György Dragomán
Writer, translator
Budaörs, Ungarn
Born in 1973 in Marosvásárhely (Tirgu Mures), Romania
Studied English and Philosophy at Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest
Arbeitsvorhaben
Shrapnel (Novel)
While working on my novels I have started writing stories about a civil war-torn city. It started off as a one-off, a story of a veteran of the conflict working as a guard manning an elevator in a church tower. This was based on one of my visits to Wroclaw, where indeed there is a rather industrial looking socialist style elevator mounted inside the cathedral. I finished the story, but kept returning to the location and realized that more and more of the stories were developing into intertwining mini-cycles featuring the same protagonists set in this fictional town, a mix of Wroclaw, Marosvásárhely, Munkacevo, Zagreb and Sarajevo.It took a while until I realized that yet again, I am working on a novel, a novel exploring the complexity and fragility of peace and the different avenues of coping with the aftermath of a brutal ethnic conflict in which the warring factions have all committed crimes against humanity and the conflict is too complex and all too recent for historic consensus or even a shared narrative of the events to have developed.
In the book I will try to tell these manifold stories from conflicting perspectives shaped by very different views and experiences of the conflict, looking at it not just through the eyes of victims and perpetrators, but also acknowledging that the line between the two positions can often be muddled, while the trauma of the conflict and the psychological aspects of survival can lead to brutalization and self-brutalization, often creating circles of passion and self-hatred, where even reflection on the past may be hugely problematic and the possibility of reconciliation might be minuscule or bordering on the impossible.
Shrapnel will be a novel blown to pieces, a shattered narrative of a city frozen in explosion, exploring the long moment when the broken pieces are in the air and the consequence of the detonation is not yet wholly visible.
Recommended Reading
Dragomán, György: A fehér király (novel). Budapest: Magvetö, 2005. (English: The White King, 2008; German: Der Weiße König, 2008.)
-. Máglya (novel). Budapest: Magvetö, 2014. (English: The Bone Fire, 2019; German: Der Scheiterhaufen, 2015.)
-. Oroszlánkórus (novel). Budapest: Magvetö, 2015. (German: Löwenchor, forthcoming.)
Kolloquium, 19.03.2019
Den Roman sprengen - das Große und das Kleine
Das Schreiben eines Romans fühlt sich oft an wie das Zusammensetzen eines zerbrochenen Gegenstands, das Lösen eines Rätsels, wie der Bau einer Maschine.
Im Laufe meiner Karriere als Schriftsteller habe ich immer wieder mit fragmentiertem Erzählen experimentiert. Dabei verwende ich oft sehr kurze Texte und baue Mini-Textzyklen zusammen, die sich ihrerseits zu größeren Bögen fügen, woraus größere Konstruktionen entstehen.
In meinem Vortrag erkunde ich diese Technik, spreche über verschiedene Aspekte des Schreibens und der Gestaltung eines Romans und konzentriere mich insbesondere auf das Verhältnis zwischen kleineren und größeren Strukturen.
Publikationen aus der Fellowbibliothek
Dragomán, György (Berlin, 2019)
Löwenchor : Novellen Oroszlánkórus
Dragomán, György (Berlin, 2015)
Der Scheiterhaufen : Roman Máglya