Reconstructing the Canon

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Anna Akhmatova
Brat La
Castalian Spring
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Common Language
Denser
Elena Shvarts
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Face To Face
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Hay Ward
Literary criticism
literary imperialism debate
Liudmila Petrushevskaia
Mood Indigo
Moscow literary circles
Moscow Tartu School
Persona
Post-war
postmodern Russian literature
Rodina
Rural Literature
Russian 1980s cultural transformation
Russian Federation
Russian Literature
Russian poetry analysis
Russian writers
Sasha Sokolov
Soviet literary criticism
Soviet literature
Soviet Patriotism
Soviet writers
urban prose studies
Urban Writers
Vasilii Belov
Village Prose
Vladimir Makanin
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367721947
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Oct 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book, first published in 2000, features analyses about and by some of the most important Russian writers of the 1980s, a period of great changes in the cultural life of Russia when the controls of Soviet communism gave way to a wide diversity of unfettered writing. A variety of critical approaches matches the diversity of Russian writers considered here. The book features David Bethea’s theoretical discussion of the work of the outstanding critic and cholar Iurii Lotman and a fascinating extending interview with leading poet Ol’ga Sedakova. Several writers and works receive their first scholarly analyses in English, such as Sasha Sokolov’s complex postmodern novel, Between Dog and Wolf, Elena Shvarts’s poetry, and Zinovii Zinik’s work. Aleksandr Zinov’ev’s prose is subjected to a searching formal analysis. The book contains an essay on the literary environment of the Moscow poet Mikhail Aizenberg, and a highly controversial article that reviews Russian writing as an extension of imperialism. Writers who for various reasons fell into opprobrium during the 1980s include the Soviet village writers and the late Andrei Siniavskii (Abram Tertz). A survey of urban prose in the late 1980s looks into an uncertain future, while playwright Viktor Slavkin represents the best of contemporary Russian drama.