Izabela Filipiak

bookmark

Creative Writing - skrivekurs på engelsk

søndag 11. mai 2008, kl. 12:00

Sal: Kverneland (2. et)

Arrangør: Polish Embassy in Oslo

Inngang: Gratis

Izabela Filipiak (born 1961) – writer, essayist, newspaper columnist and recently poet too. 

For several years Filipiak ran creative writing classes at the Gender Studies department of Warsaw University, now living and working in USA. She published her first book in 1992, a collection of short stories entitled Death and the Spiral. In this book she referred to her many years as an émigré the USA, expressing her fascination with the gloomy corners of New York, and its eccentric, seemingly “unreal” citizens. 

The breakthrough of her career came with the appearance of Absolut Amnesia (1995), an astounding book in all sorts of ways, universally recognised as Izabela Filipiak’s best work to date. Through the fortunes of Marianna, a young girl growing up in the 1970s in a typical Polish family of that era, the author illustrates how an individual is socially and culturally formatted and made into an object. Filipiak has adopted a one-track feminist perspective – her heroine is a victim of the patriarchal system of authority. 

Two years later Filipiak issued a collection of eleven stories entitled The Blue Menagerie, which marks a distinct autobiographical turn in her work. Since then, a subjective main theme has been a trademark of her writing. As in her original works, so in her instructive writing (the textbook Creative Writing for Young Ladies) she refers to modern conceptions of writing as an activity aimed at self-knowledge. Her first book of poetry, a collection entitled Madame Insight (2002), is also born in this spirit. She has also won renown as a talented, witty columnist. Her best articles have been collected into a book, The Culture of the Offended (2003), which aims its barbs at Polish intolerance, narrow, conservative thinking and inflexible morality. 

Check more: http://www.bookinstitute.pl/  

Registration : polcult@frisurf.no