Citation:
Date Published:
5 Jan, 2020Abstract:
This paper explores Varlam Shalamov’s representation of the fate of the Russian intelligentsia in the Gulag, his framing and reframing his idea of the writer’s duty. In Kolyma Tales, Shalamov not only bears witness to the Russian intelligentsia in the camps, but also establishes a dynamic relationship of common identity between the author and those about whom he writes. This relationship restores the erased identities of intelligenty and sheds light on Shalamov’s understanding of the writer’s duty to give voice to their otherwise lost experiences. Instead of declaring the Gulag the site of the death of the Russian intelligentsia in the 20th century, the Soviet camp experience becomes for Shalamov an opportunity to bring nuance to the multidimensional heritage of the intelligentsia and to affirm his belief in the immortality of the intelligentsia as an idea.
October 2020: Josefina Lundblad-Janjić is assistant professor of Russian in Monterey, California, and has worked as a lecturer at University of California, Santa Cruz. She received her doctorate in Slavic Languages & Literatures from University of California, Berkeley. Her research focuses on narratives of imprisonment and exile in the Russian literary tradition in general and on the prose and dramaturgy of Varlam Shalamov in particular.