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Topic: Taja Kramberger


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In the News (Sun 15 Nov 09)

  
 Taja Kramberger
Taja Kramberger is a poet, historical anthropologist, essayist and translator.
Born in 1970 in Ljubljana, Kramberger spent a part of her childhood in Koper/Capodistria, an old Venetian town on the Slovenian coast near the Italian border, and attended primary school there for four years.
In 2002, Kramberger was the principal artistic organizer and coordinator of the poetry translation workshop “Linguaggi di-versi/ Different Languages/ Langages di-vers” in Koper.
slovenia.poetryinternational.org /cwolk/view/25123   (394 words)

  
 Arc Publications - Biography of Taja Kramberger   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Taja Kramberger was born in Ljubljana in 1970 and spent her childhood in the port of Koper (Capodistria) near the Italian border.
She graduated in history from the University of Ljubljana (where she also studied archaeology) and continued her studies in historical anthropology as a postgraduate at the Ljubljana Graduate School of Humanities.
Taja Kramberger is currently editor-in-chief of Monitor ISH — Review of Humanities and Social Sciences and also works as a literary translator from French, Italian, English and Spanish.
www.arcpublications.co.uk /biogs/kramberg.htm   (131 words)

  
 Taja Kramberger -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Taja Kramberger -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article
Taja Kramberger (born September 11, 1970) is a (A native of Slovenia) Slovene (A writer of poems (the term is usually reserved for writers of good poetry)) poet, translator, essayist and historical (A social scientist who specializes in anthropology) anthropologist.
She was born in (The capital of Slovenia) Ljubljana, (A mountainous republic in central Europe; formerly part of the Habsburg monarchy and Yugoslavia; achieved independence in 1991) Slovenia, and lives in Ljubljana.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/T/Ta/Taja_Kramberger.htm   (377 words)

  
 46 deg N 14 deg 30 min E
First a long poem by a younger poet Taja Kramberger - this one is taken from Žametni indigo (Velvet Indigo) (her third book of poems) - in my opinion one the most impressive poems in the book.
Before you read the poem, a short bio: Taja Kramberger was born in 1970.
She is a historical anthropologist, she is the editor-in-chief of the Monitor ISA: Review of Historical, Social and other Anthropologies (in Slovenian ZSA), lives in Ljubljana and is a teaching assistant in the Faculty of Humanities at the University of Littoral in Koper.
46n1430e.blogspot.com   (2151 words)

  
 Slovenia: Modern Slovene literature: 1980s to the present day
In general, it could be said that Slovene poetry is again tending towards serenity rather than elegy.
The youngest generation of poets is led by Peter Semolič (1967), Taja Kramberger (1970), Tone Škrjanec (1953), Primož Čučnik (1971), Gregor Podlogar (1974) and Lucija Stupica (1979).
The playwright Dušan Jovanović received a great deal of attention for his treatment of long-concealed social topics, such as the victims of the Informbiro, a huge political scandal leading to the imprisonment of many innocent victims in the late 1940s and early 1950s, depicted in Vzgoja srca ('Educating the Heart', 1980).
www.culturalprofiles.org.uk /slovenia/Directories/Slovenia_Cultural_Profile/-6847.html   (742 words)

  
 Editorial 1/3/05
And do we agree with Nilmani Phookan, Assam’s most distinguished living poet, that ‘Poetry Is For Those Who Wouldn’t Read It’, or would we rather listen to Slovenian Taja Kramberger and her ‘Poem For Those Who Deserve It’?
Despite the rich tradition of women poets in Slovenia, and their influence on Slovenian literature as a whole, these female writers have been “pushed into the background” for too long, argue our editors.
Kickstarting the new year is Taja Kramberger, one of the strongest poetic voices around, male or female, and one that can both demand and command our attention:
www.poetryinternational.org /cwolk/view/25561   (578 words)

  
 calendar2004   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Reading with Taja Kramberger (Slovenia), Edward Pasewicz and Katerina Rudcenková (Czech Republic).
A reading with Taja Kramberger and Primoz Cucnik (Slovenia) and Georgi Gospodinov (Bulgaria).
for the second year, Literature Across Frontiers organizes a poetry translation workshop at the Vilenica Festival in Slovenia, with poets Mererid Puw Davies (Wales), Taja Kramberger (Slovenia), Juris Kronbergs (Latvia/Sweden), Txema Martinez-Ingles (Catalonia), Novica Novakovic (Slovenia), Louis de Paor (Ireland), Helena Sinervo (Finland), and translators Ana Jelnikar and Barbara Pogacnik.
www.lit-across-frontiers.org /calendar2004.htm   (1043 words)

  
 Slovenia News
The promotion of Slovenian culture comes at the time of Italy's stint as EU president and shortly before Slovenia's accession to the EU.
Last Friday, a literary evening was held at Casa delle Letterature in Rome as part of the Roma Poesia Festival, where representatives of the younger generation of Slovenian literates Taja Kramberger, Matjaž Pikalo and Peter Semolič read their works.
The same day, Project 4, an exhibition by Majda Gregorič, opened in the framework of the event dubbed Contemporary Trieste, a Dialogue with the Arts of Central and Eastern Europe 2003, held in the Studio Tommaseo gallery.
slonews.sta.si /index.php?id=1417   (358 words)

  
 Quality Press in Southeast Europe   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Drago B. Rotar, ISH - Ljubljana Graduate School of the Humanities
Assist Taja Kramberger, ISH - Ljubljana Graduate School of the Humanities
Sabina Mihelj, ISH - Ljubljana Graduate School of the Humanities
www.orbicom.uqam.ca /in_focus/publications/details/2004_qualitypress.html   (339 words)

  
 New Poetry from Eastern Europe   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
About this site Who we are and what we do.
Taja Kramberger from Slovenia, Edward Pasewicz from Poland and Katerina Rudyenkova from the Czech Republic are among the twenty young poets featured in A Fine Line: New Poetry from East and Central Europe, just out from Arc Publications with a preface by Václav Havel.
These poets’; encounter with Western abundance gives them fresh imagery, but also grounds for amusement and irony.
www.lecturelist.org /content/view_lecture/802   (203 words)

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