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daniel kharms

Showing 1 - 6 of 6 results for “daniel kharms
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  • Today I Wrote Nothing

    The Selected Writings of Daniil Kharms

    by Daniel Kharms ...
    Featuring the acclaimed novella The Old Woman and darkly humorous short prose sequence Events (Sluchai), Today I Wrote Nothing also includes dozens of short prose pieces, plays, and poems long admired in Russia, but never before available in English. A major contribution for American readers and students of Russian literature and an exciting discovery for fans of contemporary writers as eclectic ... Read more

    $11.79 USD or Free with Kobo Plus

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  • Exotic Moscow Under Western Eyes

    This collection of essays on Turgenev, Goncharov, Conrad, Dostoevsky, Blok, Briusov, Gorkii, Pasternak and Nabokov represents diverse voices but is also unified. One invariant is the recurring distinction between culture and civilization and the vision of Russia as the bearer of culture because it is barbaric. Another stance advocates the synthesis of sense and sensibility and the vision of Apollo ... Read more

    $42.49 USD

  • Mikhail Bakhtin

    Series series Routledge Critical Thinkers
    Mikhail Bakhtin was one of the twentieth century’s most influential literary theorists. This accessible introduction to his thought begins with the questions ‘Why Bakhtin?’ and ‘Who was Bakhtin?’, before dealing in detail with his ideas on authorship and subjecthood, language, dialogism, heteroglossia and the novel, the chronotope, and the carnivalesque. True to their dialogic spirit, these ideas ... Read more

    $39.99 USD

  • Exploring Gogol

    Series series Studies of the Harriman Institute
    For the past 150 years, critics have referred to 'the Gogol problem', by which they mean their inability to account for a life and work that are puzzling, often opaque, yet have proved consistently fascinating to generations of readers. This book proceeds on the assumption that Gogol's life and work, in all their manifestations, form a whole; it identifies, in ways that have eluded critics to date ... Read more

    $26.19 USD

  • Forces of Ambiguity

    Life, Death, Disease and Eros in Thomas Mann’s «Der Zauberberg»

    Thomas Mann’s novel Der Zauberberg (1913–1924) illustrates a change in the author’s conceptions of life, death, disease and Eros following World War I. Set in a Swiss tuberculosis sanatorium, the novel’s main protagonist, Hans Castorp, comes into contact with three pedagogic figures who each represent a different attitude towards these themes. The humanist Settembrini, for example, affirms life ... Read more

    $77.09 USD

  • Men without Women

    Masculinity and Revolution in Russian Fiction, 1917–1929

    In Men without Women Eliot Borenstein examines the literature of the early Soviet period to shed new light on the iconic Russian concept of comradeship. By analyzing a variety of Russian writers who span the ideological spectrum, Borenstein provides an illuminating reading of the construction of masculinity in Soviet culture. In each example he identifies the replacement of blood ties with ... Read more

    $28.79 USD