Voices of Ukraine Seminar to Be Offered During Fall

Ilya Repin. Reply of the Zaporizhian Cossacks, 1880
Ilya Repin

Ilya Repin. Reply of the Zaporizhian Cossacks, 1880

This fall, students interested in learning about Ukraine's history through fiction and non-fiction have an opportunity to attend a seminar RUSS 4113, which is titled Voices of Ukraine. The course will explore the multilingual, multidenominational and multinational aspects of Ukrainian literature during the last 200 years.

The seminar encompasses the works of writers who were born in Ukraine and lived there, and wrote in the Ukrainian, Russian, Yiddish and Hebrew languages. The seminar's goal will be to show how linguistically diverse Ukraine's literary tradition is and how the topics of war, violence, memory and displacement have prevailed from the 19th century to the present. The seminar examines themes of ethnic violence, blood libel accusations, pogroms, revolution, civil war, WWI, the Holodomor, WWII, the Chernobyl nuclear disaster and the current war.

The readings include known works by Nikolai Gogol, Taras Shevchenko, Lesia Ukrainka, Ivan Franko and Isaac Babel, as well as lesser known works such as Der Nister's Regrowth: Seven Tales of Jewish Life  Before, During, and After Nazi Occupation (Vidervuks), excerpts from Svetlana Alexievich's documentary work Voices from Chernobyl and Serhiy Zhadan's novel on the current war, called Orphanage.  

This seminar counts toward the Russian studies minor and Jewish studies. 

The seminar meets from 3:30-4:45 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays in Kimple Hall 213. 

Contacts

Nadja Berkovich, teaching assistant professor of Russian
World Languages, Literatures and Cultures
479-575-2951, nadezdab@uark.edu

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