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Soviet Literature in the 1970s by Norman N Shneidman
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Soviet Literature in the 1970s

Artistic Diversity and Ideological Conformity

University of Toronto Press · 1979-12-15

Soviet Literature in the 1970s: Artistic Diversity and Ideological Conformity

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What You Get

  • Reading lane: Russian & Former Soviet Union and European.
  • Publisher: University of Toronto Press.

Categories

What we read3

  • Literary Criticism / Russian & Former Soviet Union

    81%
  • Literary Collections / European / Eastern

    72%
  • Literary Criticism / European / Eastern

    69%

About This Book

Although considerable attention has been given to dissident Soviet writers who have been exiled or driven underground, the officially published works of soviet writers are almost unknown in the West. This book concentrates on those writers who have produced works of considerable interest and merit despite editorial controls. The opening chapter examines recent trends and the relationship between literary theory and practice, particularly in the light of the broadening horizo...

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Although considerable attention has been given to dissident Soviet writers who have been exiled or driven underground, the officially published works of soviet writers are almost unknown in the West. This book concentrates on those writers who have produced works of considerable interest and merit despite editorial controls. The opening chapter examines recent trends and the relationship between literary theory and practice, particularly in the light of the broadening horizons of official 'socialist realism.' Shneidman traces the creative development of six of the most gifted and popular Russian prose writers of the decade, emphasizing their publications of the 1970sand their diverse themes and styles. Sergei Zalygin sets his work in the revolutionary past, Vasil' Bykov and Iurii Bondarev write on war themes. Iurii Trifonov depicts the ordinary life of the city intelligentsia. Valentin Rasputin's stories are concerned with the fate of the Siberian peasant. Chingiz Aitmatov deals with problems of universal significance in a Kirghiz setting. This book recognizes the difficulties faced by contemporary creative writers in the USSR, and reflects the intellectual, ideological, and political atmosphere in which they work.

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