gifts

Andrew Jameson a.jameson at DIAL.PIPEX.COM
Sun Mar 25 11:29:21 UTC 2001


Not quite sure what Simon's after, but here's a quote.
Yuri Kazakov,  rasskaz: "Zapakh khleba"
Section 2 (Dusya is visiting her sister in the countryside
for the first time in several years) A great story by the way.
"Dusya stala dostavat' iz sumki gostintsy. Sestra posmotrela
na gostintsy, snova zaplakala i obnyala Dusyu."..
Maybe other colleagues can comment better than I can
on the custom of "gostintsy".
Andrew Jameson
Chair, Russian Committee, ALL
Reviews Editor, Rusistika
Listowner, allnet, cont-ed-lang, russian-teaching
1 Brook Street, Lancaster LA1 1SL   UK
Tel: 01524 32371  (+44 1524 32371)
Virus checker: Norton Symantec

----------
From: Simon Krysl <sk5 at DUKE.EDU>
To: SEELANGS at LISTSERV.CUNY.EDU
Subject: gifts
Date: 24 March 2001 22:45

Dear all,
first, many apologies for bothering you with a query: a literary query, if
one with a social- historical - relevance.
I am a graduate student in the Literature Program at Duke, currently
preparing a class on the theme of gifts and gift-giving. My own work has
been, however, mainly on Eastern European, socialist 20th century: and I
would love to include something, anything, that could show how could the
image of the gift operate in a society which is, in intention/ project -
or, in historical "actuality"
- other than capitalist. To the extent the image always refers to,
expresses or discloses, the nature of commodity culture, it may not come as
a surprise that there is little representation of gifts in Russian - or
other "socialist" - literatures altogether: the reasons for that being so,
in comparison with the Western European tradition, are obviously more
complex than the above. (Not that commodity/ capital would not be a
determining presence in societies which claimed themselves or were claimed
post-capitalist: but it is so in different ways.) Yet generally, I am not
sure that (besides Nabokov and one Brecht's play, from the Finnish exile to
boot) there are no gift images in Russian (Polish, Czech, East German...)
literature and culture (art examples would be as interesting): I just do
not know of, and was not able to find, any.
Would anyone - perhaps - know of a "text" (in the widest sense) which
peruses the image/theme of gifts and gift-giving - in howeever cursory and
apparently accidental way - and comes from the "Second World" cultural
territory? Or "at least" - which would be to approach the question from
another angle - any treatment of gift-giving or gift economy in this space
in the historical discourse?
Many thanks,
sincerely,

Simon Krysl
Graduate Program in Literature
Duke University

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Use your web browser to search the archives, control your subscription
  options, and more.  Visit and bookmark the SEELANGS Web Interface at:
                http://members.home.net/lists/seelangs/
-------------------------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Use your web browser to search the archives, control your subscription
  options, and more.  Visit and bookmark the SEELANGS Web Interface at:
                http://members.home.net/lists/seelangs/
-------------------------------------------------------------------------



More information about the SEELANG mailing list