Stanislaw Lem
Stanisław Lem (born September 12, 1921) is a Polish satirical, philosophical and science fiction writer. His books have been translated into 40 languages and sold over 27 million copies.
Stanisław Lem was born in LwÃÂów, Poland in 1921 (now Lviv, Ukraine), the son of a physician. He studied medicine at LwÃÂów University, but World War II interrupted his studies. During the war and Nazi occupation Lem worked as a car mechanic and welder, and was a member of the resistance fighting against the Germans. Toward the end of the war the Red Army occupied Poland, and the country was closely controlled by the Soviet Union for the next 50 years. In 1946 Lem "repatriated" from Soviet territory to KrakÃÂów and started medical studies at the Jagiellonian University. After finishing his studies Stanislaw Lem opted not to take final exams to avoid a career as a military doctor, and received only a certificate of completion of studies. He worked as a research assistant in a scientific institution and started to write stories in his spare time. In 1981 he received a honorary degree from the Wroclaw Polytechnic, later from Opole University, University of LwÃÂów, and finally from the Jagiellonian University. See also [1].
Lem principally wrote about contact between humans and profoundly alien civilizations and about the technological future of humanity. The latter topic included, by implication, ideal and utopian societies and the problem of human existence in a world where there is little to do because of technological development. His alien societies included swarms of mechanical flies (in The Invincible) and the Ocean (in Solaris). Issues of technological utopias appeared in Peace on Earth, in Observation on the Spot, and, to a lesser extent, in The Cyberiad. Lem is a proponent of modern Western civilization, and, despite having spent a significant portion of his career in Communist Poland and its attendant ideological censorship, his opus contains harsh critcism of collectivist societies.
Lem was awarded an honorary membership in the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA) in 1973, which was then rescinded in 1976 after he made comments about contemporary science fiction literature. He described it as ill thought-out, poorly written, and interested more in adventure than ideas or new literary forms. The SWFA then offered him a regular membership, which he refused.
In 1977 he was recognized as a honorary citizen of KrakÃÂów.
Texts by Lem were set to music by Esa-Pekka Salonen in his 1982 piece, Floof.
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Film and TV adaptations
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