Soon after Ernest Hemingway won the Nobel Prize, his works returned to the Soviet literary market. However, cultural relations between the United States and the USSR were disrupted when Boris Pasternak was selected for the prize in 1958. This article examines Hemingway\u27s reaction to Pasternak\u27s refusal of the prize, as well as his understanding of Giangiacomo Feltrinelli\u27s role in the publication of Doctor Zhivago abroad. It also explores the precarious position of authors in literary markets by examining how Hemingway became an iconic figure in the USSR, while Pasternak was simultaneously denied similar accolades for his work
This article provides an analysis of the Swedish reception and Nobel Prize nominations of William So...
Ernest Miller Hemingway (1899-1961) a famous American Nobel laureate (1954), is considered the maste...
The name of Ernest Hemingway was first mentioned in Slovenian literary criticism by the writer and c...
The article is devoted to the history of study of Boris Pasternak’s novel “Doctor Zhivago” since its...
Recounts the contents of Hemingway’s 1947 and 1954 Nobel Prize nominations. Uncovers the Academy’s e...
Drawing on newly declassified files, this is the story of how a book forbidden in the Soviet Union b...
Ernest Hemingway\u27s popularity within the Soviet Union was connected to his participation in the S...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Autho...
This project examines the problem of historical representation in literary fiction, taking as its su...
The article analyses the way a more rapid international circulation of literary texts alters the way...
Examines a controversy arising from the characterization in For Whom the Bell Tolls of a real-life C...
Consumers of culture can often view history subjectively, perceiving people and events through an id...
Consumers of culture can often view history subjectively, perceiving people and events through an id...
This essay investigates the dynamics that led to the literary reception of Ernest Hemingway before t...
On Hemingway’s enduring literary legacy and mythic status, with the latter (cultivated in part by th...
This article provides an analysis of the Swedish reception and Nobel Prize nominations of William So...
Ernest Miller Hemingway (1899-1961) a famous American Nobel laureate (1954), is considered the maste...
The name of Ernest Hemingway was first mentioned in Slovenian literary criticism by the writer and c...
The article is devoted to the history of study of Boris Pasternak’s novel “Doctor Zhivago” since its...
Recounts the contents of Hemingway’s 1947 and 1954 Nobel Prize nominations. Uncovers the Academy’s e...
Drawing on newly declassified files, this is the story of how a book forbidden in the Soviet Union b...
Ernest Hemingway\u27s popularity within the Soviet Union was connected to his participation in the S...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Autho...
This project examines the problem of historical representation in literary fiction, taking as its su...
The article analyses the way a more rapid international circulation of literary texts alters the way...
Examines a controversy arising from the characterization in For Whom the Bell Tolls of a real-life C...
Consumers of culture can often view history subjectively, perceiving people and events through an id...
Consumers of culture can often view history subjectively, perceiving people and events through an id...
This essay investigates the dynamics that led to the literary reception of Ernest Hemingway before t...
On Hemingway’s enduring literary legacy and mythic status, with the latter (cultivated in part by th...
This article provides an analysis of the Swedish reception and Nobel Prize nominations of William So...
Ernest Miller Hemingway (1899-1961) a famous American Nobel laureate (1954), is considered the maste...
The name of Ernest Hemingway was first mentioned in Slovenian literary criticism by the writer and c...