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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Literature 1987
Joseph Brodsky
Biography
Joseph Brodsky was born in 1940, in
Leningrad, and began writing poetry when he was eighteen. Anna
Akhmatova soon recognized in the young poet the most gifted lyric
voice of his generation. From March 1964 until November 1965,
Brodsky lived in exile in the Arkhangelsk region of northern
Russia; he had been sentenced to five years in exile at hard
labor for "social parasitism," but did not serve out his
term.
Four of Brodsky's poems were published in Leningrad anthologies
in 1966 and 1967, but most of his work has appeared only in the
West. He is a splendid poetic translator and has translated into
Russian, among others, the English metaphysical poets, and the
Polish emigre poet, Czeslaw
Milosz. His own poetry has been translated into at least ten
languages. Joseph Brodsky: Selected Poems was published by
Penguin Books in London (1973), and by Harper & Row in New
York (1974), translated by George L. Kline and with a foreword by
W.H. Auden. A volume of Brodsky's selected poems translated in
French has been published by Gallimard; a German translation, by
Piper Verlag; and an Italian translation, by Mondadori and
Adelphi. Farrar, Straus, and Giroux published Brodsky's acclaimed
collection, A Part of Speech, in 1980.
On June 4, 1972, Joseph Brodsky became an involuntary exile from
his native country. After brief stays in Vienna and London, he
came to the United States. He has been Poet-in-Residence and
Visiting Professor at the University of Michigan, Queens College, Smith College,
Columbia
University, and Cambridge University in England. He currently is
Five College Professor of Literature at Mount Holyoke
College. In 1978, Brodsky was awarded an honorary degree of
Doctor of Letters at Yale University, and on May 23, 1979, he was
inducted as a member of the American Academy and Institute of
Arts and Letters. In 1981, Brodsky was a recipient of the John D.
and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation's award for his works of
"genius".
In 1986, Farrar, Straus, and Giroux published Less Than
One, a collection of Mr. Brodsky's essays on the arts and
politics, which won the National Book Critic's Award for
Criticism.
In 1988 Farrar, Straus, and Giroux published a collection of his
poetry, To Urania, and in 1992 a collection of essays
about Venice, Watermark.
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1987, Editor Wilhelm Odelberg, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1988
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate.
Joseph Brodsky died on January 28, 1996.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1987
MLA style: "Joseph Brodsky - Biography". Nobelprize.org. 19 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1987/brodsky-bio.html
