Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5124649 Russian Literature 2016 26 Pages PDF
Abstract

The article draws on recent developments in trauma studies to analyze the complex “re-organization” of Russian history in Viktor Pelevin's celebrated novel Chapaev i Pustota (1996; translated as Buddha's Little Finger). Pelevin employs the narrator's individual shock, amnesia and trauma - and the confused historical plot ensuing from it - for a reflection on the possibilities of collective remembrance and mourning in post-Soviet Russia. The article briefly positions its approach among other recent efforts in Russian studies to apply notions of “trauma”. Subsequently, it analyzes Pelevin's intricate reflections on the confusing traumatic legacies of twentieth-century history in this novel.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
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