
Život je negdje drugdje
Jaromil, a young poet raised by a possessive mother, seeks a "real life" in poetry and revolution. His lyrical youth, love, and idealism lead him into conformity and betrayal of intimate relationships – he dies young and unfulfilled.
Life is Elsewhere is a satirical and philosophical novel by Milan Kundera, written in 1969, first published in French in 1973 (Kundera was already in exile at the time). The novel is a portrait of the artist as a young man – the lyric poet Jaromil, whose life is marked by his mother's obsessive love and his search for a "real life" that is always "somewhere else".
The plot spans from the 1930s to the early 1950s in Czechoslovakia: Jaromil's birth (his mother gives birth to him despite his father's request for an abortion), his childhood under his mother's influence (she sees him as a genius, sticks his verses on the wall), puberty with masturbation and fantasies about Xavier (an ideal alter ego), first loves (a red-haired saleswoman, a married woman) and finally his political involvement in the communist revolution of 1948–1949.
The mother (called Maman) is the central figure – possessive, romantic, lives through her son, rejects reality and drives Jaromil into a lyrical illusion. Jaromil, insecure and narcissistic, uses poetry as an escape from real life: he writes pathetic verses, dreams of revolution as an aesthetic act, but when the revolution wins, he becomes a conformist – betrays his friends, reports his mistress to the police out of jealousy and fear. His “lyrical age” (youth) is at once romantic and dangerous: lyricism merges with totalitarianism, poetry becomes propaganda.
The novel is divided into sections (the birth of the poet, Xavier, masturbation, mother, revolution, etc.), with Kundera’s typical ironic, essayistic digressions on art, love, politics and youth. The book criticizes romantic lyricism (Rimbaud, Shelley) which leads to political fanaticism – Jaromil is a caricature of a poet-revolutionary who sacrifices the intimate for the grandiose. There are no heroes: Jaromil is pathetic, the mother is pathetic, the revolution is fake.
The style is sharp, witty, erotic, with long philosophical passages – Kundera dissects youth as a "lyrical age" full of lies and self-deception. The novel is an early Kundera, part of the Czech cycle (along with The Joke, Funny Loves), but it announces later themes of alienation and false existence. In Croatian translation it remains one of Kundera's most appreciated novels – a bitter portrait of how idealism easily turns into cynicism and betrayal.
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