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Written in the Dark: Five Poets in the Siege of Leningrad
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Bibliographic Detail
Publisher
Ugly Duckling Presse
Publication date
October 1, 2016
Pages
160
Binding
Paperback
ISBN-13
9781937027575
ISBN-10
1937027570
Dimensions
0.50 by 4.90 by 6.90 in.
Weight
0.84 lbs.
Original list price
$18.00
Amazon.com says people who bought this book also bought:
The Soviet Gulag: Evidence, Interpretation, and Comparison (Russian and East European Studies) | The Road Not Taken: Edward Lansdale and the American Tragedy in Vietnam | Russia in Revolution: An Empire in Crisis, 1890 to 1928 | The War Within | Grief Is the Thing With Feathers | Authoritarian Russia | Alexandra Kollontai
The Soviet Gulag: Evidence, Interpretation, and Comparison (Russian and East European Studies) | The Road Not Taken: Edward Lansdale and the American Tragedy in Vietnam | Russia in Revolution: An Empire in Crisis, 1890 to 1928 | The War Within | Grief Is the Thing With Feathers | Authoritarian Russia | Alexandra Kollontai
Summaries and Reviews
Amazon.com description: Product Description: Poetry. This anthology presents a group of writers and a literary phenomenon that has been unknown even to Russian readers for 70 years, obfuscated by historical amnesia. Gennady Gor, Pavel Zaltsman, Dmitry Maksimov, Sergey Rudakov, and Vladimir Sterligov wrote these works in 1942, during the most severe winter of the Nazi Siege of Leningrad (1941-1944). In striking contrast to state-sanctioned, heroic "Blockade" poetry in which the stoic body of the exemplary citizen triumphs over death, the poems gathered here show the Siege individual (blokadnik) as a weak and desperate incarnation of Job. These poets wrote in situ about the famine, disease, madness, cannibalism, and prostitution around them—subjects so tabooed in those most-Soviet times that they would never think of publishing. Moreover, the formal ambition and macabre avant-gardism of this uncanny body of work match its horrific content, giving birth to a "poor" language which alone could reflect the depth of suffering and psychological destruction experienced by victims of that historical disaster.
Polina Barskova, a Russian- language poet and scholar of the Siege, edited this volume from archival materials, and provided guidance to the translators of the poems: Anand Dibble, Ben Felker-Quinn, Ainsley Morse, Eugene Ostashevsky, Rebekah Smith, Charles Swank, Jason Wagner, and Matvei Yankelevich.
Polina Barskova, a Russian- language poet and scholar of the Siege, edited this volume from archival materials, and provided guidance to the translators of the poems: Anand Dibble, Ben Felker-Quinn, Ainsley Morse, Eugene Ostashevsky, Rebekah Smith, Charles Swank, Jason Wagner, and Matvei Yankelevich.
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