Notes From the Blockade

de

, ,

Éditeur :

Vintage Digital

Paru le : 2011-05-31

The 900-day siege of Leningrad (1941-44) was one of the turning points of the Second World War. It slowed down the German advance into Russia and became a national symbol of survival and resistance. An estimated one million civilians died, most of them from cold and starvation. Lydia Ginzburg, a res...
Voir tout
Ce livre est accessible aux handicaps Voir les informations d'accessibilité
Ebook téléchargement , DRM LCP 🛈 DRM Adobe 🛈
Compatible lecture en ligne (streaming)
10,99
Ajouter à ma liste d'envies
Téléchargement immédiat
Dès validation de votre commande
Image Louise Reader présentation

Louise Reader

Lisez ce titre sur l'application Louise Reader.

À propos



Collection
n.c

Parution
2011-05-31

Pages
240 pages

EAN papier
9780099583387

Lydia Yakovlevna Ginzburg was born in Odessa in 1902, and moved to Leningrad in 1922, where she studied at the famous Institute for Art History as a student and later as a colleague of Victor Shklovsky, Yury Tynianov and Boris Eikhenbaum, the major figures of Russian Formalism. She survived the purges, the 900-day siege of Leningrad and the anti-Semitic campaigns that followed the war to become, in the 1960s-’80s, a friend and inspiration to a younger generation of Petersburg literary scholars and poets, including Alexander Kushner and Elena Shvarts. She was a prominent cultural figure in the years of perestroika, when she began to publish notes and essays that she been writing for the ‘desk drawer’ starting in the 1920s. Her books include venerated works of literary scholarship such as On Lyric Poetry, On Psychological Prose (published in the English translation from Princeton University Press) and On the Literary Hero. The collection of her prose that appeared in her lifetime, Person at a Writing Table (1989), and which contained Notes from the Blockade, as well as posthumous editions, have established Ginzburg as innovative author of what she called ‘in-between’ genres – notes, essays, and fragmentary narratives – that describe and analyse the human experience of a historically catastrophic era spanning much of the twentieth century. Lydia Ginzburg died in 1990.

Caractéristiques détaillées - droits

EAN EPUB
9781446475591
Prix
10,99 €
Nombre pages copiables
24
Nombre pages imprimables
24
Taille du fichier
215 Ko

Suggestions personnalisées