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Sheet 19960270

Type: Positive, Negative, Digital
Color: Black & White
Country: Schweiz
Region: Zürich
Place: Baden
Date: Mar 15, 1996
Keywords:
Personen Grafik Literatur

Image of sheet 19960270 photo 2: v.l.n.r. Toni Linder (DEH) und der polnische Schrifsteller, Photograph und Journalist Ryszard Kapuscinski während einem Gespräch in Baden, Schweiz 1996 √ Switzerland Literatur writer 

Ryszard Kapuściński (Polish pronunciation: [ˈrɨʂart kapuɕˈt͡ɕiɲski] ( listen); March 4, 1932 – January 23, 2007) was a Polish journalist and writer whose dispatches in book form brought him a global reputation. Also a photographer and poet, he was born in Pińsk—now in Belarus—in the Kresy Wschodnie or eastern borderlands of the second Polish Republic, into poverty: he would say later that he felt at home in Africa as "food was scarce there too and everyone was also barefoot". Kapuściński himself called his work "literary reportage", and reportage d'auteur.  In the English-speaking world, his genre is sometimes characterised as "magic journalism" (in counterpoint to magic realism), a term coined for him by Adam Hochschild in 1994. More recently, during the period since his death, scholars have indicated the similarities between Kapuściński's style of writing and the traditional Polish form known as the gawęda szlachecka. He was one of the top Polish writers most frequently translated into foreign languages, having been surpassed on this count only by the Nobel Prize-winner, Wisława Szymborska

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Image of sheet 19960270 photo 3: Ryszard Kapuściński (Polish pronunciation: [ˈrɨʂart kapuɕˈt͡ɕiɲski] ( listen); March 4, 1932 – January 23, 2007) was a Polish journalist and writer whose dispatches in book form brought him a global reputation. Also a photographer and poet, he was born in Pińsk—now in Belarus—in the Kresy Wschodnie or eastern borderlands of the second Polish Republic, into poverty: he would say later that he felt at home in Africa as "food was scarce there too and everyone was also barefoot".[1] Kapuściński himself called his work "literary reportage",[2] and reportage d'auteur.[3] In the English-speaking world, his genre is sometimes characterised as "magic journalism" (in counterpoint to magic realism), a term coined for him by Adam Hochschild in 1994. More recently, during the period since his death, scholars have indicated the similarities between Kapuściński's style of writing and the traditional Polish form known as the gawęda szlachecka. He was one of the top Polish writers most frequently translated into foreign languages, having been surpassed on this count only by the Nobel Prize-winner, Wisława Szymborska.

mit Toni Linder DEH in Baden Sitzung und Besprechung Photobuch  Zürich 1996

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Image of sheet 19960270 photo 10: Ryszard Kapuściński with Lars Muller, Baden Switzerland 1996.

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Image of sheet 19960270 photo 37: s

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