Růžena Jesenská

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Růžena Jesenská
Růžena Jesenská, ca 1930
Růžena Jesenská, ca 1930
Born1863
Prague
Diedd. 1940
Prague
NationalityCzech

Růžena Jesenská (b. 1863 Prague, d. 1940 Prague), was a decadent writer, a follower of Julius Zeyer. She was a member of the Czech Academy of Sciences (elected 1929), sister of Marie Jesenská and aunt of writer Milena Jesenská. Jesenská wrote novels, plays, short stories, children's books, and over 50 collections of poetry.[1] Although few works by Czech women writers have been translated into English, writers, such as Jesenská, were widely published and read.

Biography[edit]

Růžena Jesenská was born into a family of many children and was the oldest daughter of an official who later became a businessman.[2] She began training as a teacher in 1878 at St. Thomas Girls’ school in Prague, the same school she attended as a girl, and later taught at various schools in Prague. At the Fin de siècle in 1907, she was forced to retire from teaching and entered a career in journalism.[3]

Jesenská traveled extensively through the Baltic countries, France, Italy, and Russia and published under the pseudonyms, Eva Z Hluboké and Martin Věžník. Her first novella was published in the journal, Světozor, under the male pseudonym, Martin Věžník. She first wrote didactic literature for girls and young women before writing poems, drama, and novels, including 3 biographical novels. Her writing largely excludes the sentimentalism found in other Czech women's writing of the 1880s, and instead, she incorporates symbolism through "truncated images and syntax."[4] Critic Jan Opolsky describes her writing as "against the current," and Max Brod critiqued "her chauvinistic Czech attitudes and philistine outlook."[5]

Selected works[edit]

Poetry[edit]

Rudé západy (Crimson Sunsets, 1904)[edit]

At her own expensive, Jesenská published this collection of poems which constitute "a sensualist hymn to sexual passion."[6] There is suspicion among critics that these poems describe her secret relationship with painter and photographer, Alfons Mucha.[3]

Mladi (1926)

Jesenská accounts for "moral confrontations and animosities that affected advancement in her career" in this autobiographical collection of poems.[4]

Prose[edit]

Jarmila (1894) and its sequel, Jarní píseň (Song of Spring, 1902)[edit]

These novels provide manuals of etiquette for bourgeois young women.[6]

Román dítěte (Romance of a Child, 1905)[edit]

In this psychological study of girl entering prostitution, Jesenská explores love as "an inspiration for vitality" and the power of rejected love to mentally and physically destroy.[6]

Mimo svět (A World Apart, 1909)[edit]

Jesenská's volume of 14 stories with narration that is often wooden and melodramatic. Many center around topics of incest, oppressive lesbian love, and present the woman as a victim.[6] Decadent themes and motifs presented include "the outsider, ‘abnormal’ sexuality, and the association of sex and death." This volume inspired the title of Kathleen Hayes' anthology, A world apart and other stories: Czech women writers at the Fin de siècle.[7]

Tanecnice (The Dancer, 1912)[edit]

Jesenská paints a psychologically-detailed portrait of the first-person-narrator heroine.[6]

Plays[edit]

Estera (published and performed 1909)[edit]

Estera is a symbolist tragedy set in Renaissance Bohemia and composed in iambic pentameters.[6]

Attila (published and performed 1919)

Attila is a Neo-Romantic play that concerns the battle between passion (Germanic) and love (Slav).[6]

Other Literary Contributions[edit]

Jesenská published in newspapers for women, including Ženské listy, Ženský obzor, and Časopis učitelek. She was briefly a theater critic for Ženský svět (Women's World) in 1921. Founded prior to World War I, these periodicals covering "the woman question" moved discussions of women and gender into the cultural sphere.[8]

Jesenská was a regular contributor to the Czech literary magazine, Zlata, Praha, and edited the children's periodical, Dětské Besedy Máje (Children's Maytime chat).

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Jesenská, Ružena". Women in World History, Vol. 8: Jab-Kyt. Waterford, CT: Yorkin Publications. 2000. p. 137. ISBN 0-7876-4067-0.
  2. ^ Hayes, Kathleen (2023). A World Apart and Other Stories Czech Women Writers at the Fin de Siècle. Karolinum Press. pp. 200–201. ISBN 978-80-246-4804-0. OCLC 1369664932.
  3. ^ a b Poniz, Katja Mihurko (2021-05-23). "Růžena Jesenská". Women Writers in History | CEEPUS. Retrieved 2023-03-02.
  4. ^ a b Lines of fire : women writers of World War I. Margaret R. Higonnet. New York, N.Y.: Plume. 1999. p. 487. ISBN 0-452-28146-6. OCLC 39189822.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  5. ^ Sayer, Derek (1 November 1996). "The language of nationality and the nationality of language: Prague 1780-1920. (Czech Republic history)". Past & Present (153): 164 – via Factiva.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g A history of Central European women's writing. Celia Hawkesworth, University of London. School of Slavonic and East European Studies. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave, in association with School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University College, London. 2001. p. 130. ISBN 0-333-77809-X. OCLC 45532426.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  7. ^ Hayes, Kathleen (2023). A World Apart and Other Stories Czech Women Writers at the Fin de Siècle (2nd ed.). Prague: Karolinum Press. pp. 20–21. ISBN 978-80-246-4804-0. OCLC 1369664932.
  8. ^ Oates-Indruchová, Libora (2016). "Unraveling a Tradition, or Spinning a Myth? Gender Critique in Czech Society and Culture". Slavic Review. 75 (4): 919–943. doi:10.5612/slavicreview.75.4.0919. ISSN 0037-6779 – via JSTOR.