Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker i Ukrainian Studies-serien

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  • - The Contemporary Ukrainian Literature Series Anthology
     
    244,-

    Presents translations of literary works that imaginatively engage pivotal issues in today's Ukraine and express its tribulations and jubilations. Featuring poetry, fiction, and essays by fifteen Ukrainian writers, the anthology offers English-language readers a wide array of the most beguiling literature written in Ukraine in the past fifty years.

  • - Ukrainian Postmodernism of the 1990s
    av Tamara Hundorova
    452,-

    Having exploded on the margins of Europe, Chornobyl marked the end of the Soviet Unionand tied the era of postmodernism in Western Europe with nuclear consciousness. The Post-Chornobyl Library becomes a metaphor of a new Ukrainian literature of the 1990s, which emerges out of the Chornobyl nuclear trauma.

  • - Essays in Honor of Marko Pavlyshyn
     
    1 563,-

    A bilingual collection of essays that celebrates Marko Pavlyshyn's contribution to the study of modern and contemporary Ukrainian literature and culture. With its many methodological approaches and the variety of periods and authors, the book reflects and builds on Pavlyshyn's willingness to modernize our understanding of Ukrainian literature.

  • av Ola Hnatiuk
    335 - 455,-

    Offers a study of a multicultural city in times when all norms collapse. Ola Hnatiuk presents a meticulously documented portrait of Lviv's diverse intelligentsia during World War Two. She employs diverse sources in several languages to tell the story of the city and to challenge the national narratives dominant in Central and Eastern Europe.

  • - New Poems from Ukraine
     
    226,-

    The armed conflict in Ukraine brought about an emergence of a distinctive trend in contemporary Ukrainian poetry: the poetry of war. The poems collected in this volume engage with the events and experiences of war, reflecting on the themes of alienation, loss, and disability; as well as justice, heroism, courage, resilience, and forgiveness.

  • av Yaroslav Hrytsak
    428,-

    In this Ukrainian bestseller, now available in English for the first time, Yaroslav Hrytsak examines the first three decades (1856-86) in the life of Ivan Franko, a prominent writer, scholar, journalist, and political activist who became an indisputable leader in the forging of modern Ukrainian national identity.

  • - Ukrainian Poems on the City
     
    1 082,-

    Demonstrates how descriptions and evocations of New York City are connected to various stylistic modes and topical questions urgent to Ukrainian poetry throughout its development. The collection gives readers the opportunity to view New York through various poetic and stylistic lenses.

  • - Ukrainian Poems on the City
     
    249,-

    Demonstrates how descriptions and evocations of New York City are connected to various stylistic modes and topical questions urgent to Ukrainian poetry throughout its development. The collection gives readers the opportunity to view New York through various poetic and stylistic lenses.

  • - Pantelejmon Kulis (1819-1897) and the Formation of Literary Ukrainian
    av Andrii Danylenko
    428 - 1 119,-

    Offers a comprehensive study of the language programme of the prominent Ukrainian writer and ideologue Pantelejmon Kuli (1819-1897) whose translations of the Bible and Shakespeare proved most innovative in the formation of literary and the national self-identification of Ukrainians. The author looks at Kuli's translations from the perspective of cultural and ethnic studies.

  • - Mykola (Nik) Bazhan's Early Experimental Poetry
    av Mykola Bazhan
    1 274,-

  • av Andrii Portnov
    490 - 1 725,-

  • av Mirja Lecke
    1 347,-

    This interdisciplinary study of cosmopolitan spaces in Odesa explores topical issues in cultural diversity, ethnicity, literature, and socio-economic history. The book brings together leading scholars in a ground-breaking discussion of relations between Russians, Jews, and Ukrainians in one of the most fascinating multiethnic cities in eastern Europe.

  • av Maria Grazia Bartolini
    1 018,-

    The book offers a thorough study of the early poetry (1956?1971) of the Ukrainian/American writer Yuriy Tarnawsky, focusing on its evolutionary path from late modernism to postmodernism, which the author conceptualizes as a ?shift of dominants? from humanist (existentialist) questions to an anti-humanist and post-epistemological perspective.

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