A history of Russian women's writing, 1820-1992

Bibliographic Information

A history of Russian women's writing, 1820-1992

Catriona Kelly

Clarendon Press, 1994

Available at  / 7 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. [448]-483

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Russian women's writing is now attracting great interest both in the West and in Russia itself. This is the first one-volume history of the subject to appear in any language in modern times. Written from a feminist perspective, the book combines a broad historical survey with close textual analysis. Sections on women's writing in the periods 1820-1880, 1881-1917, 1917-1954 and 1953-1992 are followed by essays on individual writers. Drawing on a wide range of sources, including rare literary journals and almanacs, Catriona Kelly's account shows familiar figures such as Akhmatova, Tsvetaeva and Tolstoya in a radical new context, and brings to light a gallery of fascinating but neglected writers including Elena Gan, Nadezhda Teffi, Natalya Baranskaya, and Nina Sadur. The text is supported by quotations from the Russian, all with English translations. Complemented by Dr Kelly's "Anthology of Russian Women's Writing 1777-1992" (also available from OUP), this is a source for readers and students of women's writing, and for all those concerned with women's history, the history of feminism and Russian literature in general. Catriona Kelly is the author of "Petrushka: The Russian Carnival Puppet Theatre", editor of "Discontinuous Discourses in Modern Russian Literature" (with Michael Makin and David Shepherd), and has translated Leonid Borodin's "The Third Truth" and Sergei Kaledin's "The Humble Cemetery".

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: "Not Written by a Lady". Part 1: the "feminine pen" and the imagination of national tradition - Russian women's writing 1820-1880
  • Mariya Zhukova (1804-1855)
  • Karolina Pavlova (1807-1893)
  • Elena Gan (1814-1842). Part 2: configurations of authority - feminism, modernism and mass culture 1881-1917
  • Olga Shapir (1850-1916)
  • Nadezhda Teffi (1872-1952)
  • Anna Akhmatova (1889-1966). Part 3: class war and the home front - from the Revolution to the death of Stalin 1917-1953
  • Sofiya Parnok (1885-1933)
  • Marina Tsvetaeva (1892-1941)
  • Vera Bulich (1898-1954). Part 4: who wants to be a man? - de-Stalinizing gender 1954-1992
  • Natalya Baranskaya (1908- )
  • Elena Shvarts (1948- )
  • Olga Sedakova (1949- )
  • Nina Sadur (1950- )
  • instead of an afterword - some concluding remarks.

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