Malířová, Olbracht and other well-known writers signed the 1929 Manifesto of the Seven in protest against the cultural policy of the new KSČ leadership. She along the other writers were expelled from the party.[2]
Malířová's work is characterized by her commitment to communism and the women's movement. Her theme is the struggle of women for self-realization and against social constraints. The literary high point of her work is the 1930s, when she begins to experiment with fragmentary and more complex literary forms. Malířová also wrote fairy tales and children's literature and translated the works of famous European writers such as Victor Hugo, Claude Farrère, B. Traven and Thomas Mann.[3]
Malířová and Olbracht remained partners until 1935, when he left her for his future wife Jaroslav Kellerová. In 1936, she again traveled to several European countries and visited, together with a delegation of Czech intellectuals, Spain during the Civil War to support the Republican cause.[2]
She died of heart disease in 1940 in Prague during the Nazi occupation. Her urn was placed in the columbarium in Prague-Strašnice. Later, her sister Růžena Nasková was also buried in the same grave.[1]
Works
Lidské srdce (1901)
Právo na štěstí (1908)
Malé příběhy (1910)
Víno (1912)
Popel (1914)
Rudé besídky
Požehnání (1920)
Povídky s dobrým koncem (1923)
Deset životů (1937)
Barva krve
Vítězství
Stříbrný racek a jiné povídky
Křehké květiny
Mariola
Dědictví
Nový rok
Pod kaštanem (1939)
Zápisky z nemoci
References
12"Helena Malířová". Encyklopedie Prahy 2 (in Czech). 2018-08-22. Retrieved 2023-03-27.