Picture of author.

Lydia Chukovskaya (1907–1996)

Forfatter af Sofia Petrovna

22 Works 545 Members 24 Reviews 1 Favorited

Om forfatteren

Daughter of the famous critic Kornei Chukovsky, Lydia Chukovskaya is a fiction writer and memoirist of note. Her two novels, Sofia Petrovna (1965), which was translated as The Deserted House, and Going Under (1972), dealt with the Stalin period. The former work is a portrait of a woman whose psyche vis mere gradually dissolves under the impact of the purges. A close friend of Anna Akhmatova, Chukovskaya preserved a detailed account of their encounters, highly important for understanding the poet's biography and views. Chukovskaya became a leading dissident, and was expelled from the Writers' Union in 1974. (Bowker Author Biography) vis mindre

Værker af Lydia Chukovskaya

Satte nøgleord på

Almen Viden

Kanonisk navn
Chukovskaya, Lydia
Juridisk navn
Чуковская, Лидия Корнеевна
Andre navne
Chukovskaya, Lydia Korneievna
Uglov, A. (pseudonym)
Chukovskaia, Lidiia
Tschukowskaja, Lydia
Fødselsdato
1907-03-24
Dødsdag
1996-02-08
Køn
female
Nationalitet
Russia
Fødested
Helsingfors, Russian Empire
Dødssted
Peredelkino, Russia
Bopæl
St. Petersburg, Russia
Moscow, Russia
Peredelkino, Russia
Erhverv
poet
novelist
memorist
editor
Relationer
Chukovsky, Kornei (father)
Marshak, Samuil (mentor)
Bronstein, Matvei (husband)
Akhmatova, Anna (friend)
Organisationer
Writer's Union of the USSR
Priser og hædersbevisninger
Andrei Sakharov Prize For Writer's Civic Courage (1990)
Kort biografi
Lydia Korneievna Chukovskaya was a daughter of a literary critic and children's writer and grew up in a home in St. Petersburg frequented by prominent literary figures. She was educated at the Institute for the History of the Arts. Her first job, which lasted 10 years, was as an editor at the state children's publishing house. She published her first short story, "Leningrad-Odessa", under the pseudonym A. Uglov. At about the same time she met and married a young Jewish physicist, Mikhail (Matvei) Bronstein. In 1937, he was arrested on a false charge and executed in the Gulag. She was never told of his fate. Lydia befriended others whose loved ones had also disappeared, including the poet Anna Akhmatova. She went on to become an established poet and writer herself and one of the senior editors on a liberal monthly, Literatur Naya Moskva. Her real breakthrough was a short story, "Sofia Petrovna," written in 1939-1940; it was circulated clandestinely in the late 1950s and appeared in Paris in 1965 under the title "Opustely Dom" ("An Abandoned House"). It was banned in the Soviet Union. Her second major book, Spusk pod Vodu ("Descent Into Water"), also never appeared in her own country. In 1974, Lydia was expelled from the Writers' Union for defending Boris Pasternak and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. She was monitored closely by the KGB, and only her important literary status in the West saved her from arrest. Her most important work was the two-volume journal, which she kept at great personal risk, of her meetings and conversations with Anna Akhmatova in the days of Stalin's Great Terror, Zapiski Akhmatovoi ("Akhmatova's Notes"). It was published in Paris in 1979-1980 and banned in her own country. Her works finally became legally available for Soviet readers beginning in 1988.

Medlemmer

Anmeldelser

Sovjetunionen, ca 1937
Olga Petrovna er enke og har en eneste søn, Kolja. Han bliver arresteret som folkefjende og sendt i 10 års forvisning. Hun er fast overbevist om at sønnen til fingerspidserne er partitro og derfor aldrig kan have gjort de forbrydelser han anklages for. Hun er også fast overbevist om at partiet har ret og aldrig kan tage fejl.
Hun forsøger at rumme begge opfattelser og hendes forstand tager skade af det.

Fortællingen selv har heller ikke haft nogen god skæbne, men den endte dog med at blive udgivet i udlandet.
Dette er en gloseret udgave til brug for russiskundervisningen.
Den hed oprindeligt Софья Петровна, men skiftede navn undervejs i processen med at udgive den i udlandet.
… (mere)
 
Markeret
bnielsen | 13 andre anmeldelser | Jul 29, 2012 |

Lister

Hæderspriser

Måske også interessante?

Associated Authors

Statistikker

Værker
22
Medlemmer
545
Popularitet
#45,748
Vurdering
3.9
Anmeldelser
24
ISBN
50
Sprog
9
Udvalgt
1

Diagrammer og grafer