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Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2023) 75 (2): 207–226.
Published: 01 June 2023
... of East European borders. In the wake of the 2013–14 Euromaidan protests, poets in Ukraine have sought to correct the failures of both Soviet nationalities policy and post-Soviet Ukrainian national-identity formation by weaving Jewish, Ukrainian, and Crimean Tatar histories of collective trauma...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2023) 75 (2): 133–139.
Published: 01 June 2023
... justice protests in the summer of 2020 and completed amid the invasion of Ukraine in 2022—two events with global reverberations that decisively punctured the illusions of a post-imperial, post-socialist, and post-racial world order homogenized by the unfettered spread of neoliberal capitalism—the articles...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2023) 75 (2): 172–187.
Published: 01 June 2023
... deployed to repress protests in Belarus and Kazakhstan between 2020 and 2021 or the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 following the annexation of Crimea in 2014—has prompted commentators and scholars alike to reckon with the past. Imperial returns, both tsarist and Soviet, provide the predominant...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2009) 61 (2): 97–127.
Published: 01 March 2009
... but his own good luck and forms no lasting attachments.24 While Ryleev was so eager to believe in Ukraine’s demo- cratic traditions that he compared this Cossack leader to a freedom-loving Roman, Pushkin (using the same historical documents as Ryleev) came to regard Mazepa as a dangerous...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2017) 69 (4): 394–412.
Published: 01 December 2017
... . “ Global Migration Meets TV Format Adaptation: The Post-Soviet Diaspora, ‘Whiteness,’ and Return Migration in Dancing with the Stars (US) and Ukraine’s The Bachelor .” European Journal of Cultural Studies , vol. 17 , no. 6 , 2014 , pp. 753 – 68 . Sassen Saskia . “ Global Cities and Diasporic...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2009) 61 (4): 447–448.
Published: 01 September 2009
..., and the Ukraine, with Albanian and Romanian authors provided much more space than one might suspect. Segel’s method is chronological and thematic, from WWII to post-89 “postcolonnialism.” Individual literatures are not cordoned off into sepa- rate chapters but loosely grouped according to themes, which...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2009) 61 (4): 449–451.
Published: 01 September 2009
... Germany, Hungary, Macedonia, Poland, Bulgaria, Serbia, Slovenia, and the Ukraine, with Albanian and Romanian authors provided much more space than one might suspect. Segel’s method is chronological and thematic, from WWII to post-89 “postcolonnialism.” Individual literatures are not cordoned off...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2009) 61 (4): 451–452.
Published: 01 September 2009
... Germany, Hungary, Macedonia, Poland, Bulgaria, Serbia, Slovenia, and the Ukraine, with Albanian and Romanian authors provided much more space than one might suspect. Segel’s method is chronological and thematic, from WWII to post-89 “postcolonnialism.” Individual literatures are not cordoned off...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2023) 75 (2): 188–206.
Published: 01 June 2023
.... Borenstein’s analysis of its devastating effects sounds prescient against the backdrop of the ongoing invasion of Ukraine: “A quasi-Eurasianist, quasi-nationalist narrative that ascribed all of Russia’s ills to hostile alien forces, whether they be Maidan activists, resurgent Ukrainian fascists, US and NATO...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2013) 65 (2): 137–161.
Published: 01 June 2013
....” Literarisches Leben in Österreich 1848–1890 . Ed. Amann Klaus Lengauer Hubert Wagner Karl . Vienna : Böhlau , 2000 . 359 – 94 . Print . Chernetsky Vitaly . “Nationalizing Sacher-Masoch: A Curious Case of Cultural Reception in Russia and Ukraine.” Comparative Literature Studies...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2010) 62 (1): 1–21.
Published: 01 January 2010
... a little poet Tchernikhovsky was a god and the fi elds of Ukraine my past. And Bialik brought me a nest for the bird from the warm lands to the cold of my yesterday. And when I grew up I understood I have...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2024) 76 (2): 125–134.
Published: 01 June 2024
.... Perhaps the novel would, in that significant regard, have reified the ethnic cleansing and land theft now perpetrated by Russia. But it might also, at the same time, have exposed the destructive forces now at work in Ukraine by imagining wild people and places seemingly untouched by Russia’s destructive...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2022) 74 (1): 73–98.
Published: 01 March 2022
... Society, based in St. Petersburg, and the republican Southern Society, based in the military garrison at Tulchin in what is now Ukraine. One of the most divisive issues for the conspirators was whether the Russian monarchy should be preserved and, if not, what the fate of the royal family might...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2023) 75 (2): 140–152.
Published: 01 June 2023
... Levitov ( 1850–1918 ) proposed to make Manchuria “Yellow Russia” ( zheltorossiia ), after “Small Russia” (Ukraine) and “White Russia” (Belarus): “By Yellow Russia, I mean the space where the Russian element is blended with the yellow race, especially the region stretching from Lake Baikal to the Pacific...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2003) 55 (3): 217–228.
Published: 01 June 2003
... of the criticism of Once in Europa turns around this point. See Pfeil, Dyer, and Messmer. SECOND WORLD, SECOND SEX/221 Berger envisions working memory as a phenomenon that is dying out with the last of Europe’s peasants: the farmers of the Ukraine, the fishermen...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2024) 76 (2): 135–156.
Published: 01 June 2024
... to the extent that the source of the diasporic imaginary is much more the memory of loss and fear than any rational criterion ( Axel ; Quayson ). Trauma runs through individual histories of exile. Ismailovitch fled Ukraine in the heat of war. Pierre Verger’s travels were triggered by the death of his family...
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Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2023) 75 (2): 153–171.
Published: 01 June 2023
... the structures of Soviet racial prejudice, Ice puts them on display in all their strangeness. Yurii Andrukhovych was born in 1960 in Ivano-Frankivsk, in western Ukraine. He began publishing in literary journals in 1982; in 1985 he cofounded the poetic performance group Bu-Ba-Bu (Burlesque-Bluster...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2022) 74 (1): 52–72.
Published: 01 March 2022
... in a small town in what is now Ukraine, Sholem Aleichem became most famous for his simultaneously satiric and sympathetic depictions of the eastern European Jewish landscape of his youth. In 1964, decades after his death, his fame would be extended when his prose project Tevye the Dairyman was Americanized...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2017) 69 (4): 370–393.
Published: 01 December 2017
..., what is now Ukraine. As he built his literary reputation through the 1830s, drawing greedily on the growing mythology of St. Petersburg, he also participated in the non-literary spheres of the city’s cultural life. Not only did Gogol write passionately about architecture and the visual arts...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2019) 71 (3): 272–297.
Published: 01 September 2019
... him to travel throughout the regions ( wilāyāt ) of Shirvan, Armenia, Daghestan, Cherkessia, and Georgia, as well as to the Ottoman Empire, Ukraine, Russia, Lithuania, and Poland (280). 26 In spite, or perhaps because, of having been introduced to “scholars of great fame of Europe” ( Gulistān...