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Up From Socialist Realism
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13641 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
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8 / 1988 |
4,727 Words |
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Ewa M. Thompson Ewa M. Thompson is professor and chair of the Department of
German and Slavic Studies at Rice University. |
QUEST FOR AN ISLAND
Vassily Aksyonov
New York: PAJ Publications, 1988
246 pp., $17.95
Like many other twentieth-century intellectuals, the Russian writer Vassily Aksyonov has thrived in exile. He left the Soviet Union in 1979 and has since become a popular figure on American campuses. He is not the only émigré Russian who has published at an amazing pace while in exile. Vladimir Voinovich and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn have done it. But he possesses one characteristic the others do not have: an ability to ignore half a century of Russian linguistic practice and to reach back to the 1920s and earlier for stylistic inspiration. Let me explain.
Since the creation of the Union of Soviet Writers in 1932, so-called socialist realism has been the obligatory method of creating literature in Russia. It has affected not only the quality of literary production but also, and primarily, the Russian language. For all the disclaimers, modifications, and up-datings that have occurred since Stalin's death, socialist realism has remained a straitjacket into which the Russian language has been forced by hundreds of writers and thousands of journalists. Under their leadership, whole areas of human experience have disappeared from the language, and therefore, from consciousness and culture.
Through their songs, film scripts, novels, poems, skits, and articles, Soviet Russian writers have inscribed in the Russian language a crudely materialistic, yet sentimental, vision of man and the world. With few exceptions,
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