Companion to Victor Pelevin
Title | Companion to Victor Pelevin PDF eBook |
Author | Sofya Khagi |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 280 |
Release | 2021-12-28 |
Genre | |
ISBN | 9781644697764 |
Companion to Victor Pelevin, a collaborative undertaking by a group of emerging Russianist scholars, focuses on the work of one of the most important and hotly debated post-Soviet writers. It provides a valuable resource to scholars, teachers, and students, including how best to teach Pelevin to university-level students, and which critical debates invite further investigation. The contributors offer new readings of Pelevin texts that cover a broad time span and pay due attention to the philosophical and aesthetic complexities of Pelevin's oeuvre in its development from the early post-Soviet years to the second decade of the present millennium. Examining all of Pelevin's major works and all Peleviniana currently available in English, the Companion aims to prompt further inquiry into this author's intellectually stimulating and socially prescient work.
Companion to Victor Pelevin
Title | Companion to Victor Pelevin PDF eBook |
Author | Sofya Khagi |
Publisher | Academic Studies PRess |
Total Pages | 318 |
Release | 2022-01-18 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1644697785 |
Companion to Victor Pelevin, a collaborative undertaking by a group of emerging Russianist scholars, focuses on the work of one of the most important and hotly debated post-Soviet writers. It provides a valuable resource to scholars, teachers, and students, including how best to teach Pelevin to university-level students, and which critical debates invite further investigation. The contributors offer new readings of Pelevin texts that cover a broad time span and pay due attention to the philosophical and aesthetic complexities of Pelevin’s oeuvre in its development from the early post-Soviet years to the second decade of the present millennium. Examining all of Pelevin’s major works and all Peleviniana currently available in English, the Companion aims to prompt further inquiry into this author’s intellectually stimulating and socially prescient work.
4 by Pelevin
Title | 4 by Pelevin PDF eBook |
Author | Viktor Pelevin |
Publisher | New Directions Publishing |
Total Pages | 116 |
Release | 2001 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 9780811214919 |
"The literary voice of the post-Soviet generation." --The New York Times
Omon Ra
Title | Omon Ra PDF eBook |
Author | Viktor Pelevin |
Publisher | New Directions Publishing |
Total Pages | 166 |
Release | 1998 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 9780811213646 |
A satire about the Soviet space program finds Omon, who has dreamed of space flight all of his life, enrolled as a cosmonaut only to learn that his task will be piloting a supposedly unmanned lunar vehicle to the Moon and remaining there to die.
The Cambridge Companion to Modern Russian Culture
Title | The Cambridge Companion to Modern Russian Culture PDF eBook |
Author | Nicholas Rzhevsky |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | 446 |
Release | 2012-04-05 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1107495628 |
Russia's size, the diversity of its peoples and its unique geographical position straddling East and West have created a culture that is both inward and outward looking. Its history reflects the tension between very different approaches to what culture can and should be, and this tension shapes the vibrancy of its arts today. The highly successful first edition of Rzhevsky's Companion has been updated to include post-Soviet trends and new developments in the twenty-first century. It brings together leading authorities writing on Russian cultural identity, its Western and Asian connections, popular culture and the unique Russian contributions to the arts. Each of the eleven chapters has been revised or entirely rewritten to take account of current cultural conditions and the further reading brought up to date. The book reveals, for students, academic researchers and all those interested in Russia, the dilemmas, strengths and complexities of the Russian cultural experience.
Pelevin and Unfreedom
Title | Pelevin and Unfreedom PDF eBook |
Author | Sofya Khagi |
Publisher | Northwestern University Press |
Total Pages | 434 |
Release | 2020-12-15 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0810143046 |
Sofya Khagi’s Pelevin and Unfreedom: Poetics, Politics, Metaphysics is the first book-length English-language study of Victor Pelevin, one of the most significant and popular Russian authors of the post-Soviet era. The text explores Pelevin’s sustained Dostoevskian reflections on the philosophical question of freedom and his complex oeuvre and worldview, shaped by the idea that contemporary social conditions pervert that very notion. Khagi shows that Pelevin uses provocative and imaginative prose to model different systems of unfreedom, vividly illustrating how the present world deploys hyper-commodification and technological manipulation to promote human degradation and social deadlock. Rather than rehearse Cold War–era platitudes about totalitarianism, Pelevin holds up a mirror to show how social control (now covert, yet far more efficient) masquerades as freedom and how eagerly we accept, even welcome, control under the techno-consumer system. He reflects on how commonplace discursive markers of freedom (like the free market) are in fact misleading and disempowering. Under this comfortably self-occluding bondage, the subject loses all power of self-determination, free will, and ethical judgment. In his work, Pelevin highlights the unprecedented subversion of human society by the techno-consumer machine. Yet, Khagi argues, however circumscribed and ironically qualified, he holds onto the emancipatory potential of ethics and even an emancipatory humanism.
Buddha's Little Finger
Title | Buddha's Little Finger PDF eBook |
Author | Victor Pelevin |
Publisher | Penguin |
Total Pages | 353 |
Release | 2001-12-01 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 1101655844 |
Russian novelist Victor Pelevin is rapidly establishing himself as one of the most brilliant young writers at work today. His comic inventiveness and mind-bending talent prompted Time magazine to proclaim him a "psychedelic Nabokov for the cyber-age." In his third novel, Buddha's Little Finger, Pelevin has created an intellectually dazzling tale about identity and Russian history, as well as a spectacular elaboration of Buddhist philosophy. Moving between events of the Russian Civil War of 1919 and the thoughts of a man incarcerated in a contemporary Moscow psychiatric hospital, Buddha's Little Finger is a work of demonic absurdism by a writer who continues to delight and astonish.