"Bahktin is one of the giants of 20th Century social and cultural theory."
Voice Literary Supplement
“Bakhtin was never interested in writing his memoirs, nor in making out of himself a work of art. Or even a good story. In his view, we have great novels for that. But Viktor Duvakin, who shared Bakhtin’s deep love of poetry, found just the right tone and timing to put his subject at ease. The result, in this full and fluent rendering of the taped sessions, is as close as we can come to the master’s nimble, irreverent, freely-roaming voice.”
- Caryl Emerson, Princeton University
“The Duvakin recordings were a surprise gift to Bakhtin scholars: a series of intimate but vigorous conversations, led by an expert interviewer, in which Bakhtin described his life and times in striking detail. Now available in a marvelously readable English translation, they are an invaluable resource for anyone interested in Bakhtin and his historical-cultural context, as well as anyone with an interest in the culture and cultural politics of the Soviet Union.”
- Ken Hirschkop, University of Waterloo
“This book is an extraordinary contribution to cultural and intellectual history. Bakhtin’s conversations with Duvakin capture a succession of epochs and dramatic events; they reveal a Bakhtin who is both vulnerable and sovereign, anchored in his time and breaking free of its constraints.”
- Galin Tihanov, Queen Mary University of London
While some readers may not relish working through the thicket of allusions and references that occasion these interviews, there are many rewards to be had for doing so, especially for intellectual historians of twentieth-century Russia, and for Bakhtin scholars everywhere. I recommend it highly.
The Russian Review
"Bahktin is one of the giants of 20th Century social and cultural theory."
Voice Literary Supplement
“Bakhtin was never interested in writing his memoirs, nor in making out of himself a work of art. Or even a good story. In his view, we have great novels for that. But Viktor Duvakin, who shared Bakhtin’s deep love of poetry, found just the right tone and timing to put his subject at ease. The result, in this full and fluent rendering of the taped sessions, is as close as we can come to the master’s nimble, irreverent, freely-roaming voice.”
- Caryl Emerson, Princeton University
“The Duvakin recordings were a surprise gift to Bakhtin scholars: a series of intimate but vigorous conversations, led by an expert interviewer, in which Bakhtin described his life and times in striking detail. Now available in a marvelously readable English translation, they are an invaluable resource for anyone interested in Bakhtin and his historical-cultural context, as well as anyone with an interest in the culture and cultural politics of the Soviet Union.”
- Ken Hirschkop, University of Waterloo
“This book is an extraordinary contribution to cultural and intellectual history. Bakhtin’s conversations with Duvakin capture a succession of epochs and dramatic events; they reveal a Bakhtin who is both vulnerable and sovereign, anchored in his time and breaking free of its constraints.”
- Galin Tihanov, Queen Mary University of London
While some readers may not relish working through the thicket of allusions and references that occasion these interviews, there are many rewards to be had for doing so, especially for intellectual historians of twentieth-century Russia, and for Bakhtin scholars everywhere. I recommend it highly.
The Russian Review
Published by Bucknell University Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers University Press.
Illustrations
Introduction
Slav N. Gratchev
Translator’s Introduction
Margarita Marinova
Interview One, February 22, 1973
Interview Two, March 1, 1973
Interview Three, March 8, 1973
Interview Four, March 15, 1973
Interview Five, March 22, 1973
Interview Six, March 23, 1973
Afterword: Six Interviews about the Death and Resurrection of the Word
Dmitriy Sporov
Acknowledgments
Bibliography, of the Introductions and Afterword ...
Index
About the Editors and Translator
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
SLAV N. GRATCHEV, MBA, PHD is an associate professor of Spanish at Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia. He is the author or editor of several books, including The Polyphonic World of Cervantes and Dostoevsky.MARGARITA MARINOVA, PHD is an associate professor of English and comparative literature at Christopher Newport University in Newport News, Virginia. She is a translator and author of Transnational Russian-American Travel Writing.
DMITRY SPOROV is chair of the department of oral history at Moscow State University’s Science Library and a distinguished historian. He is also the president of the Foundation for Research in the Humanities and the chief editor for the book series Let's Remember Moscow: 1930s and Let's Remember Moscow: 1940s, a unique collection of oral memoirs about Moscow.