Kaputt_(novel)

<i>Kaputt</i> (novel)

Kaputt (novel)

1944 novel by Curzio Malaparte


Kaputt is a 1944 autobiographical novel by the Italian writer Curzio Malaparte.

Quick Facts Author, Translator ...

Plot

The book was inspired by Malaparte's experiences as a war correspondent at the Eastern Front of World War II. It presents itself as Malaparte's personal witness account of intense violence and cruelty, but the content is largely fictional.[1]

Reception

The book was an international success. Already at the publication, several European critics received the book's narrator as a fictionalised author persona, and the book as an attempt from Malaparte to position himself after Italy's defeat and his own past as a fascist sympathiser.[1] When the English translation was published in 1946, Kirkus Reviews received it as a true account and called it "a subtly brilliant piece of writing" where Malaparte is "whipping the sensibilities to a sharp awareness of the degradation of Europe, of the utter collapse of morality, integrity, and so on".[2]

Translations

The book was translated into Lithuanian by Tomas Venclova [3]



References

  1. Hope, William (2000). Curzio Malaparte: The Narrative Contract Strained. Market Harborough: Troubador. pp. 82–86. ISBN 1-899293-221.
  2. "Kaputt". Kirkus Reviews. 1 November 1946. Retrieved 8 November 2023.
  3. "Kaput - Curcio Molaparte; Tomas Venclova; | Tyto Alba". tytoalba.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 2024-01-10.

Further reading

  • Hope, William (1999). "The narrative contract strained: The problems of narratorial neutrality in Malaparte's Kaputt". The Italianist. 19 (1): 178–192. doi:10.1179/ita.1999.19.1.178.
  • Walker, Robert G. (2010). "Malaparte and Literary Strangeness: A Critical Preface to Kaputt". The Sewanee Review. 18 (2): 270–282. JSTOR 40801276.



Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Kaputt_(novel), and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.