Debrecen Literary Days focuses on the latest issue of the Great Plain – Debrecen news, Debrecen news | News of Debrecen and Hajdú-Bihar counties
The Debrecen Literary Days are the focus of the latest issue of the Great Plain
Author: Szilágyi Szilvia [email protected]
Published on 11/13/2021 19:00 | Updated: 11/13/2021 19:00
Debrecen – In addition to the sketchy history of the event celebrating its anniversary, reviews of works by authors affiliated with Debrecen can be found in the November issue.
The editorial staff of the Great Plain has awarded prizes to its outstanding authors since the 1960s. This gesture was usually associated with the opening of the Debrecen Literary Days.
The awards were traditionally presented again this year, in the framework of the Debrecen Literary Days, on the evening of the Great Plain winners on November 9.
The November issue of the Great Plain primarily commemorates the event celebrating its fiftieth anniversary and brings its history to life.
Thus, immediately after the poems and prose of the Fiction section, we can read the writings of Barnabás Pótor, who focuses on the events of DIN ’80s, focusing on the events of the literary and cultural policy discourses in state socialism, and the situation of the Debrecen Literary Days.
This is followed by an interview with Tibor Imre László Juhász, a literary historian and critic, and a former editor of the Study section of the Great Plain. The poet asked the professor about his editorial duties as a poet and doctoral student, about the history of the Debrecen Literary Days, his past and present role.
In his large-scale study, Zoltán Kulcsár discusses the speech act of addressing, the linguistic dilemmas of self-addressing, from the first recorded address, a divine pseudonym, to Attila József’s Know You Have No Forgiveness. Andrea Rálik draws the paratextual procedures of “Russian poems” by László Bodgán, Ferenc András Kovács and István Baka.
In the Critique section we find critiques of works by authors affiliated with Debrecen or Debrecen. Szabárd Borbély’s novel The Sons of Kafka, published this year by Miklós Györffy, Tamás Korpa The multimedia work Adrienn Pataky, Kinga Tóth while Mervyn Peake’s Gormenghast trilogy was reviewed by Tamás Kisantal.
In the Fiction column, János Marno (In vain, Half-dim in the dark), Katalin Szlukovényi (Kásahegy, Megálló, It, Hope, Resilience) Andriamanitra and man), poems by Júlia Nagy (Hameln, Délibáb), András Gerevich (Ashberries on the lake shore), János Géczi (Lót’s wife, Lót, Palimpszeszt) and Tibor Zalán (Chatter in the Underwater City) and Robert Balogh (Perhaps only the hiccups), the prose of Noémi Kiss (Éva Róth, 1952) and Aurél Birs Zsombor (The Body Left Alone).
József Szurcsik illustrated the issue in the Writers’ Shop, at major newsagents, and digitally at the Sofa side.