Stock image for illustration purposes only - book cover, edition or condition may vary.
The Englishman from Lebedian'. A Life of Evgeny Zamiatin (1884-1937).
J A E Curtis
FREE Delivery in Ireland
Description for The Englishman from Lebedian'. A Life of Evgeny Zamiatin (1884-1937).
Num Pages: 403 pages, black & white illustrations. BIC Classification: 1DVUA; BGL; DSB; HBJD. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 237 x 164 x 30. Weight in Grams: 740.
This volume explores the life and work of Evgeny Zamiatin, whose renown abroad has largely been shaped by his anti-utopian novel We, completed in 1919-20. After his death in 1937, he seemed fated to disappear into obscurity in the West, at the same time as he was being airbrushed out of Soviet literary history at home. George Orwell, who readily acknowledged that reading We had contributed to his own ideas for 1984, together with Professor Gleb Struve, set out to secure Zamiatin’s reputation after the Second World War. It would be sixty-five years after its initial publication that the novel ... Read morefinally became available to Russian readers at home, at the very end of the Soviet era. Only now has We been recognised in Zamiatin’s own country as a defining text, warning of the political and technological dangers of the coming century. Show Less
Product Details
Publisher
Academic Studies Press United States
Place of Publication
Brighton, United States
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
About J A E Curtis
J. A. E. Curtis, Oxford University, UK
Reviews for The Englishman from Lebedian'. A Life of Evgeny Zamiatin (1884-1937).
“Julie Curtis’s The Englishman from Lebedian’: A Life of Evgeny Zamiatin is an indispensable new biography for readers who want to learn more about one of Russia’s most important 20th-century writers. Curtis has unearthed fascinating new details about Zamiatin’s early years in England, and she brings to life the world of Revolutionary Russia as he wrote what would become his ... Read moremasterpiece, We. The biography’s concluding chapters are especially riveting, as Curtis describes Zamiatin’s final years in emigration and his relationship with friends and colleagues in Soviet Russia and abroad. Beautifully written and deeply researched, The Englishman from Lebedian’ will undoubtedly become the English language standard for both scholars and general readers.”
Justin Weir, Harvard University “[T]hroughout this compelling new biography we are struck above all by Zamiatin’s multifaceted personality and extraordinary vitality. . . . The sheer amount of detail could have become overwhelming, but Curtis never allows it to stifle a narrative that brilliantly illuminates the life of one of the most talented figures in twentieth-century Russian life and letters.”
Roger Cockrell
Modern Language Review, Volume 109, Part 4, October 2014
“The Englishman From Lebedian’ by J. A. E. Curtis is a welcome and significant contribution to the scholarship on Evgenii Zamiatin. Weaving together a detailed account of his dual career as an engineer and a writer with insights into his complicated personal life, Curtis creates a narrative fabric that is both comprehensive and nuanced. This book will be useful to students getting acquainted with Zamiatin and to scholars who have known him for many years. . . . Curtis’s access to Zamiatin’s archives and especially his voluminous correspondence has resulted in a full, balanced and meticulously detailed account of his life and work. Of particular value to scholars of this period are accounts of Zamiatin’s friendships and collaborations with Bulgakov, Akhmatova, Fedin, Annenkov, Kustodiev, Chukovskii and many other figures in Russian modernism. The photographs and illustrations included in the book add significantly to the story Curtis tells in this volume. It is a story that expands and enriches our understanding of early twentieth-century Russian and Soviet culture as a whole.”
Karen L. Ryan
Slavonic and East European Review, 92, 4, October 2014
“This book is the combined product of love for the subject matter and thorough research in archives across two continents and three countries: the United States, Russia, and France. The result is the first complete critical biography of one of Russia’s leading modernist writers, critics, and philosophers. . . . Curtiss detailed treatment of Zamiatin’s family, work, and literary relationships brings the story of the writer’s everyday life directly to the reader. Her analyses of his literary works are comprehensive but not obtrusively so. They whet the reader’s appetite to read the originals. . . . Most important, Curtis describes the highly complicated individual that was Evgenii Zamiatin fairly. In short, her book should be welcomed into every academic and general reader’s home. Readers will likely learn not only the uniqueness of Zamiatin’s multifaceted heritage and the history of his troubled times but will also understand something about their own personal struggles and victories.”
Zinaida Gimpelevich
Slavic Review, vol. 73, no. 4 (Winter 2014)
“J.A.E. Curtis’s meticulously researched and highly entertaining new biography is a refreshing addition to Evgenii Zamiatin scholarship. . . . Curtis takes full advantage of archives that were previously closed or inaccessible in order to provide us with a detailed account of Zamiatin’s nomadic life and work. . . . I felt at times that I was peering over Curtis’s shoulder as she delightedly uncovered each new object and letter. Zamiatin’s journeys are informed and enriched by Curtis’s own journey through the archives. . . . I highly recommend this biography to anyone interested in the early Soviet period or in Zamiatin. Curtis provides us with a vivid, well-researched, and entertaining account of one of the most important writers of the twentieth century.”
Eric Laursen (University of Utah)
Canadian Slavonic Papers, Vol. LVI, Nos. 3-4, September-December 2014
“The first study of its scope, Curtis’s book offers an astute and carefully researched, not to mention unparalleled, consideration of Zamiatin. Here, between a smartly designed cover and interspersed with two sets of illustrations and photographs, we find a carefully wrought portrait of the writer. Curtis has culled from numerous archives to construct a biography that illuminates many aspects of Zamiatin and his many contacts in the Soviet and Western worlds, The Englishman allows its subject to speak for himself. . . . An especially enticing feature of Curtis’s book is that it features the clarity, scope, and novel points of departure necessary to spark further interest in this most unabashedly iconoclastic of writers.”
José Vergara
Slavic and East European Journal, vol. 58, no. 4 (Winter 2015)
“This new biography, the product of many years research in archives in the US, France, and Russia, is by far the most detailed account of this writer’s life to have been published so far and constitutes a landmark in the study of twentieth-century modernist fiction and Russian cultural life more broadly. The appeal of this monograph lies not only in its patient exploration of the significant personal events in Zamiatin’s life, but also in its impressive grasp of the social, political, and cultural events which shaped him. … Not only has Curtis woven this existing body of material into an elegantly written and compelling biographical narrative, she has also discovered archival materials of her own which shed important light on aspects of Zamiatin’s life and literary career which were hitherto shrouded in relative mystery. … It is a model of judicious and meticulous excavation, and a monumental achievement.” —Philip Cavendish, University College London, Canadian-American Slavic Studies Vol. 53
Canadian-American Slavic Studies
Show Less