Suggestions for 20th-century literature survey?

Robert Romanchuk rromanch at GMAIL.COM
Tue Sep 29 15:41:50 UTC 2009


Dear Colleagues,
Kenneth Harper's New Voices is an excellent text for a 20th-c. lit survey in
Russian, but locating it is a bit of a chore.

It appeared in the Books in Print database as a Harcourt College Publishers
book, but is now a Thomson/Heinle POD reprint which, moreover, can't be
found on their website. To add to the fun, the title is broken off as New
Voices: Contemporary Soviet and the author is identified as "Koulaef" (sic).
The ISBN is 0-15-504472-9 (ISBN 13 adds 978 at the beginning). The retail
price was listed at $26.50.

As recently as fall 2007 our bookstore was able to order it in quantities of
10, directly from the publisher if I'm not mistaken. You can also find it
here (at slightly inflated prices) from third-party sellers at Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0155044729/sr=8-1/qid=1254237856/

Best,
Robert Romanchuk
Florida State University

On Tue, Sep 29, 2009 at 8:12 AM, Blake Galbreath <blg4u at virginia.edu> wrote:

> Dear Alyssa,
> You can supplement Harper's New Voices with Yatsenko's Russkaja
> netraditsionnaja proza kontsa XX veka.  Posobie dlja inostrannyx
> uchashchixsja. - 2-e izd. - CPb.: Zlatoust, 2006. (
> http://www.kniga.ru/books/253556)
>
> Also, there are those little red paperbacks (Bristol Russian Studies), each
> of which is an individual author (e.g., T.N. Tolstaja Tri Rasskaza/T.N.
> Tolstaia Three Stories).  They make a bunch of those.
>
> Blake Galbreath
> UVA
>
> On Tue, Sep 29, 2009 at 12:25 AM, Robert Romanchuk <rromanch at gmail.com
> >wrote:
>
> > Dear Alyssa,
> > In a similar course, for prose of the "Thaw," we use Kenneth Harper's New
> > Voices (which is available again as a print-on-demand book from Thomson
> > Gale).
> >
> > On a side note, we've found that Struve's Century of Russian Prose and
> > Verse
> > (not in print, but your copy store can request copyright clearance) is a
> > great text to use in a 19th-c. survey taught in Russian; it also includes
> > some 20th-c. selections. Curiously, there is a good deal of anxiety about
> > Islam in the selections, which can lead to very interesting discussions
> > (and
> > Pushkin's "Journey to Erzerum" seems quite up-to-the-minute).
> >
> > Best, RR
> >
> > On Mon, Sep 28, 2009 at 10:27 PM, Alyssa Gillespie <gillespie.20 at nd.edu
> > >wrote:
> >
> > > Dear colleagues:
> > >
> > > Next semester I will be teaching the second semester of our Advanced
> > > Russian (3rd year) course, which is conceived as simultaneously a
> course
> > on
> > > advanced language topics as well as an introduction to reading
> > 20th-century
> > > Russian literature (prose and poetry; plays are also possible) in
> > Russian.
> > >
> > > The first semester of this year-long course (which I am currently
> > teaching)
> > > is similarly conceived but covers the 19th century, and I am
> successfully
> > > using The Golden Age reader (ed. Sandra Rosengrant) coupled with Emil
> > > Draitser's 19th-c. poetry anthology for that course. I have hit upon a
> > > reader entitled Seven Soviet Poets published by Duckworth (ed. Robert
> > > Porter) that may well work for the poetry component of the spring
> > semester
> > > course, but I am coming up dry in regard to prose. Of course I could
> > compile
> > > a reader of my own, but that would mean that the students would lack
> the
> > > extremely useful marginal glosses and glossary, biographical
> information,
> > > and other pedagogical materials that are found in Rosengrant's
> anthology.
> > >
> > > Can anyone suggest an equivalent text to The Golden Age reader that
> > covers
> > > 20th-century prose (and/or poetry and plays, but prose right now is my
> > main
> > > concern) for intermediate-to-advanced level Russian language students?
> > >
> > > Thanks in advance for any suggestions.
> > >
> > > Best wishes,
> > > Alyssa Dinega Gillespie
> > >
> > > Associate Professor of Russian
> > > University of Notre Dame
> > >
> > >
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