1945 in literature

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
List of years in literature (table)
In poetry
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948

This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1945.

Events[]

  • January – In Paris, journalist and poet Robert Brasillach is tried and found guilty of "intelligence with the (German) enemy" during World War II, sparking a major dispute in French society over collaboration and clemency.[1]
  • c. January 1 – Jean-Paul Sartre refuses the Légion d'honneur.
  • January 27Primo Levi is among those liberated from the Auschwitz concentration camp complex.
  • February – Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn is sentenced to eight years in a labour camp for criticizing Joseph Stalin.
  • February 1315 – The bombing of Dresden in World War II is seen by the German Jewish diarist Victor Klemperer, the novelist Kurt Vonnegut as an American prisoner of war, and Miles Tripp as a British bomb aimer. It will feature in Józef Mackiewicz's novel Sprawa pulkownika Miasojedowa (Colonel Miasoyedov's Case, 1962), Bohumil Hrabal's Ostře sledované vlaky (Closely Observed Trains, 1965) and Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five, or The Children's Crusade: A Duty-Dance with Death (1969).
  • March 4 – Poet Pablo Neruda is elected a Chilean senator and officially joins the Communist Party of Chile four months later.
  • March 8Federico García Lorca's play The House of Bernarda Alba, completed just before his assassination in 1936, is first performed, in Buenos Aires.
  • March 31Tennessee Williams' semi-autobiographical "memory play" The Glass Menagerie (1944, adapted from a short story) opens on Broadway at the Playhouse Theatre (New York City), starring Laurette Taylor and winning the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award.[2]
  • About end March – Jack Kerouac and William S. Burroughs complete their mystery novel And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks, a fictionalization of manslaughter committed in 1944 by their friend Lucien Carr, but it will not appear fully until 2008.[3]
  • May – The Estonian poet Heiti Talvik is deported to Siberia and never heard of again.
  • May 2
    • The expatriate American poet Ezra Pound is arrested by the Italian resistance movement and taken to its headquarters in Chiavari, but soon released as of no interest.[4] On May 5, he turns himself in to the United States Army. He is held in a military detention camp outside Pisa, spending 25 days in an open cage before being given a tent. There he appears to suffer a nervous breakdown. While in the camp he drafts The Pisan Cantos.
    • French novelist Colette is the first woman admitted to the Académie Goncourt.
  • May 8 – The occupying powers in Allied-occupied Germany and Austria impose publishing curbs as part of denazification.[5]
  • June – Ern Malley hoax: Australia's most celebrated literary hoax takes place when Angry Penguins is published with poems by the fictional Ern Malley. Poets James McAuley and Harold Stewart created the poems from lines of other published work and then sent them as the purported work of a recently deceased poet. The hoax is played on Max Harris, at this time a 22-year-old avant garde poet and critic who had started the modernist magazine Angry Penguins. Harris and his circle of literary friends agreed that a hitherto completely unknown modernist poet of great merit had come to light in suburban Australia. The Autumn 1944 edition of the magazine with the poems comes out in mid-1945 due to wartime printing delays with cover illustration by Sidney Nolan. An Australian newspaper uncovers the hoax within weeks. McAuley and Stewart loved early Modernist poets but despise later modernism and especially the well-funded Angry Penguins and are jealous of Harris's precocious success.[6]
  • c. July – Theatre Workshop is formed in the north of England by Joan Littlewood, Ewan MacColl and other former members of Theatre Union as a touring company.
  • August 17 – The allegorical dystopian novella Animal Farm by George Orwell, a satire on Stalinism, is first published by Fredric Warburg in London.
  • September 11 – The Citizens Theatre opens in Glasgow under this name.
  • September – J. B. Priestley's drama An Inspector Calls is premièred in Russian translation in Leningrad.[7]
  • October 29Vladimir Nabokov's 1940 application for U.S. citizenship is granted.[8]
  • November 1 – The U.S. magazine Ebony appears.
  • November 21André Malraux is named Minister of Information by the new French President, Charles de Gaulle.[9]
  • November 26 – The U.K. film Brief Encounter, adapted from Noël Coward's short play Still Life, is released.
  • November – Astrid Lindgren's children's book Pippi Långstrump, with illustrations by Ingrid Vang Nyman, is published in Sweden by Rabén & Sjögren, having won a competition run by the publisher for children's books in August. It introduces an anarchic child heroine. An English translation appears as Pippi Longstocking.
  • December – Nag Hammadi library, a collection of Gnostic texts, is discovered in Upper Egypt.[10]

New books[]

1st ed.

Fiction[]

Children and young people[]

  • Rev. W. AwdryThe Three Railway Engines (first in 42 Railway Series books by Awdry and his son Christopher Awdry)
  • Selina Chönz and Alois CarigietUorsin (Schellen-Ursli. Ein Engadiner Bilderbuch, translated as A Bell for Ursli)
  • Marguerite HenryJustin Morgan Had a Horse
  • Tove JannsonThe Moomins and the Great Flood (Småtrollen och den stora översvämningen)
  • Jim KjelgaardBig Red
  • Ruth KraussThe Carrot Seed
  • Robert LawsonRabbit Hill
  • Lois LenskiStrawberry Girl
  • Astrid LindgrenPippi Longstocking (Pippi Långstrump, first in the Pippi Longstocking series of three full-length and six picture books)
  • E. B. WhiteStuart Little

Drama[]

Poetry[]

  • Idris DaviesTonypandy and other poems

Non-fiction[]

  • Vannevar BushAs We May Think
  • R. G. CollingwoodThe Idea of Nature
  • Françoise FrenkelRien où poser sa tête (No place to lay one's head)
  • Carlo Emilio GaddaEros e Priapo
  • Jacquetta HawkesEarly Britain
  • Aldous HuxleyThe Perennial Philosophy
  • Arthur KoestlerThe Yogi and the Commissar and Other Essays
  • Carlo LeviChrist Stopped at Eboli (Cristo si è fermato a Eboli)
  • C. S. LewisThe Great Divorce (serialization concludes and book publication)
  • Betty MacDonaldThe Egg and I
  • Karl PopperThe Open Society and Its Enemies
  • Bertrand RussellA History of Western Philosophy And Its Connection with Political and Social Circumstances from the Earliest Times to the Present Day
  • Ernesto SabatoOne and the Universe (Uno y el Universo)
  • Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.The Age of Jackson
  • Henry DeWolf SmythSmyth Report (A General Account of the Development of Methods of Using Atomic Energy for Military Purposes)
  • Richard WrightBlack Boy

Births[]

  • January 3David Starkey, English historian
  • January 20Robert Olen Butler, American novelist and short story writer
  • January 30Michael Dorris, American writer (died 1997)
  • February 12David Small, American author and illustrator
  • February 23Robert Gray, Australian poet and critic
  • February 25Shiva Naipaul, Trinidad-born novelist (died 1985)
  • March 19Jim Turner, American literary editor (died 1999)
  • April 2Anne Waldman, American poet
  • April 16Sebastian Barker, English poet and journalist (died 2014)
  • April 27August Wilson, American playwright (died 2005)
  • April 30Annie Dillard, American poet and prose writer
  • June 11Robert Munsch, American-Canadian author and academic
  • June 21Adam Zagajewski, Polish poet, novelist and essayist
  • July 5Michael Blake, American novelist and screenwriter (died 2015)
  • July 9Dean Koontz, American novelist
  • July 12Remy Sylado (Yapi Panda Abdiel Tambayong), Indonesian writer
  • July 21Wendy Cope, English poet
  • July 30Patrick Modiano, French novelist, Nobel laureate
  • September 1Mustafa Balel, Turkish author and translator
  • October 15John Murrell, American-born dramatist
  • November 5Richard Holmes, English literary biographer
  • November 24Nuruddin Farah, Somali novelist
  • December 17Jacqueline Wilson, English children's writer
  • December 21Raymond E. Feist, American fantasy writer
  • unknown dates
    • Esther Croft, French Canadian novelist and short-story writer[11]
    • Rabai al-Madhoun, Palestinian writer[12]
    • Mari Strachan, Welsh novelist
    • Mohamed Zafzaf, Moroccan novelist (died 2001)[13]

Deaths[]

  • January 13Margaret Deland, American novelist (born 1857)
  • January 15Ursula Bethell, English-born New Zealand poet (born 1874)
  • January 22Else Lasker-Schüler, German-born Jewish poet (born 1869)
  • January 27Antal Szerb, Hungarian writer (in concentration camp, born 1901)
  • February 6Robert Brasillach, French writer (executed, born 1909)
  • February 23Aleksey Nikolayevich Tolstoy, Russian writer (born 1883)
  • c. March 12 – Anne Frank, German-born Dutch child diarist (probable typhus in concentration camp, born 1929)
  • March 20Lord Alfred Douglas, English poet (born 1870)
  • March 31Maurice Donnay, French dramatist (born 1859)
  • April – Josef Čapek, Czech artist and writer (in concentration camp, born 1887)
  • April 9Dietrich Bonhoeffer, German theologian (hanged in concentration camp, born 1906)
  • May 15Charles Williams, English author (born 1886)
  • May 29Mihail Sebastian, Romanian Jewish playwright, essayist, and novelist (road accident, born 1907)
  • June 5Ilie Bărbulescu, Romanian linguist and journalist (born 1873)
  • June 8Robert Desnos, French poet (in concentration camp, born 1900)
  • July 13Alla Nazimova, Crimean-born American scriptwriter and actress (born 1879)
  • July 25Charles Gilman Norris, American novelist (born 1881)
  • August 18E. R. Eddison, English fantasy writer (born 1882)
  • August 20Alexander Roda Roda, Austro-Croatian-born novelist (born 1872)
  • August 26Franz Werfel, Bohemian-born writer (born 1890)
  • September 9Zinaida Gippius, émigré Russian writer (born 1869)
  • September 21Ioan C. Filitti, Romanian historian, political theorist and essayist (born 1879)
  • September 22Thomas Burke, English novelist and story writer (born 1886)
  • October 8Felix Salten, Austrian-born children's writer (born 1869)
  • November 21Robert Benchley, American humorist (born 1889)
  • December 4Arthur Morrison, English writer (born 1863)
  • December 28Theodore Dreiser, American author (born 1871)

Awards[]

References[]

  1. ^ Judt, Tony (1992). Past Imperfect. French Intellectuals, 1944–1956. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 63–74. ISBN 0-520-07921-3.
  2. ^ "The Glass Menagerie". Internet Broadway Database. The Broadway League. Retrieved 2014-12-16.
  3. ^ Walsh, John (2008-11-03). "The young generation: Burroughs and Kerouac – an unpublished collaboration". The Independent. London. Retrieved 2015-07-13.
  4. ^ Hugh Kenner.
  5. ^ Suarez, Michael F.; Woudhuysen, H. R., eds. (2013). The Book: A Global History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-967941-6.
  6. ^ Heyward, Michael (1993). The Ern Malley Affair. University of Queensland Press.
  7. ^ Grove, Valerie (2015-08-29). "How JB Priestley's Inspector first called on the USSR". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2019-11-12.
  8. ^ Pitzer, Andrea (2013). "Vladimir Nabokov immigration files". The Secret History of Vladimir Nabokov. Retrieved 2015-08-03.
  9. ^ Claude Mauriac (1973). The Other de Gaulle: Diaries 1944-1954. Angus and Robertson. p. 143.
  10. ^ James McConkey Robinson (1984). The Nag Hammadi Library in English. Brill Archive. p. 9. ISBN 90-04-07185-7.
  11. ^ "Croft, Esther" (in French). Infocentre littéraire des écrivains.
  12. ^ "Rabai al-Madhoun". International Prize for Arabic Fiction. Retrieved 1 December 2020.
  13. ^ Marcia Lynx Qualey. "Book review: Muhammad Zafzaf′s ″Elusive Fox″". Qantara. Retrieved 1 December 2020.
  14. ^ Marie-Clotilde Hubert (2000). Construire le temps: normes et usages chronologiques du moyen âge à l'époque contemporaine (in French). Librairie Droz. p. 493. ISBN 978-2-900791-33-2.


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