'H. G. Wells and All Things Russian' examines Wells's keen interest in Russian culture and development, and how Russia and the Soviet Union were, in turn, profoundly influenced by his works and his visits to the country.
'H. G. Wells and All Things Russian' examines Wells's keen interest in Russian culture and development, and how Russia and the Soviet Union were, in turn, profoundly influenced by his works and his visits to the country.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Galya Diment is the Byron W. and Alice L. Lockwood Professor in the Humanities at the University of Washington, USA, where she teaches Russian and comparative literature. The author of The Autobiographical Novel of Co-Consciousness: Goncharov, Woolf and Joyce (1994), Pniniad: Vladimir Nabokov and Marc Szeftel (1997, 2013) and A Russian Jew of Bloomsbury: The Life and Times of Samuel Koteliansky (2011, 2013), Diment has published more than fifty articles. In addition, she has edited/co-edited Between Heaven and Hell: The Myth of Siberia in Russian Culture (1993), Goncharov's 'Oblomov': A Critical Companion (1998), MLA Approaches to Teaching 'Lolita' (2008) and Katherine Mansfield and Russia (2017). Her articles have also appeared in the Times Literary Supplement, the London Magazine and New York Magazine.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction: 'The Wells Effect', Galya Diment WELLS IN RUSSIA PRE-WORLD WAR II 1. Yevgeny Zamyatin and the Wellsian Utopia, Maxim Shadurski 2. Time Machines and Metamorphoses: H. G. Wells's Influence on Mikhail Bulgakov and Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky, Muireann Maguire 3. 'The Wellsian Twist' in Nabokov's 'Terra Incognita', Zoran Kuzmanovich POST WORLD WAR II 4. 'Unregenerate Mass Nature' in H. G. Wells and the Brothers Strugatsky, Richard Boyechko 5. Culturology: Yuly Kagarlitsky's Life of Wells, Patrick Parrinder 6. 'Come and Visit Us in Ten Years' Time!': Representation of H. G. Wells on the Russian Stage and Screen, Olga Sobolev and Angus Wrenn RUSSIA IN WELLS 7. Russia and H. G. Wells's 'Babes in the Darkling Wood', David Rampton 8. Wells and Gorky, Ira Nadel 9. Odette Keun versus H. G. Wells on Russia, Galya Diment Appendix. Translations 1. V. D. Nabokov on Visiting Wells in England in 1916 (trans. Galya Diment) 2. Alexander Amfiteatrov on Wells's Visit to Russia in 1920 (trans. Veronica Muskheli) 3. Alexander Belyaev on the Wells-Lenin debate about 'Utopias' (trans. Galya Diment) 4. Karl Radek and Solomon Lozovsky to Stalin (trans. Galya Diment) 5. Yury Olesha on His Love for Wells (trans. Galya Diment) 6. Yuly Kagarlitsky on Being a Soviet Biographer of Wells (trans. Veronica Muskheli) Bibliography Index.
Introduction: 'The Wells Effect', Galya Diment WELLS IN RUSSIA PRE-WORLD WAR II 1. Yevgeny Zamyatin and the Wellsian Utopia, Maxim Shadurski 2. Time Machines and Metamorphoses: H. G. Wells's Influence on Mikhail Bulgakov and Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky, Muireann Maguire 3. 'The Wellsian Twist' in Nabokov's 'Terra Incognita', Zoran Kuzmanovich POST WORLD WAR II 4. 'Unregenerate Mass Nature' in H. G. Wells and the Brothers Strugatsky, Richard Boyechko 5. Culturology: Yuly Kagarlitsky's Life of Wells, Patrick Parrinder 6. 'Come and Visit Us in Ten Years' Time!': Representation of H. G. Wells on the Russian Stage and Screen, Olga Sobolev and Angus Wrenn RUSSIA IN WELLS 7. Russia and H. G. Wells's 'Babes in the Darkling Wood', David Rampton 8. Wells and Gorky, Ira Nadel 9. Odette Keun versus H. G. Wells on Russia, Galya Diment Appendix. Translations 1. V. D. Nabokov on Visiting Wells in England in 1916 (trans. Galya Diment) 2. Alexander Amfiteatrov on Wells's Visit to Russia in 1920 (trans. Veronica Muskheli) 3. Alexander Belyaev on the Wells-Lenin debate about 'Utopias' (trans. Galya Diment) 4. Karl Radek and Solomon Lozovsky to Stalin (trans. Galya Diment) 5. Yury Olesha on His Love for Wells (trans. Galya Diment) 6. Yuly Kagarlitsky on Being a Soviet Biographer of Wells (trans. Veronica Muskheli) Bibliography Index.
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