- Jan Kott
Jan Kott (
October 27 ,1914 -December 23 ,2001 ) was a well-known Polish critic and theoretician of thetheatre .Born in
Warsaw in 1914, Kott moved to the United States in 1966 and lectured at Yale and Berkeley. Apoet ,translator , and critic, he was also one of the finestessayist s of the Polish school. He died inSanta Monica, California after a heart attack in 2001. [ [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-490908.html Jan Kott Dies; Helped Recast Shakespeare | Article from The Washington Post | HighBeam Research ] ]Kott became well-known after
World War II , initially as thechief editor of literary magazine "Kuznica" and as Poland's leading theorist ofSocialist Realism . He promoted a flavor of Socialist Realism colored by Polishculture andhistory that he termed "Grand Realism". At the heart of his criticism was the desire to see the literature of a "New Poland" modelled onCharles Dickens ,Honoré de Balzac ,Stendhal andLeo Tolstoy . However, as thecommunist authorities tightened their control over all aspects of life in Poland, Kott found himself pushed to the margins of political life. He renounced his membership in the communist party in 1957.A long-time theatrical reviewer, Kott won fame for his readings of the classics, and above all of Shakespeare. His "
Shakespeare Our Contemporary " (1965) became the most widely read work of criticism by any Polish author. The book interpreted Shakespeare in the light of the philosophical, existential and political experience of the 20th century, with generous helpings of insight from Kott's own personal experiences. This autobiographical accent became ahallmark of his criticism. Kott sought to juxtapose Shakespeare withEugène Ionesco andSamuel Beckett , but his greatest insight came from the juxtaposition of Shakespeare with the everyday experiences of citizens living undertotalitarianism . He took a similar approach to his reading ofGreek tragedy in "The Eating of the Gods ".Peter Brook 's film of "King Lear " andRoman Polanski 's "Macbeth" (both made in 1971) are heavily influenced by Kott's view of Shakespearean high tragedy as adumbrations of the modern "nightmare of history".Kott wrote more than 30 books and countless articles in such leading American journals as "
The New Republic ", "Partisan Review " and "The New York Review of Books ". Aside from Shakespeare and Greek tragedy, he also wrote about Japanese theatre,Tadeusz Kantor andJerzy Grotowski . He translated extensively into Polish and English, including works byJean-Paul Sartre ,Denis Diderot ,Eugène Ionesco andMolière .:
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