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A War Vocabulary: Traumatic Experience and the Search for a New Language in Ukrainian Literature

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Manage episode 357578227 series 1567208
Content provided by CREECA at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Center for Russia, East Europe, and Central Asia at the University of Wisconsin. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by CREECA at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Center for Russia, East Europe, and Central Asia at the University of Wisconsin or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
The literature of the war against Ukraine testified to the profound changes that took place in the nature of Ukrainian artistic expression: from the loss of the very ability to speak, through the development of a new poetics of the voice and body, through literalism as the restoration of the connection between the word and reality and the rejection of metaphor in favor of metonymy – to the formation of a new idea of literature. Understood as a sphere of imagination and at the same time as a mechanism of representation, Ukrainian literature has been re-thinking its attitudes around reality and also its use for constructing of the ‘common places’ of anthropological and emotional experience. - Olena Haleta is a professor of literary theory and comparative literature at Ivan Franko National University of Lviv and professor of cultural anthropology at Ukrainian Catholic University (Ukraine). She is an author, co-author, and co-editor of eight books on the literary history of modern Ukraine.
  continue reading

153 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 357578227 series 1567208
Content provided by CREECA at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Center for Russia, East Europe, and Central Asia at the University of Wisconsin. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by CREECA at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Center for Russia, East Europe, and Central Asia at the University of Wisconsin or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
The literature of the war against Ukraine testified to the profound changes that took place in the nature of Ukrainian artistic expression: from the loss of the very ability to speak, through the development of a new poetics of the voice and body, through literalism as the restoration of the connection between the word and reality and the rejection of metaphor in favor of metonymy – to the formation of a new idea of literature. Understood as a sphere of imagination and at the same time as a mechanism of representation, Ukrainian literature has been re-thinking its attitudes around reality and also its use for constructing of the ‘common places’ of anthropological and emotional experience. - Olena Haleta is a professor of literary theory and comparative literature at Ivan Franko National University of Lviv and professor of cultural anthropology at Ukrainian Catholic University (Ukraine). She is an author, co-author, and co-editor of eight books on the literary history of modern Ukraine.
  continue reading

153 episodes

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