The literary field under Communist rule / / edited by Ausra Jurgutiene and Dalia Satkauskyte.

"This volume widens the field of Soviet literature studies by interpreting it as a multinational project, with national literatures acting not as copies of the Russian model, but as creators of a multidimensional literary space. The book proposes a reconsideration of Pierre Bourdieu's theo...

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Bibliographic Details
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Boston : : Academic Studies Press,, [2018]
2018
Year of Publication:2018
Language:English
Series:Lithuanian studies without borders
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (257 pages).
Notes:"The problem "The Literary Field under the Communist Regime: Structure, Functions, 'Illusio'" was discussed by literary scholars from various European countries and the USA who came to the Institute of Lithuanian Literature and Folklore in Vilnius (2015). At this conference the literary scholars aimed to overcome the dualistic schemes prevailing in the research of literatures under the communist regime and to create more complex, nuanced, and contextualized frameworks for their analyses. Pierre Bourdieu's concept of literary field suggested a systematic approach towards literary practices, highlighting the functional relationship between literature and society, revealing a network of interconnected individual and collective literary agents, emphasizing the role of illusio (the tendency of participants to engage in the political game and believe in its significance), and combining internal and external analysis of literary works. Part of the discussion from this conference was published in the journal Colloquia, "A Discussion on Methodology for Researching Soviet Literary Space" (2015) and the other part; the most relevant articles have been written for this collection"-- from the preface.
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Table of Contents:
  • [Part 1] Soviet literature as theoretical and historical problem. Evgeny Dobrenko: Soviet multinational literature: approaches, problems, and perspectives of study
  • Dalia Satkauskyte: The role of Aesopian language in the literary field: autonomy in question
  • Vilius Ivanauskas: Between universalism and localism: the strategies of Soviet Lithuanian writers and "sandwiched" Lithuanian ethnic particularism
  • [Part 2] Contradictions in Lithuanian literary field. Nerija Putinaite: Atheist autobiography: politics, the literary canon, and restructured experience
  • Solveiga Daugirdaite: Sartre and De Beauvoir encounter the pensive Christ
  • Loreta Macianskaite: The production of Eimuntas Nekrosius's Kvadratas as a palimpsest of Soviet-era memory
  • Donata Mitaite: The experiences of one generation of Soviet poets, their illusions and choices
  • Ausra Jurgutiene: The art of compromise in literary criticism that legitimated Soviet-era modernism
  • [Part 3] Hermeneutics of truth and compromise in literatures of other Soviet Republics. Valentyna Kharkhun: Ukrainian literature of the late Soviet period: the history of three generations of poets
  • Pavel Arsenev: State of emergency literature: Varlam Shalamov vs. "progressive humanity"
  • Eva Eglaja-Kristsone: Reading literary history through the archives: the case of the Latvian literary journal Karogs
  • Anneli Mihkelev: Hamlet and folklore as elements of the resistance movement in Estonian literature.