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Russian 20th Century Short Stories course outline 2018-19

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Students must note that failure to do so may result in de-registration from the module, which may have a significant impact on their overall degree classification DESCRIPTION While the

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Department of Modern Languages and Culture/Department of Comparative

Literatures and Cultures

School of Languages, Linguistics and Film

Queen Mary, University of London

COM5021/RUS4021/5021 Russian Short Stories: The Twentieth Century

Pre-requisite: none (for the RUS5021, ability to read in Russian)

Assessment: COM5021/RUS5021: One 1500-word essay (40 per cent); one 2500-word essay (60 per cent) RUS4021 students: 1000-word essay (40 percent); one 2000 word

essay (60 percent)

Credit Value: 15 credits

Level: 4/5

Semester: 1/3; Timetable: Lecture and Seminar Monday 9 am - 11, Bancroft 3.11

Organiser: Professor Jeremy Hicks

Contact details: Room: Arts One, 2.43; Office hours: Mon 12.30-1.30, Tues 2-3,

Tel.: 020 7882 8306; j.g.hicks@qmul.ac.uk

All students are expected to follow the School's guidelines and regulations, set out in the handbook, in all matters regarding this module Students must note that failure to

do so may result in de-registration from the module, which may have a significant impact on their overall degree classification

DESCRIPTION

While the novel has enjoyed a privileged status for much of the twentieth century, for important periods the short story dominated Russian culture After defining and analyzing the specific features of the short story form, its theorizations, long critical neglect and the prejudice against it as a fragmentary form, this course focuses on periods where short stories came to the fore in Russia: the beginning and end of the century and the period of World War Two

LEARNING OUTCOMES OF THE MODULE

COM5021 and RUS5021 students will acquire the capacity to:

• Identify the defining characteristics of and dominant approaches to defining short stories

• Identify the specific attraction and features of the short story in the context of Russian literature in the twentieth century

• Define the relation between the stories discussed in class and the political, philosophical and social debates of the day

• demonstrate the understanding and application of key theoretical and critical

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• demonstrate the study habits and the interpretive skills necessary to processing short prose

• demonstrate 'close reading' skills

• demonstrate their enhanced command of essay writing skills and academic English

Students taking RUS 5021:

• will have acquired increased fluency in reading in Russian and will have developed their Russian vocabulary

ASSIGNMENT DEADLINES

1000 (RUS4021) /1500-word essay (RUS5021,COM5021) (40 per cent): Sunday 11 November 23.55 (Last day of Reading Week)

2000 (RUS4021)/2500-word essay (RUS5021,COM5021) (60 per cent): Sunday 16 December 23.55 (First Sunday after end of term)

MARKING CRITERIA

According to the student handbook

SUBMISSION OF COURSEWORK

On QMPlus

Required Reading and Module Schedule

Each week students are required read a single story in Russian and relate it to a single piece of secondary reading The further reading section indicates further relevant

stories by the writer, and further reading on her or his work

Week 1

Introduction, Definition of the Short Story

Lyudmila Parts, ‘Introduction: The Short Story as the Genre of Cultural Transition,’ The Russian Twentieth-Century Short Story: A Critical Companion, ed with an intro by

Lyudmila Parts, Brighton, MA: Academic Studies Press, 2010, xiii-xxxii

Week 2 - Pre-revolutionary World

Ivan Bunin, ‘The Gentleman from San Francisco’ (1916) in Chandler (ed.), Russian Short Stories

Gaiton Marullo, Thomas If You See the Buddha: Studies in the Fiction of Ivan Bunin

Evanston, ILL: Northwestern University Press, 1998 (excerpt)

Week 3 - The 1920s

Mikhail Zoshchenko, ‘The Bathhouse,’ (1925) ‘The Crisis’ (1925) in Chandler (ed.),

Russian Short Stories

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Jeremy Hicks, Mikhail Zoshchenko and the Poetics of Skaz, Nottingham: Astra, 2000 (ch

5)

Week 4 - 1930s

Andrei Platonov ‘The River Potudan,’ (1937) in Andrey Platonov, The Return and Other Stories, trans Robert and Elizabeth Chandler and Angela Livingstone, London: Harvill,

1999, 98-134

Thomas Seifrid, Andrei Platonov, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992 194-98.

Week 5- Emigration

Vladimir Nabokov, ‘Spring in Fialta,’(1936/47) in Vladimir Nabokov, Collected Stories,

Penguin, 2010, 472-91.

John Burt Foster Jr, ‘Nabokov’s Art of Memory: Recollected Emotion in “Spring in Fialta,”’

in Parts (ed.), The Russian Twentieth-Century Short Story, 97-116.

Week 6 – World War II

Aleksei Tolstoi, Russian Character (1944)

http://az.lib.ru/t/tolstoj_a_n/text_0110.shtml

Anna Krylova, ‘“Healers of Wounded Souls”: The Crisis of Private Life in Soviet Literature,

1944–1946,’ Journal of Modern History, Vol 73, No 2 (June 2001), pp 307-331.

Week 7 - Reading Week

First assessment deadline: Sunday 11 November 23.55 (Last day of Reading Week)

Week 8 - The Gulag

Varlam Shalamov, ‘Through the Snow,’ ‘Berries,’ (1959/73) ‘The Snake Charmer,’

(1954/67) in Chandler (ed.), Russian Short Stories

Sarah J Young ‘Recalling the Dead: Repetition, Identity, and the Witness in Varlam

Shalamov’s Kolymskie rasskazy,’ Slavic Review, Vol: 2 (2011), 353-372

Week 9 - Village Prose and essay feedback workshop

Vaily Shukshin, ‘Cutting them down to size,’ in Stories from a Siberian Village, trans

Laura Michael and John Givens, with a foreword by Kathleen Parthé, De Kalb, Northen Illinois University Press, 1996, 21-29

Diane Ignashev Nemec, ‘Vasilii Shukshin’s “Cut Down to Size” (Srezal) and the Question

of Transition,” in The Russian Twentieth-Century Short Story: A Critical Companion, ed.

with an intro by Lyudmila Parts, Brighton, MA: Academic Studies Press, 2010, 217-238

Essay Feedback workshop

Week 10 - Dissidence

Sergei Dovlatov, ‘"Straight Ahead" in Sergei Dovlatov, The Zone: A Prison Guard’s Notes,

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trans Anne Frydman, Richmond: One World Classics, 2011, 165-80

Jekaterina Young, Sergei Dovlatov and his Narrative Masks, Evanston, ILL: Northwestern

University Press, 2009 (excerpt)

Week 11 - Beyond the Soviet Era

Liudmila Petrushevskaia, ‘Songs of the Eastern Slavs’ (‘Incident at Sokolniki’ etc.) in

Petrushevskaia, Ludmilla There Once Lived a Woman Who Tried to Kill Her

Neighbour’s Baby: Scary Fairy Tales, selected and translated with an introduction by

Keith Gessen and Anna Summers, London: Penguin, 2009

Nina Kolesnikoff, ‘The Generic Structure of Ljudmila Petruševskaja's Pesni Vostočnyx

Slavjan,’ The Slavic and East European Journal, Vol 37, No 2 (Summer, 1993), pp

220-230

Week 12 - Russian Post-Modernism and essay workshop

Viktor Pelevin, ‘Nika,’ (1997) in Victor Pelevin, The Blue Lantern, London: Faber, 2001

Olga Bogdanova, ‘The “Traditional Postmodernism” of Viktor Pelevin’s Short Story,

“Nika,”’ in Parts (ed.) The Russian Twentieth Century Short Story, 327-41.

Essay workshop

Second Essay Deadline: Sunday 16 December 23.55 (First Sunday after end of term)

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Further Reading

Week 1 (and general course reading)

Definitions, Theorisations and Historicisations of the Russian Short Story

Edith W Clowes, Russia on the Edge: Imagined Geographies and Post-Soviet Identity,

Ithaca : Cornell University Press, 2011

Dobrenko, E A (ed.), The Cambridge companion to twentieth-century Russian literature, 2011

Eikhenbaum, Boris ‘O’Henry and the Theory of the Short Story,’ in May, The Russian Twentieth-Century Short Story: A Critical Companion, ed with an intro by Lyudmila

Parts, Brighton, MA: Academic Studies Press, 2010

Lohafer, Susan Reading for storyness : preclosure theory, empirical poetics, and culture

in the short story, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003

Lohafer, Susan and Jo Ellyn Clarey (eds), The Short Story Theory at a Crossroads, Baton

Rouge/London: Luoisiana State University Press, 1989

May, Charles E (ed.) , The New Short Story Theories, Athens: Ohio University Press, 1994 Moser, Charles A The Russian Short Story: A Critical History, Boston: Twayne , 1986 Parts, Lyudmila, ‘Introduction: The Short Story as the Genre of Cultural Transition,’ in The Russian Twentieth-Century Short Story: A Critical Companion, ed with an intro by

Lyudmila Parts, Brighton, MA: Academic Studies Press, 2010, xiii- xxxii

Pratt, Mary Louise “The Short Story: The Long and the Short of It,” Poetics, 10:2-3 (1981), 175-94 Also in Charles E May (ed.) , The New Short Story Theories, Athens:

Ohio University Press, 1994

Tynianov, Iurii ‘The Literary Fact,’ in Modern Genre Theory ed Duff New Short Story Theories,

Winther, Per, Jocon Lothe and Has H Skei (eds), The Art of Brevity Excursion into Short Story Theory and Analysis, Columbia: U of South Carolina Press, 2004

Week 2: Bunin

Ivan Bunin Collected Stories , trans Graham Hettlinger, Chicago, 2007.

Julian Connolly, Ivan Bunin, Boston: Twayne, 1982.

A Volkov, Proza Ivana Bunina, Moscow: Moskovskii rabochii, 1969, 258-79.

James B Woodward, Ivan Bunin: A Study of his Fiction, Chapel Hill: University of North

Carolina Presss, 1980, 107-33

Week 3: Zoshchenko

Mikhail Zoshchenko, The Galosh and Other Stories, trans Jeremy Hicks, London: Angel,

2000

Lesley Milne, Zoshchenko and the Ilf-Petrov Partnership: How They Laughed,

Birmingham:Birmingham Slavonic Monographs, 2003

Cathy Popkin, The Pragmatics of Insignificance : Chekhov, Zoshchenko, Gogol, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1993.

Jenny Kaminer, ‘Theatrical Motifs and the Drama of Everyday Life in the 1920s Stories of

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Mikhail Zoshchenko,’ Russian Review, Vol 65, No 3 (Jul., 2006), pp 470-490

Week 4: Platonov

Andrey Platonov, The Return and Other Stories, trans Robert and Elizabeth Chandler and

Angela Livingstone, London: Harvill, 1999

Keith A Livers, Constructing the Stalinist Body: Fictional Representations of Corporeality

in the Stalinist 1930s, Lanham: Lexington Books, 2004.

E Korchagina, ‘O nekotorykh osobennostiakh skazovoi formy v rasskaze “Reka Potudan

´,”’ in V.P Skobelev et al (eds), Tvorchestvo A Platonova, Voronezh: Izdatel´stvo

Voronezhskogo universiteta, 1970, 107-16

Philip Ross Bullock, The Feminine in the Prose of Andrey Platonov, Oxford: Legenda,

2005, 151-201

Week 5: Nabokov

Vladimir Nabokov, Collected Stories, London: Penguin, 1995.

Maxim D Shrayer, The World of Nabokov's Stories, Austin: University of Texas, 2000 Stephen Matterson, ‘Sprung from the Music Box of Memory: “Spring in Fialta,”’ in

Charles Nicol and Gennady Barabtarlo (eds), A Small Alpine Form: Studies in

Nabokov’s Short Fiction, New York: Garland, 1993, 99-109.

Week 6: Aleksei Tolstoi

Lilya Kaganovsky, How the Soviet Man Was (Un)made: Cultural Fantasy and male

Subjectivity Under Stalin, Pittsburgh: University of Pitssburgh Press, 2008

Katherine Hodgson, ‘The Soviet War,’ in Marina MacKay (ed.) The Cambridge Companion

to the Literature of the Second World War, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,

2009, 111-122

M Charnyi Put´ Alekseia Tolstogo: ocherk tvorchestva, 2nd edn, Moscow:

Khudozhestvannaia literatura, 1981, 226-35

Petr Pavlenko, ‘Istoriia dvukh rasskazov,’ in Sobranie sochinenii, 6 Vols, Moscow:

Khudozhestvennaia literatura, 1955, Vol.1, 430-31

Konstantin Trenev, ‘V sem´e,’ in Izbrannye proizvedeniia, 2 Vols, Moscow:

Khudozhestvennaia literatura, 1955, Vol 1 510-23

Week 8: Shalamov

Shalamov, Varlam Kolyma Tales, Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1994

Leona Toker, ‘Toward a Poetics of Documentary Prose From the Perspective of Gulag

Testimonies,’ Poetics Today, Vol 18, No 2 (Summer, 1997), pp 187-222.

Return from the Archipelago: Narratives of Gulag Survivors, Bloomington:

Indiana University Press, 2000

Violeta Davoliute, ‘Shalamov's Memory,’ Canadian Slavonic Papers / Revue Canadienne des Slavistes, Vol 47, No 1/2 (March-June 2005), pp 1-21

Nathaniel Golden, Varlam Shalamov's Kolyma Tales: A Formalist Analysis, Amsterdam:

Rodopi, 2004

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Week 9: Shukshin

Vasily Shukshin, Stories from a Siberian Village, trans Laura Michael and John Givens,

with a foreword by Kathleen Parthé, De Kalb, Northen Illinois University Press, 1996

John Givens, Prodigal Son: Vasilii Shukshin in Soviet Russian Culture, Evanston, ILL:

Northwestern University Press, 2000 (excerpt)

Nicole Christian, ‘Manifestations of the Eccentric in the Works of Vasilii Shukshin,’ The Slavonic and East European Review, Vol 75, No 2 (Apr., 1997), pp 201-215

Week 10: Dovlatov

Sergei Dovlatov, The Zone, trans Anne Frydman, London: Alma Classics, 2011

David J Galloway, ‘Sergei Dovlatov's Zona as Metatextual Memoir,’ Canadian Slavonic

Papers / Revue Canadienne des Slavistes, Vol 50, No 3/4 (September-December

2008), pp 325-340

‘Polemical Allusions in Russian Gulag Prose,’ The Slavic and East European Journal, 51: 3 (2007), pp 535-52

Karen Ryan-Hayes, ‘Narrative Strategies in the Works of Sergei Dovlatov,’ Russian

Language Journal, 45 1994, 155-78.

Olga Soboleva, ‘“It Is Only Chekhov That One Wants to Be Like”: Chekhov and Dovlatov – The Art of a Storyteller,’ in Andrew, Joe (ed and preface); Reid, Robert (ed and

preface) Chekhov 2004: Chekhov Special Issues in Two Volumes, Vol II: Chekhov and Others Keele, England: Keele University Students Union; 2006, 305-18.

Olga Tabachnikova, ‘“The World Is Ugly and People Are Sad”: On Chekhov's Ethics and Aesthetics in the Works of Sergei Dovlatov, in Andrew, Joe (ed and preface); Reid,

Robert (ed and preface) Chekhov 2004: Chekhov Special Issues in Two Volumes, Vol II: Chekhov and Others Keele, England: Keele University Students Union; 2006,’

319-54

Week 11: Petrushevskaia

Ludmilla Petrushevskaia, There Once Lived a Woman Who Tried to Kill Her Neighbour’s Baby: Scary Fairy Tales, selected and translated with an introduction by Keith Gessen

and Anna Summers, London: Penguin, 2009

Sally Dalton-Brown, Voices From the Void: The Genres of Liudmilla Petrushevskaia, New

York and Oxford: Berghan, 2001

Kolesnikoff, Nina ‘The Narrative Structure of Liudmila Petrushevskaia's Short Stories,’

Canadian Slavonic Papers/ Revue Canadienne des Slavistes, Vol 32, No 4 (December

1990), pp 444-56

Week 12: Pelevin

Victor Pelevin, The Blue Lantern, London: Faber, 2001.

Sally Dalton-Brown, ‘Ludic Nonchalance or Ludicrous Despair? Viktor Pelevin and Russian

Postmodernist Prose,’ The Slavonic and East European Review, 75:2 (1997), 216-233 Laird, Sally Voices of Russian Literature: Interviews with Ten Contemporary Writers,

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Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999.

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