Wlassics was born in Budapest, Hungary in 1936 to an aristocratic family. After World War II and the formation of the Hungarian People's Republic, his father was imprisoned for refusing to give up his title and mansion. Though Wlassics was well-educated, he was not allowed to attend university because of his upper-class status, instead working first in manual labour and then in translation. One of the works he translated into Hungarian during this time was Federico García Lorca's Romancero gitano.[1]
Much of the career of Wlassics was devoted to the study of the Italian poet Dante Alighieri. While at the University of Virginia, Wlassics founded Lectura Dantis, a journal of "Dante research and interpretation" that ran twice a year[3][4] and wrote an original translation of Dante's Inferno.[5] From 1990 to 1995, Wlassics published a series of Introductory Readings for Dante's Divine Comedy, which was praised by a colleague as "the first complete, multivoice series in English of readings for the Commedia."[6]
Wlassics was also considered an expert on other Italian figures such as Galileo Galilei, Giovanni Verga, and Cesare Pavese.[7] One academic wrote that his work on the latter "revolutionized the field of Pavese studies".[8]
Legacy
Wlassics died on 28 October 1998. He received in-depth obituaries in the Dante Society of America's journal Dante Studies[9] and in the journal Italica.[10] The University of Virginia's Department of Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese has held an ongoing Tibor Wlassics Faculty Lecture Series since 1984.[11]