Monday, March 24, 2008

ΟΥΓΚΟ ΚΛΑΟΥΣ: Είπε μόνος του αντίο στη «Θλίψη του Βελγίου»

http://woldhek.nl/images/drawings/253-hugo-claus-2.jpg
Ενας μεγάλος Ευρωπαίος και παγκόσμιος συγγραφέας, ο 79χρονος Φλαμανδός Ούγκο Κλάους δεν υπάρχει πια. Ο θάνατός του, την περασμένη Τετάρτη, αποτελεί είδηση και για τα ιατρικά χρονικά, αφού επέλεξε την ευθανασία, ύστερα από μακροχρόνια σωματική και ψυχική ταλαιπωρία με την ασθένεια του Αλτσχάιμερ. Στο πλευρό του, στο νοσοκομείο Μιντελχάιμ της Αμβέρσας, μέχρι την τελευταία στιγμή βρέθηκε η τρίτη σύζυγός του, η Βέερλε ντε Βιτ, η οποία δήλωσε: «Επέλεξε από μόνος του τη στιγμή του θανάτου του». Ως γνωστόν στην Ολλανδία και το Βέλγιο η ευθανασία είναι μια νόμιμη διαδικασία.

Αντικληρικαλιστής, με προωθημένη λογοτεχνική θεματολογία και αντισυμβατική ζωή, ο Ούγκο Κλάους κατέκτησε το ευρωπαϊκό κοινό και συζητήθηκε αρκετές φορές για Νόμπελ
Το έργο το οποίο εκτίναξε τη φήμη του Ούγκο Κλάους στην ευρωπαϊκή ήπειρο και τον έβγαλε εκτός των «στενών» βελγικών συνόρων ήταν το αριστουργηματικό μυθιστόρημά του «Η θλίψη του Βελγίου» (1983, «Καστανιώτης»). Είναι το κατηγορώ και το ανάθεμα ενός Φλαμανδού εναντίον των γαλλόφωνων Βαλόνων του Νότου, που χωρίζει επί χρόνια εξακολουθητικά τους δύο λαούς του Βελγίου -τις τελευταίες ημέρες βρήκε την ηρεμία το βελγικό κράτος, μετά την ανάληψη της πρωθυπουργίας από τον χριστιανοδημοκράτη Βαλόνο από πατέρα και Φλαμανδό από μητέρα, Ιβ Λετέρμ... [Του ΒΑΣΙΛΗ Κ. ΚΑΛΑΜΑΡΑ, Ελευθεροτυπία, 24/3/2008].
Highly versatile and prolific Belgian author, whose oeuvre included poetry, novels, dramas, short stories, screenplays, essays, translations. Most of Hugo Claus's writing had an experimental quality. An anti-authoritarian, his attacks on conventional bourgeois mores, religious bigotry stirred much controversy. Claus worked also as a stage and film director - his films were regarded as scandalous due to their eroticism and bluntness. His international breakthrough Claus made in 1983 with the postmodern novel The Sorrow of Belgium. Claus wrote in Flemish. For decades he was the dominant figure in Belgium's postwar Dutch-language literature.
ULYSSES
Too many battles I have seen,
heard too much whining of lovers.
I always travelled too far.
A show-box has replaced my eye,
a humming-top my ear.
Too much mire
and too much corpses.
Too much joy.
Now I hide among the suitors,
those beggars.

(from The International Portland Review 1980, ed. by Cindy Ragland, 1980)
http://www.nrc.nl/multimedia/archive/00227/claus_227897e.jpg

Hugo Claus was born in Bruges. After a very strict Catholic upbringing, Claus left school at an early age, unable to adapt himself to the traditional education system. He worked on a farm while studying at the Academy of Ghent, but at the same time he also studied drama. In France he was a seasonal worker in a sugar factory, saying later that he found it so senseless that he decided never to work for anyone again. In Paris Claus met Antonin Artaud whose influence is seen in Claus's early collection of poems, Registreren (1948). After returning to Belgium he joined the Cobra group, which was named after the cities of Copenhagen, Brussels, and Amsterdam. The group was established in 1948 by Karel Appel with other Northern European artists and writers, and presented a European parallel to the Abstract Expressionists in New York. Later Claus published essays on the painter Corneille (Over het werk van Corneille, 1951) and Appel. In the novel Een zachte vernieling (1988) he retunerned to the activities of group.

In 1950, Claus went to live in Paris. He also spent some time in Italy. In 1955 he settled down in Belgium and married Elly Overzier; they had one son. As a novelist Claus made his debut with De metsiers (1950, The Duck Hunt), which was inspired by William Faulkner's As I Lay Dying. This naturalistic family chronicle made Claus famous. The Duck Hunt focuses on the problems of puberty, and shows how innocence is crushed by an absurd fate. Claus's experimental period in poetry ended with De Oostakkerse Gedichten (1955).

In the fragmented Het verlangen (1978, Desire) overweight, slow-witted Jake and dark, brooding Michael leave The Unicorn, their local tavern and head for Las Vegas, where they see the other side of glitter and glamour in the New World. Meanwhile their friends at The Unicorn comment on their missing buddies and Jake's wife struggles to tend their brain-damaged daughter.

Claus's ambitious war novel De verwondering (1963), a story of a private inferno and Flemish Nazis, was an allegory of the contemporary world, and included references to Dante, Sir James Frazer's The Golden Bough, and classical mythology. The work had a late sequel in Het verdriet van België (1983, The Sorrow of Belgium), which traced grippingly the narrow-mindedness of ordinary Belgians, a subject which had led the French poet Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867) collect his insults in a travel book entitled Pauvre Belgique! The post-modern bestseller can be read on different levels. Louis Seynaeve, the protagonist, is young who grows up in Nazi occupied Belgium. His formative years are tinged with a convent school with its nuns and monks and later the strong women of the family who reveal to him the secrets of the family. Claus's book later inspired Claude Goretta's television film Der Kummer von Flandern (1994).
Schaamte
(1972) was set in the Caribbean and the autobiographical Het jaar van de kreeft (1972) was based on a love affair between the author and a well-known actress. In Claus's work the emphasis is more on situation than on character. Often his books dealt with a family crisis in which the victims and victimizers are both threatened by the same forces. De zwaardvis (1989, The Swordfish) was a novella about a small-town conflict and crisis. In the story Martin Ghyselen, a lonely boy, escapes the pressures of his surroundings into fantasy, seeing himself tragically as the martyred Jesus. De geruchten (1996) was set in the mid-1960s. René Catrijsse, the sick prodigal son, returns to his home village. He has fought in the Belgian Congo before deserting from the army. His return coincides with a series of accidents in the community, and soon also the scapegoat is found.

As a playwright Claus wrote psychological and social dramas, such as Suiker (1958), historical spectacles (Tijl uilenspiegel, 1965; Het leven en de werken van Leopold II, 1970), and adaptations of classical Greek, Roman, and Elizabethan texts, written under the influence of Antonin Artaud's theatre of cruelty. Orestes (1976) was after Euripides and Het huis van Labdakos (1977, The House of Labdacus) was a synthesis of several ancient Greek and Roman works. In Vrijdag (1969) Claus examined a triangular drama in which the acceptance of the truth means a step toward reconciliation. George Vermeersch returns from prison and finds that his wife has a lover. Vermeersch reveals that he had an incestuous relationship with their daughter. His wife acknowledges that she was aware of the situation. When the lover leaves her, the Vermeersches are left to reconstruct their marriage.

In 1973 Claus travelled to Bangkok where his wife of that time, Sylvia Kristel, acted in Emmanuelle, one of the most successful erotic movies ever made. Claus, who was 27 years her senior, coached her in acting. "Don't lie there like a dead fish," Kristel recalled him saying. Claus's own place in Belgian cinema was primarily as a writer, for example of commentaries for documentaries by Charles Dekeukeleire, Paul Haesaerts and Patrick Ledoux. He wrote the screenplay for Roland Verhavert's Pallieter and adapted Stijn Streuvel's novel De Teleurgang van de Waterhoek for Fons Rademakers' film Mira (1971). With Rademaker he also collaborated in Het Mes (1961), De dans van de reiger (1966), and Niet voor de poezen (1973), based on Nicolas Freeling's Van der Valk crime thriller. Claus's own films caused much controversy and were less successful. In 1967 he directed De Vijanden (Enemies) from his own screenplay and in 1980 Vrijdag (Friday), based on his play which was produced originally in Amsterdam in 1969. Another attempt at direction was Het Sacrament (1989, The Sacrament), about 24 hours in the life of a priest. Claus adapted the film from his novel Omtrent Deedee (1963).

Claus lived long periods in Paris and Rome. In the later years of his life Claus spent half of the year in his farm in Northern France. Claus's several awards include the State Prize for Dutch Letters, the Herman Gorter Prize, and VSB Prize for poetry in 1994. De Geruchten (1996) received in 1998 the Aristeion Prize. He was frequently mentioned as a candidate for the Nobel Prize for Literature. Claus, who suffered from Alzheimer's disease, died by euthanasia at a hospital in Antwerp on 19 March, 2008. Claus was married to the actress Veerle Claus-De Wit.


For further information: Encyclopedia of World Literature in the 20th Century, vol. 1, ed. by Steven R. Serafin (1999); Introduction to Four Works for the Theatre by Hugo Claus by D. Willinger (1990); Introduction to Hugo Claus: Selected Poems by T. Hermans (1986); Claus Reading by Paul Claes (1984); Mensch und Schuld by Herbert van Uffelen (1983); Hugo Claus, Experiment en Traditie by J. Weisgerber (1974); Hugo Claus of Oedipus in het Paradijs by G. Wildemeersch (1973); Literature on the Low Countries by R.P. Meijer (1971); Post-war Dutch Literature by J.P.Snapper (1971); Over Claus' Toneel by J.De Decker (1971) - See also: Studie- en Documentatiecentrum Hugo Claus ; Hugo Claus ; Over de gaapgrens

No comments: