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Nikos Kazantzakis

N. Kazantzakis, Greek novelist, poet, playwriter and thinker, born February 18, 1883, Heraklion, Crete, died October 26, 1957, Freiburg, Germany. Arguably the most important Greek writer and philosopher of the 20th century, he acquired wide fame after his novel "The Life of Alexis Zorbas" was made into a film in 1964 (Zorba the Greek). He is the Greek author with the most translations in several languages.

Biography

Kazantzakis was born in Heraklion in 1883, at that time a small town still under Turkish rule, but under intense revolutionary fever, following the continuous uprisings of the Greek population to achieve independence from the Ottoman empire and to unite with Greece.

In 1902 he moved to Athens, Greece where he studied Law at the Athens University and then in 1907 to Paris to study Philosophy. There he was influenced by the teachings of Henri Bergson.

Back in Greece, he started translating works of philosophy and in 1914 he got acquainted with Angelos Sikelianos[?]. Together they travelled for two years in places where Greek Christian culture flourished, largely influenced by the enthusiastic nationalism of Sikelianos.

In 1919, as Director General of the Ministry of Social Relief, he undertook to transfer Greek populations from Caucasus to Greece, following the turmoil of the Russian Revolution. This became the beginning of a continuous wandering Odyssey all over the world. Driven by an intense internal urge, he was travelling and staying for short periods of time, in several places till his death in 1957. From 1922 to 1924 in Paris and Berlin. In 1924 in Italy. In 1925 in Russia. In 1932 in Spain, and then Cyprus, Spain, Aegina, Egypt, the mountain of Sina, Czechoslovakia, Nice, China, Japan etc..

During his stay in Berlin, where a critical and explosive situation ruled, Kazantzakis got introduced to communism and became an admirer of Lenin, but he never became a consistent communist. Yet, since that time, his nationalistic beliefs were replaced by a more universal ideology.

In 1957 he started a new trip to China and Japan. This, however, was his last. He got ill and was transferred to Freiburg, Germany, where he died. He was buried at Heraklion. His epitaph read "I hope for nothing. I fear nothing. I am free." (Δεν ελπίζω τίποτε. Δεν φοβάμαι τίποτε. Είμαι λεύτερος)

Literary work

His first work was the narrative "Snake and Lily" (Όφις και Κρίνο), 1906, which he signed with the pen-name Karma Nirvami. After his studies in Paris, he authored the tragedy "The Master Builder" (Ο Πρωτομάστορας), based on a popular Greek folklore myth (1910).

His numerous trips all over the world inspired him to start the series "Travelling" (Ταξιδεύοντας), which became known as masterpieces of Greek travel literature[?]. This series included Italy, Egypt, Sina, Japan, China, England.

Kazantzakis himself considered the "The Odyssey: A Modern Sequel" 1924-1938 to be his most important work. He wrote it seven times before publishing it in 1938. According to another important Greek author, Pantelis Prevelakis[?], "it has been a superhuman effort to record his immense spiritual experience". Following the structure of Homer's Odyssey, it is divided in 24 rhapsodies and consists of 33.333 verses.

His best and most famous novels include "The Life of Alexis Zorbas" (1946), "Christ Recrucified[?]" (1948), "Kapetan Michalis" (1950), "The Last Temptation of Christ" (1951), "Broken Souls[?]".

The spirit of Kazantzakis, even since his youth, was restless. He was tortured by metaphysical and existential concerns. He seeked relief in knowledge, in travelling, in contact with other people, in every kind of experience. The influence of Friedrich Nietzsche on his work is evident, especially by his atheism and the presence of the superman concept. However, religious concerns also haunted him.

The figure of Jesus Christ is ever present in his thoughts, from his youth to his last years. But as presented in The Last Temptation of Christ it is a Christ tortured by the same metaphysical and existential concerns, seeking answers to haunting questions and often torn between his sense of dutie and cause on one side and his own human needs to enjoy life, to love and to be loved, to have a family. A tragic figure who at the end sacrefices his own human hopes for a wider cause. Kazantzakis'Christ is not an infallible, pationless deity but rather a passionate and emotional human being who has been assigned a mission, with a meaning that he is struggling to understand and that often requires him to face his consience and his emotions and ultimately to sacrifice his own life for its fulfilment. He is subject to doubts, fears and even guilt. In the end he is the Son of Man, a man whose internal struggle represents that of humanity.



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