Joseph Brodsky and Modern Russian Culture: Studies in Slavic Literature and Poetics, cartea 68
Joe Andrew, Katharine Hodgson, Robert Reid, Alexandra Smithen Limba Engleză Hardback – 26 sep 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004708006
ISBN-10: 9004708006
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.83 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Studies in Slavic Literature and Poetics
ISBN-10: 9004708006
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.83 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Studies in Slavic Literature and Poetics
Notă biografică
Joe Andrew is Professor Emeritus at Keele University. He has published over 25 books, and hundreds of other pieces, mostly on nineteenth-century Russian literature, but he has also written on twentieth-century Russian literature, as well as Russian and British film.
Katharine Hodgson is Professor in Russian at the University of Exeter. Her recent work has been on post-Soviet changes to the canon of twentieth-century Russian poetry. She is now exploring the ways in which poets defined their poetic affinities and identities during the Soviet period.
Robert Reid is an Honorary Fellow of Keele University where he was formerly Reader in Russian. He has published widely on Russian literature. His most recent publication is Tolstoi: Art and Influence, edited with Joe Andrew (Brill, 2023).
Alexandra Smith is Reader in Russian Studies at the University of Edinburgh. She has published extensively on Russian literature and culture. Most recently she has co-edited a book on film adaptations of Russian literature: Film Adaptations of Russian Literature: Dialogue and Authorship.
Katharine Hodgson is Professor in Russian at the University of Exeter. Her recent work has been on post-Soviet changes to the canon of twentieth-century Russian poetry. She is now exploring the ways in which poets defined their poetic affinities and identities during the Soviet period.
Robert Reid is an Honorary Fellow of Keele University where he was formerly Reader in Russian. He has published widely on Russian literature. His most recent publication is Tolstoi: Art and Influence, edited with Joe Andrew (Brill, 2023).
Alexandra Smith is Reader in Russian Studies at the University of Edinburgh. She has published extensively on Russian literature and culture. Most recently she has co-edited a book on film adaptations of Russian literature: Film Adaptations of Russian Literature: Dialogue and Authorship.
Cuprins
Contents
List of Charts, Figures and Tables
Notes on Contributors
Joseph Brodsky and Modern Russian Culture: Introduction
Joe Andrew, Katharine Hodgson, Robert Reid and Alexandra Smith
1 The Case of the Polukhina – Brodsky Archive
Arina Bedrina
2 Valentina Polukhina and the Joseph Brodsky Museum Foundation
Mikhail Milchik and Anton Alekseevskii
3 Valentina Polukhina, Lev Loseff and the Invention of Brodsky Studies
Carol Ueland
4 Valentina Polukhina on Metaphor in Brodsky’s and Khlebnikov’s Poetry
Willem G. Weststeijn
5 The Brodsky Legacy: Looking Backwards, Looking Forward
David Bethea
6 Between Reflective Nostalgia and Counter-Memory: the Reception of Brodsky by Russian Authors after 1996
Alexandra Smith
7 Is Brodsky a Poet for Our Time?
Maria Rubins
8 Rethinking Joseph Brodsky: Imperialism, Conservatism, and the Primacy of Aesthetics
Marat Grinberg
9 Joseph Brodsky (1940–1996) and Zbigniew Herbert (1924–1998): ‘a Touch of Normal Classicism’
Zakhar Ishov
10 Joseph Brodsky the War Poet
Katharine Hodgson
11 Jewish Themes in Brodsky’s Poetry: in Search of His Ethnocultural Position
Henrietta Mondry
12 From Variety to Monotony and Back: the Rhythm(s) of Brodsky’s Iambic Tetrameters
Andrei Dobritsyn, Sergei Liapin and Igor Pilshchikov
13 A Room and a Half and the Art of Poetic Cinema
Olga Sobolev
14 Joseph Brodsky’s Postcards to Friends: Translingual Texts
Natasha Rulyova
15 Fifty Shades of Black: an Analysis of Был черный небосвод светлей тех ног … in Conjunction with Its English Translation
Robin Milner-Gulland and Olga Sobolev
16 Echoing Dante’s Footsteps: Joseph Brodsky on the Threshold of The Divine Comedy
Olga Sedakova
Index
List of Charts, Figures and Tables
Notes on Contributors
Joseph Brodsky and Modern Russian Culture: Introduction
Joe Andrew, Katharine Hodgson, Robert Reid and Alexandra Smith
1 The Case of the Polukhina – Brodsky Archive
Arina Bedrina
2 Valentina Polukhina and the Joseph Brodsky Museum Foundation
Mikhail Milchik and Anton Alekseevskii
3 Valentina Polukhina, Lev Loseff and the Invention of Brodsky Studies
Carol Ueland
4 Valentina Polukhina on Metaphor in Brodsky’s and Khlebnikov’s Poetry
Willem G. Weststeijn
5 The Brodsky Legacy: Looking Backwards, Looking Forward
David Bethea
6 Between Reflective Nostalgia and Counter-Memory: the Reception of Brodsky by Russian Authors after 1996
Alexandra Smith
7 Is Brodsky a Poet for Our Time?
Maria Rubins
8 Rethinking Joseph Brodsky: Imperialism, Conservatism, and the Primacy of Aesthetics
Marat Grinberg
9 Joseph Brodsky (1940–1996) and Zbigniew Herbert (1924–1998): ‘a Touch of Normal Classicism’
Zakhar Ishov
10 Joseph Brodsky the War Poet
Katharine Hodgson
11 Jewish Themes in Brodsky’s Poetry: in Search of His Ethnocultural Position
Henrietta Mondry
12 From Variety to Monotony and Back: the Rhythm(s) of Brodsky’s Iambic Tetrameters
Andrei Dobritsyn, Sergei Liapin and Igor Pilshchikov
13 A Room and a Half and the Art of Poetic Cinema
Olga Sobolev
14 Joseph Brodsky’s Postcards to Friends: Translingual Texts
Natasha Rulyova
15 Fifty Shades of Black: an Analysis of Был черный небосвод светлей тех ног … in Conjunction with Its English Translation
Robin Milner-Gulland and Olga Sobolev
16 Echoing Dante’s Footsteps: Joseph Brodsky on the Threshold of The Divine Comedy
Olga Sedakova
Index