Search for:
Register
Log In
An online community for ASEEES members
Groups
Members
CORE
Member Websites
Activity Feed
Help & Support
HC Organizations
HC
ARLIS/NA
AUPresses
MLA
MSU
SAH
ASEEES Visitor
Register
Login
Groups
Members
CORE
Member Websites
Activity Feed
Help & Support
HC Organizations
HC
ARLIS/NA
AUPresses
MLA
MSU
SAH
Enchanting Literary Modernity: Idris Bazorkin’s Postcolonial Soviet Pastoral (The Modern Language Review, 2020)
Author(s):
Rebecca Ruth Gould
(see profile)
Date:
2020
Group(s):
Narrative theory and Narratology
Subject(s):
Whites--Social life and customs
,
Soviet literature
,
Russian literature
,
Historical fiction
,
English literature
,
Nineteenth century
,
Regionalism
Item Type:
Article
Tag(s):
Russian Empire
,
Literary canon
,
Caucasian cultures
,
Victorian literature
Permanent URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/6kyr-9z59
Abstract:
This article introduces the Ingush writer Idris Bazorkin. Bazorkin’s novel Dark Ages (1968) is examined as a pastoral novel that cultivates a Soviet style of postcolonial reflection on the cultural and historical memory of colonial rule.
Metadata:
xml
Published as:
Journal article
Show details
Status:
Published
Last Updated:
4 years ago
License:
All Rights Reserved
Share this:
Downloads
Item Name:
2020-bazorkin-mlr.pdf
Download
View in browser
Activity:
Downloads: 83
Back to Deposits