California Slavic Colloquium

California Slavic Colloquium
Date
Sat April 25th 2015, 10:30am - 4:30pm
Location
Building 260, Rooms 113 & 252

Session I (10:40-12:00): Mediations of Logos
I-A: The Word Reborn: Literature and Language in Flux

Caroline Lemak Brickman, “Batiushkov in Greek Antiquity: Towards an Anthological Poetics of Translation”

Darya Ivanova, “Varieties of the Obscene: Two Parodic Responses to Piron”

Anne C. Burke, “S. An-sky’s Language of Cultural Identity”

I-B: The Poetic Word: Shades of Meaning

Jinyi Chu, “A Secular Myth: Two Aspects of Mandelstam’s ‘Word’’’

Michael Lavery, ‘‘Poblizhe k svetu stan’, poèt’: Anna Prismanova’s Shadow and Body”

Naike Trincas, “From Shadow to Flame: Boris Pasternak’s ‘Pro Domo’”

 

Session II (1:30-2:50): Temporal Mosaics
II-A: Filtering Modernisms through Time and Space

Isobel Palmer, “The End of the Line: Pasternak, the Train, and Urban Form”

Ksenia Radchenko, “Pavel Filonov and the Northern Renaissance”

Teresa Kuruc, “An Odyssey: Reading Viktor Shklovskii through Nanyzivanie”

II-B: The Unity of Rupture in Nineteenth-Century Prose

Kit Pribble, “Gogol’s ‘Empty’ Words: The Ethics of Verbal Excess in Mertvye dushi”

Zachary Johnson, “The Subject and the Event in Dostoevsky’s Demons”

Peter Winsky, “Soteriology and the Symbolism of Murder: The Path to Salvation
through Death and Brotherhood in The Idiot, Demons, and The Brothers Karamazov”

Session III (3:10-4:30): Aesthetics and Power
III-A: Bodies of Power: State Fictions and Discursive Ethics

Alice E.M. Underwood, “Constituting the Masculine Body: The New Man in Stagnation-Era Literature and Law”

Olga Lazitski, “Cold War Again? Examining the Genealogy of the Recent Tension between Russia and the U.S.”

Kevin Hart, “Fool, Clown, Rogue: Author and Narrator in Nabokov’s Laughter in the Dark”

III-B: Public and Private in Pushkin’s World

Dominick Lawton, “Pushkin, Tatiana, and the Problem of Mediation”

Laurel Schmuck and Mac Watson, “Pushkin’s Napersnichestvo: Sacrilegious Confession – Erotic Tittle-Tattle – Elegy”

 

 

Sponsored by the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures and the Division of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages