Māra Zālīte


Māra Zālīte is a well-known Latvian writer and cultural worker.
Zālīte’s literary works include poetry, essays, plays, drama, prose and librettos. They often deal with historical problems and have symbolic meanings that correspond with mythology and Latvian culture and people. The author’s works have been translated in many languages including Russian, English, German, Swedish, Estonian, and French.
Zālīte’s first literary works were published in the early 1970s. During the 1980s, Zālīte turned to playwriting, composing librettos for musicals and writing rock operas. Her works have used music by many eminent Latvian artists such as Raimonds Pauls and Jānis Lūsēns.
The writer has earned many literary prizes and national awards, including the Order of the Three Stars, and is considered as one of the greatest Latvian social figures.
Her first prose work – the autobiographical novel “Five fingers”, earned wide recognition from both readers and members of the writing community.

Early life

Māra Zālīte was born in the city of Krasnoyarsk, in Siberia, where her family had been deported in 1941.
She spent 4 and a half years of her childhood in Krasnoyarsk, Siberia until the autumn of 1956 when her parents got the permission to return to their homeland of Latvia. She spent the rest of her childhood in Slampes Kalna Ķivuļi. Zālīte studied elementary and secondary school at Slampes primary school.

Career

Māra Zālīte is a graduate from Murjāņi sports boarding school and Faculty of Philology of the University of Latvia . Between years 1974 and 1989, Zālīte worked as a technical assistant at the Writers’ Union of Latvia, as a manager of the New Writers’ Studio and as a poetry consultant for the magazine “Liesma”. In 1989, she became chief editor of the publishing house and magazine “Karogs”, a position she held until 2000, when she became president of the Latvian Authors’ Association . Māra Zālīte has also been a member of the City Council of the Three-Star Order, chairman of a State Language Commission as well as a member of Chapter of Orders.
She is also a trust member of the National Library Board, an honorary member of the Academy of Sciences and one of the 14 founders of “Koknese foundation”.
Zālīte has been awarded the Three Star Order, Commemorative Medal of Barricades and has received several literary prizes.

Family

Māra Zālīte is married to Jānis Ķuzulis and they have two children – Jānis Ķuzulis and Ilze Ķuzule-Skrastiņa as well as three grandchildren – Krišjānis, Emīlija and Marats. She currently lives in Riga and often stays at her countryside house in Tukums.

Major awards

Vladimir Mayakovsky Award
Ojārs Vācietis prize
Aspazija Award
The Herder Prize
The Commemorative Medal for Participants of the Barricades of 1991 for sinigificant involvement in the Barricades of 1991.
Order of the Three Stars for involvement in the Barricades.
Cross of Recognition for outstanding merits in social and cultural work, a brilliant creative contribution in Latvian literature and the strengthening of the Latvian language.
The International Baltic Sea Region Jānis Baltvilks Prize in Children’s Literature and Book Art prize for the children tale "Tango un Tūtiņa ciemos" ''.
The Annual Latvian Literary Award for collection of plays "Sauciet to par teātri"; play "Zemes nodoklis" and autobiographical novel "Pieci pirksti".

Style and genre

At the start of Zālīte’s career, during the time of her first significant publication of poem “Balādīte” in the magazine “Karogs” in 1972 the main ideas in her poetry were about life and youth in the 1970s — looking for the meaning of life, development of personality, values, and overcoming the problems of life.
Alongside with poetry, Zālīte has written drama. In the 1980s, the writer focused more on the philosophical and emotional motifs combining history and modern times as well as referencing ongoing social and political issues, often associated with Latvian culture and mythology. The tragic Latvian fate and nation’s longing for freedom is best depicted in the poetry collection “Debesis, debesis”.
Initially, her playwriting developed as a continuation of her poetry. She has written a handful of plays and librettos combining strong individual characters with topics of history, myths and national identity, her most popular one being the libretto for the mythic-symbolic rock opera “The Bearslayer” which became a symbol of the Third Latvian awakening.
At the end of the 20th century, Zālīte’s 6th poetry collection “Apkārtne” pictured a person aware of his surroundings and the problems he faces – freedom, chaos, hope, loss and depression.
In all of the author's literary career her works have been strongly influenced by her childhood which is best depicted in her first prose works – the autobiographical novels “Five fingers” and “Paradīzes putni” that talk about occupation and childhood spent in the Soviet Union’s regime. Readers describe these works as poetic, nostalgic and passionate.
Māra Zālīte has also released some literary works for children.

Published works

Poetry collections