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Written for the Drawer: Leonid Tsypkin, Uncensored Literature, and Soviet Jewishness

Autor Brett Winestock
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 17 dec 2024
Russian-Jewish writer Leonid Tsypkin (1926–82), a doctor by trade, wrote primarily “for the drawer,” fearing professional consequences if he were to publish his fiction. Despite Tsypkin’s almost complete lack of readership during his lifetime, his work has received international posthumous recognition, with Susan Sontag calling his work “among the most beautiful, exalting, and original achievements of a century’s worth of fiction.” 

Tsypkin’s autobiographical writing explored the impossibility of being both a Russian writer and a Soviet Jew, employing indirection and referentiality. In the first book-length appraisal of Tsypkin and his work, Brett Winestock considers Tsypkin’s fiction as part of a transnational literary response to the horrors of the twentieth century, a reception that helps explain his much-belated international readership. Through close readings of Tsypkin’s work in the context of late-Soviet cultural worlds, Winestock makes an important contribution to studies of Jewish Soviet writing and identity.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780299350000
ISBN-10: 0299350002
Pagini: 222
Ilustrații: 9 b-w illus.
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: University of Wisconsin Press
Colecția University of Wisconsin Press

Notă biografică

Brett Winestock is an assistant professor of Russian studies at Dalhousie University. His research has been published in In geveb: A Journal of Yiddish Studies and the Russian Review.

Cuprins

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Note on Transliteration
Introduction: The Uncensored Man
1 The Uncensored Text as a Family Photo Album
2 A Soviet Jew in Armenia
3 Reading Tsypkin Reading Dostoevsky
4 Tsypkin in St. Petersburg
Conclusion: A Book’s Journey
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Recenzii

“Perceptive. . . . Serves as a rousing case study of how creativity persisted behind the iron curtain. It’s an incisive tribute to an overlooked Soviet author.”

“Tsypkin’s novel Summer in Baden-Baden is an outstanding example of the proposition that, sometimes, manuscripts don’t burn. Winestock shows how Tsypkin uses memory and multiple media to engage with repressed history and the literary tradition in his uncensored writing, which gives us an excruciating and exquisite portrait of the Jewish intellectual in the late Soviet period.”

“A valuable contribution that helps us better understand the complicated phenomenon that is Soviet Jewishness. This book will benefit scholars in Russian and Slavic literary studies, Jewish literary studies, and comparative literature, and will be a good addition to the bookshelf of readers interested in the ruminative twentieth-century prose that Tsypkin’s work represents.”