Erövringen av Izmail

477 sidor ; 22 cm, 477 sidor

På Swedish

Publicerades 2020 av Ersatz.

View on Finna

»Jag satte mig för att skriva ner min livshistoria, men jag hade visst lyckats hitta en penna som stammade.«.

1 utgåva

None

Hear ye, hear ye, court is now in session, the honourable judge Mikhail Shishkin presiding.

Taking Izmail is a trial with a thousand witnesses, and it's not remotely fair, but then again neither is the crime... if indeed there is one. Shishkin, writing in exile from New Russia in 1998, puts the entirety of Russo-Soviet history, (self-)mythology, literature and society up there in both the witness booth and the bench of the accused. What is Russia after the fall of the Soviet Union? What was it? What stories does it tell about itself? What does it do to itself?

The witnesses are from two camps: existing literature and Shishkin's own. Large parts of the novel are basically a DJ Shadow-esque samplefest of literature from and about Russia - a sentence from the Nestorian chronicle, a name from Dostoevsky, a section from a party newspaper in 1929, bible bible bible, etc …

Ämnen

  • Vasiljevitj, Aleksandr (fiktiv gestalt)
  • 1990-talet
  • samhällsutveckling
  • öde
  • självuppgörelse
  • män
  • människan
  • plats
  • städer
  • tidsnivåer
  • omväxling
  • Moskva
  • Ryssland