Serapion Sister

Serapion Sister
Title Serapion Sister PDF eBook
Author Leslie Dorfman Davis
Publisher Northwestern University Press
Pages 290
Release 2001
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9780810115798

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Elizaveta Polonskaja (1890-1969), was a poet, translator, children's writer, journalist and noted memoirist. This text attempts to restore the neglected poet to her rightful place in the Russian literary tradition, while exploring the the politics that served to obscure her.

Serapion Sister

Serapion Sister
Title Serapion Sister PDF eBook
Author Leslie Jane Dorfman
Publisher
Pages 592
Release 1996
Genre
ISBN

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Jewish Women Writers in the Soviet Union

Jewish Women Writers in the Soviet Union
Title Jewish Women Writers in the Soviet Union PDF eBook
Author Rina Lapidus
Publisher Routledge
Pages 375
Release 2013-03-01
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1136645462

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This book presents the lives and works of eleven Jewish women authors who lived in the Soviet Union, and who wrote and published their works in Russian. The works include poems, novels, memoirs and other writing. The book provides an overview of the life of each author, an overview of each author’s literary output, and an assessment of each author’s often conflicted view of her "feminine self" and of her "Jewish self". At a time when the large Jewish population which lived within the Soviet Union was threatened under Stalin’s prosecutions the book provides highly-informative insights into what it was like to be a Jewish woman in the Soviet Union in this period. The writers presented are: Alexandra Brustein, Elizaveta Polonskaia, Raisa Bloch, Hanna Levina, Ol'ga Ziv, Yulia Neiman, Rahil’ Baumwohl’, Margarita Alliger, Sarah Levina-Kul’neva, Sarah Pogreb and Zinaida Mirkina.

The Sisters

The Sisters
Title The Sisters PDF eBook
Author Georg Ebers
Publisher BoD – Books on Demand
Pages 57
Release 2018-09-21
Genre Fiction
ISBN 3734051967

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Reproduction of the original: The Sisters by Georg Ebers

Dog-Headed Death

Dog-Headed Death
Title Dog-Headed Death PDF eBook
Author Ray Faraday Nelson
Publisher Wildside Press LLC
Pages 214
Release 2014-09-15
Genre Fiction
ISBN 1479403695

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Meet Centurion Gaius Hesperian; a reflective and compassionate member of Emperor Nero’s palace guard with a knack for detective work. (He’s considered rather odd by his fellow officers because he doesn’t torture witnesses.) When Odysseus Memnon, a Greek-Egyptian shipping magnate, is found murdered in his Alexandrian mansion after annoucing his conversion to an evangelistic cult to which he plans to donate all of his worldly goods, it's up to Gaius Hesperian to solve the crime.

Western Crime Fiction Goes East

Western Crime Fiction Goes East
Title Western Crime Fiction Goes East PDF eBook
Author Boris Dralyuk
Publisher BRILL
Pages 197
Release 2012-09-06
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9004233105

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This volume examines the staggering popularity of early-20th-century Russian detective serials, traditionally maligned as 'Pinkertonovshchina,' and posits the 'red Pinkerton' as a vital 'missing link' between pre- and post-Revolutionary popular literature.

The Writer in Petrograd and the House of Arts

The Writer in Petrograd and the House of Arts
Title The Writer in Petrograd and the House of Arts PDF eBook
Author Martha Weitzel Hickey
Publisher Northwestern University Press
Pages 630
Release 2009-06-16
Genre History
ISBN 0810125277

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Founded by Maksim Gorky and Kornei Chukovsky in 1919 and disbanded in 1922, the Petrograd House of Arts occupied a crucial moment in Russia's cultural history. By chronicling the rise and fall of this literary landmark, this book conveys in greater depth and detail than ever before a significant but little studied period in Soviet literature. Poised between Russian culture's past and her Soviet future, between pre- and post-Revolutionary generations, this once lavish private home on the Nevsky Prospekt housed as many as fifty-six poets, novelists, critics, and artists at one time, during a period of great social and political turbulence. And as such, Hickey contends, the House of Arts served as a crucible for a literature in transition. Hickey shows how the House of Arts, though virtually ignored by Soviet-era cultural historians, played a critical role in shaping the lively literature of the next decade, a literature often straddling the border between fiction and non-fiction. Considering prose writers such as Yevgeny Zamyatin, Olga Forsh, the Serapion Brothers group, Viktor Shklovsky, Boris Eikhenbaum, as well as poets including Alexander Blok, Nikolay Gumilev, Anna Radlova, Osip Mandelstam, and Vladislav Khodasevich, she traces the comings and goings at the House of Arts: the meetings and readings and lectures and, most of all, the powerful influence of these interactions on those who briefly lived and worked there. In her work, the Petrograd House of Arts appears for the first time in all its complexity and importance, as a focal point for the social and cultural ferment of the day, and a turning point in the direction of Russian literature and criticism.