Ágnes Rapai

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Dorothy Una Ratcliffe
Born (1952-03-13) 13 March 1952 (age 72)
Szekszárd, Hungary
OccupationPoet
Writer
Translator
LanguageHungarian
NationalityHungarian
Alma materM.V. Lomonosov Moscow State University
GenrePoetry

Ágnes Rapai (born 13 March 1952 in Szekszárd, Hungary) is a Hungarian poet, writer, and translator.

Biography

Rapai spent her childhood in

freelance
poet and writer since 1989.

Since 2007, Rapai has been a board member of ARTISJUS (Hungarian Bureau for the Protection of Authors' Rights). She is also a member of the Belletrist Association (Szépírók Társasága),[1] the Hungarian National Association of Creative Artists (MAOE), and the Hungarian PEN Club.

Bibliography

Rapai has published five collections of poetry in Hungary. Her works have been published in Switzerland, including collections and anthologies such as Frauenfelder Lyriktage, Poesie Agenda, and Ungarische Poeten. All her publications in German have been translated by András Sándor.

Collections

  • Máshol [Elsewhere] (in Hungarian), Magvető Kiadó, 1985
  • A darázs szeme [Eye of the Wasp] (in Hungarian), Orpheusz Publishing House, 1990
  • Spaziergang mit Hölderlin (in German), Orte-Verlag, 1995
  • Zadarnál a tenger [The Sea by Zadar] (in Hungarian), Orpheusz Publishing House, 1997
  • Budapest.. (in German), Orte-Verlag, 1999
  • Arc poétika [Face of Poetry] (in Hungarian), Novella Publishing House, 2006
  • Mindenhol jó [Everywhere's Good] (in Hungarian), Novella Publishing House, 2007

Anthologies

Awards

In 1995, Rapai received the Rosenthal Institute for Holocaust Studies Award.[citation needed] She was also awarded by the Hungarian Art Fund in 1996,[citation needed] and took the János Arany Prize in 1999.[citation needed]

Activities

In 1997, Rapai took part in the International Poetry Festival in Frauenfeld, Switzerland. In 1999, Hungary was the guest of honor (Schwerpunkt-country) at the Frankfurt Book Fair. Her second collection of poems in German was published for this occasion.[2]

In 2007, Rapai participated in the ninth annual Prague International Poetry Days.

Reviews

Several publications have reviewed works by Rapai:

  • Bella, István (1985), A fűszál színeváltozása [The Discoloration of a Blade of Grass] (in Hungarian), Élet és Irodalom
  • Pécsi, Györgyi (1991), A darázs szeme [Eye of the Wasp] (in Hungarian), Életünk
  • Lukácsi, András (1994), Magyar költőnő Svájcban [A Hungarian Poetess in Switzerland] (in Hungarian), Magyar Hírlap
  • Sándor, András (1995), E ruhátlan lét: a költészet [Poetry – This Unclothed Existence] (in Hungarian), Tekintet
  • Legeza, Ilona, "Zadarnál a tenger" [The Sea by Zadar], Ilona Legeza’s Literary website (in Hungarian)
  • Kapecz, Zsuzsa (2007), Láng Olivér tündöklése és bukása [Oliver Láng High and Low] (in Hungarian), Élet és Irodalom
  • Kálmán, Gábor (2007), Amikor a háziasszony verset ír [When the Housewife Writes Poetry] (in Hungarian), Könyvesblog
  • Traber, Barbara (29 October 1994), Elegie am Nachmittag (in German), Badener Tagblatt

References

  1. ^ "A KÖNYV UTÓÉLETE eseményei / 2007" [BOOK FOLLOWUP events / 2007] (in Hungarian). Szépírók Társasága. 2007. Retrieved 2011-12-10.
  2. ^ "RAPAI, Ágnes". Frankfurt'99. 1999. Retrieved 2011-12-10.