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・ Elin Karolina Svensson
・ Elin Kattstrom
・ Elin Kling
・ Elin Klinga
・ Elin Kristiansen
・ Elin Landström
・ Elin Lanto
・ Elin Lerum Boasson
・ Elin Magnusson
・ Elin Manahan Thomas
・ Elin Mattsson
・ Elin McCoy
・ Elin Nilsen
・ Elin Nordegren
・ Elin Oğlu
Elin Pelin
・ Elin Pelin (town)
・ Elin Pelin dialect
・ Elin Pelin Point
・ Elin Phillips
・ Elin Pikkuniemi
・ Elin Rodum Agdestein
・ Elin Rosseland
・ Elin Rubensson
・ Elin Sigvardsson
・ Elin Skantze
・ Elin Suleymanov
・ Elin Topuzakov
・ Elin Wallin
・ Elin Wikström


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Elin Pelin : ウィキペディア英語版
Elin Pelin

Elin Pelin ((ブルガリア語:Елин Пелин)) (July 8, 1877 – December 3, 1949), born Dimitar Ivanov Stoyanov ((ブルガリア語:Димитър Иванов Стоянов)) is arguably considered Bulgaria’s best narrator of country life.
Born into a large family in the village of Bailovo near Sofia, he loved writing and reading from an early age. Studying to become a teacher, he taught for a year in 1895 in his native village.
He was first published in 1901, and the respect it earned him in literary circles encouraged him to go to Sofia in 1903, where he worked as a librarian at the university library. It was during this period he took his now-famous pseudonym from the word ''pelin'', which means ''wormwood'' in Bulgarian. He spent 1906-07 in France, perfecting his skills in the language. By this time, he was already a popular writer.
Between 1910 and 1916, he was the director of special collections at the National Library and also served as editor of numerous magazines, including the children’s publication ''Veselushka''. Additionally, he served as a war correspondent during World War I.
In 1911, one of his most famous works appeared, ''The Gerak Family'' (Bulgarian: ''Geratsite''). It is one of the best-known pieces of Bulgarian literature and deals with a traditional village family experiencing the transition from the simplicity of rurality to the modernization of Bulgarian society, a world in which old time practices founded on family love and dedication to the land start to disappear. His second great work, ''Earth'' (Bulgarian: ''Zemya''), was published in 1922. In this book, Pelin created a gallery of characters who identified with the national character and conscience.
Pelin’s works—poems, short stories and novels—recreated the peasant and countryside atmosphere of the old Bulgaria. His predilection for short stories led him to write many, of which the humouristic ''Pizho and Penda'' is perhaps the best known. A genuine realism, with descriptions full of light and color, classify his works. Considered one of the masters of Bulgarian prose, he was also one of the initiators of Bulgarian children’s literature. His tales of ''Yan Bibiyan'' and his voyages to the moon still delight today.
From 1924 until 1944, Pelin served as conservator at the Ivan Vazov Museum, all the while continuing to write, mostly for children, and be published. In 1940, he was named president of the Union of Bulgarian Writers.
After the War, he managed to escape being blacklisted as a forbidden author by the Communist government of the People's Republic of Bulgaria. The regime chose to consider his works as those of a realistic, critical author, а precursor of Socialist Realism who, although not having correctly seized the true nature of the Bourgeois state, knew how to tell about the working life and individual revolt of exploited peasants.
''Earth'' and ''The Gerak Family'', amongst other works, have been filmed several times (1930 and 1957, and 1958, respectively).

==Honour==
The town of Elin Pelin was named after him.
Elin Pelin Point on Smith Island, South Shetland Islands is named after him too.
There is yet another place in America called the Elin Pelin place, where you can view a beautiful monument of Elin Pelin.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Elin Pelin」の詳細全文を読む



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