This article focuses on two novels by Vladimir Sharov, Staraia devochka (The Old Girl) and Voskreshenie Lazaria (The Resurrection of Lazarus), that address the Stalinist repressions of the 1930s. Through analysis of these novels, the article examines two interrelated aspects of Sharov’s works: their representation of traumatic history and their postmodernist style. The paper then examines the way these features of Sharov’s prose relate to broader, current cultural trends. Sharov’s novels contain a synthetic view of history that unites such incompatible elements as Orthodox Christianity, a variety of charismatic sects, Bolshevik ideology, and Stalinism. Despite Sharov’s unconventional view of the Soviet past, the article argues that there ar...
The article discusses the impact on Western scholarship of the opening of secret police archives in ...
The article discusses the cultural and narratological aspects of melancholic understanding of histor...
Building on Marianne Hirsch’s concept of postmemory, this article examines Oksana Zabuzhko’s latest ...
This article focuses on two novels by Vladimir Sharov, Staraia devochka (The Old Girl) and Voskreshe...
© Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies 2017. The article analyzes the instrum...
© Journal of Language and Literature. The article considers the manner of history conceptualization ...
Russian emigration after the 1917 revolution gave birth to a special culture of memory and a specifi...
Maria Ferretti, Stalinism between history and memory : the malaise of Russian memory. The article st...
This article explores the phenomenon of nostalgia for the Soviet era found in contemporary Russian s...
This article discusses the retro-utopian novel Temptation of Archangel Mikhail Groys by Vadim Mesyat...
This article is devoted to a specific case of identification with the Soviet past, when the latter i...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor and Francis via t...
A notable figure in the Russian literary landscape since the scandalous publication of his second no...
This article investigates post-Soviet practices of amateur genealogy in relation to the politics of ...
The article discusses Sergei Loznitsa’s film Schast’e moe (My Joy, 2010) as the most radical critiqu...
The article discusses the impact on Western scholarship of the opening of secret police archives in ...
The article discusses the cultural and narratological aspects of melancholic understanding of histor...
Building on Marianne Hirsch’s concept of postmemory, this article examines Oksana Zabuzhko’s latest ...
This article focuses on two novels by Vladimir Sharov, Staraia devochka (The Old Girl) and Voskreshe...
© Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies 2017. The article analyzes the instrum...
© Journal of Language and Literature. The article considers the manner of history conceptualization ...
Russian emigration after the 1917 revolution gave birth to a special culture of memory and a specifi...
Maria Ferretti, Stalinism between history and memory : the malaise of Russian memory. The article st...
This article explores the phenomenon of nostalgia for the Soviet era found in contemporary Russian s...
This article discusses the retro-utopian novel Temptation of Archangel Mikhail Groys by Vadim Mesyat...
This article is devoted to a specific case of identification with the Soviet past, when the latter i...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor and Francis via t...
A notable figure in the Russian literary landscape since the scandalous publication of his second no...
This article investigates post-Soviet practices of amateur genealogy in relation to the politics of ...
The article discusses Sergei Loznitsa’s film Schast’e moe (My Joy, 2010) as the most radical critiqu...
The article discusses the impact on Western scholarship of the opening of secret police archives in ...
The article discusses the cultural and narratological aspects of melancholic understanding of histor...
Building on Marianne Hirsch’s concept of postmemory, this article examines Oksana Zabuzhko’s latest ...