kipling (née MacDonald) and (John) Lockwood Kipling. Alice (one of four remarkable Victorian sisters) was a vivacious woman[about whom a future Viceroy of India would say, "Dullness and Mrs. Kipling cannot exist in the same room."Lockwood Kipling, a sculptor and pottery designer, was the Principal and Professor of Architectural Sculpture at the newly founded Sir Jamsetjee Jeejebhoy School of Art in Bombay. John Lockwood and Alice had met in 1863 and courted at Rudyard Lake in Rudyard, Staffordshire, England. They married, and moved to India in 1865. They had been so moved by the beauty of the Rudyard Lake area that when their first child was born, they included a reference to the lake in naming him. Alice's sister Georgiana was married to painter Edward Burne-Jones, and her sister Agnes was married to painter Edward Poynter. Kipling's most famous relative was his first cousin, Stanley Baldwin, who was Conservative Prime Minister of the UK three times in the 1920s and 1930s.Kipling's birth home still stands on the campus of the J J School of Art in Mumbai and for many years was used as the Dean's residence. Mumbai historian Foy Nissen points out, however, that although the cottage bears a plaque stating that this is the site where Kipling was born, the original cottage was torn down decades ago and a new one was built in its place. The wooden bungalow has been empty and locked up for years.
Kipling's days of "strong light and darkness" in Bombay ended when he was five years old.As was the custom in British India, he and his three-year-old sister, Alice ("Trix"), were taken to England—in their case to Southsea (Portsmouth), to live with a couple who boarded children of British nationals who were serving in India. For the next six years, from October 1871 to April 1877, the two children lived with the couple, Captain Pryse Agar Holloway, once an officer in the merchant navy, and Mrs Sarah Holloway, at their house, Lorne Lodge at 4 Campbell Road, Southsea. In his autobiography, published some 65 years later, Kipling recalled the stay with horror, and wondered ironically if the combination of cruelty and neglect which he experienced there at the hands of Mrs. Holloway might not have hastened the onset of his literary life: "If you cross-examine a child of seven or eight on his day’s doings (specially when he wants to go to sleep) he will contradict himself very satisfactorily. If each contradiction be set down as a lie and retailed at breakfast, life is not easy. I have known a certain amount of bullying, but this was calculated torture — religious as well as scientific. Yet it made me give attention to the lies I soon found it necessary to tell: and this, I presume, is the foundation of literary effort".[ Trix fared better at Lorne Lodge; Mrs. Holloway apparently hoped that Trix would eventually marry the Holloway son.[ The two Kipling children, however, did have relatives in England whom they could visit. They spent a month each Christmas with their maternal aunt Georgiana ("Georgy"), and her husband at their house, "The Grange" in Fulham, London, which Kipling was to call "a paradise which I verily believe saved me." In the spring of 1877, Alice returned from India and removed the children from Lorne Lodge. Kipling remembers, "Often and often afterwards, the beloved Aunt would ask me why I had never told any one how I was being treated. Children tell little more than animals, for what comes to them they accept as eternally established. Also, badly-treated children have a clear notion of what they are likely to get if they betray the secrets of a prison-house before they are clear of it".[ In January 1878 Kipling was admitted to the United Services College, at Westward Ho!, Devon, a school founded a few years earlier to prepare boys for the British Army. The school proved rough going for him at first, but later led to firm friendships, and provided the setting for his schoolboy stories Stalky & Co. (1899).[25] During his time there, Kipling also met and fell in love with Florence Garrard, who was boarding with Trix at Southsea (to which Trix had returned). Florence was to become the model for Maisie in Kipling's first novel, The Light that Failed (1891).[25] Near the end of his stay at the school, it was decided that he lacked the academic ability to get into Oxford University on a scholarship[ and his parents lacked the wherewithal to finance him, so Lockwood obtained a job for his son in Lahore, Punjab (now in Pakistan), where Lockwood was now Principal of the Mayo College of Art and Curator of the Lahore Museum. Kipling was to be assistant editor of a small local newspaper, the Civil & Military Gazette. He sailed for India on 20 September 1882 and arrived in Bombay on 18 October. He described this moment years later: "So, at sixteen years and nine months, but looking four or five years older, and adorned with real whiskers which the scandalised Mother abolished within one hour of beholding, I found myself at Bombay where I was born, moving among sights and smells that made me deliver in the vernacular sentences whose meaning I knew not. Other Indian-born boys have told me how the same thing happened to them." This arrival changed Kipling, as he explains, "There were yet three or four days’ rail to Lahore, where my people lived. After these, my English years fell away, nor ever, I think, came back in full strength".[ له قصيدة بعنوان إذا تقول: إذا استطعت أن تحتفظ برأسكعندما يفقد كل من حولك رؤوسهم و ينحون عليك باللائمة إذا وثقت بنفسك عندما يفقد كل إنسان ثقته فيك و لا تترك مع ذلك مجالاً للشك إذا استطعت أن تنتظر دون أن تمل الانتظار أو أن يعاملك الآخرون بالكذب من دون أن تلجأ إليه أو أن تكون موضع كراهية و لكنك لا تدع لها مجالاً للتسرب إلى نفسك و لا تبدو أفضل مما ينبغي ولا تتكلم بحكمة أكثر مما يجب إذا استطعت أن تحلم و لا تدع للأحلام سيادة عليك إذا استطعت أن تفكر و لا تجعل الأفكار غايتك القصوى إذا استطعت أن تجابه الفوز والفشل و تتعامل مع هذين المخاتلين … الخادعين … على حد سواء إذا استطعت أن تكدس كل ما تملك من أرباح و تغامر بها دفعة واحدة و تخسرها جميعاً … ثم تبدأ من جديد من دون أن تنطق بكلمة واحدة عن خسارتك إذا استطعت أن تعامل الناس من غير أن تتخلى عن فضائلك و أن تسير في ركاب الملوك من دون أن تفقد مزاياك المعتادة إذا عجز الأعداء … والأصدقاء … والمحبون... عن إثارة حفيظتك … بإيذائهم إياك إذا استطعت أن تملأ الدقيقة الغاضبة التي لا تغفر لأحد بما يعادل ستين ثانية من السعي ركضاً فلك الأرض وما عليها و أنت … فوق ذلك كله ستكون رجلاً … يا بُني - غادر والديه الى انجلترا وهو في سن الخامسة وعاش لدى عائلة بديلة هناك 7 سنوات . - وصف حياتة لدى العائلة البديلة بأنها كانت كارثية بل ربما جحيم فيها مزيج من الرعب والاهمال. يتيم اجتماعي. |
رودلف أوكن
رودلف أوكن (بالألمانية: Rudolf Eucken) هو فيلسوف ألماني ولد في 5 يناير 1846 وتوفى في 15 سبتمبر 1926. درس في جامعة جوتنجن وجامعة برلين. أصبح بعد ذلك محاضرا في جامعة بازل حتى سنة 1874 ودرس بعدها في جامعة لينا. تحصل على جائزة نوبل في الأدب سنة 1908. Rudolf Christoph Eucken (5 January 1846 – 15 September 1926) was a German philosopher, and the winner of the 1908 Nobel Prize for Literature. Early life Eucken was born in Aurich, Kingdom of Hanover (now Lower Saxony). His father died when he was a child, and he was brought up by his mother. He was educated at Aurich, where one of his teachers was the classical philologist and philosopher Ludwig Wilhelm Maximilian Reuter (1803-1881). He studied at Göttingen University and Berlin University. In the latter place, Friedrich Adolf Trendelenburg was a professor whose ethical tendencies and historical treatment of philosophy greatly attracted him. == German philosopher, who was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 1908. Eucken was an idealist philosopher who saw that man has an inner spiritual life, which soars beyond everyday life and the physical world. In his work Eucken transformed idealism into a quest toward elevated spiritual level. Eucken's fame was short-lived and today Eucken's writings are more or less forgotten. Besides philosophical studies, he also published works in religion. Eucken's award was in tune with the partly incomplete will of Alfred Nobel, in which he had intended the literary award to recognize "excellence in works of an idealistic tendency".
Rudolf Christoph Eucken was born in Aurich, in the province of East Friesland. His childhood was shadowed his poor health and the death of his father, Ammo Becker Eucken, who worked in the postal service. Also Eucken's only sibling, his younger brother, died. Eucken's mother, the former Ida Maria Gittermann, was a deeply religious woman. Her father was a liberal-minded clergyman. To support the family, she took lodgers, and was able to provide her son a good education. - يتيم الاب وهو صغير. |
الساعة الآن 02:19 AM |
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