Roman Utkin is an assistant professor of Russian, East European, and Eurasian studies as well as feminist, gender, and sexuality studies at Wesleyan University, specializing in twentieth- and twenty-first-century Russian culture, literature, and society.
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Description
List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Note on Transliteration and Translation Introduction 1. Unsentimental Journeys: Berlin as Trial Emigration 2. Guides to Berlin: Exiles, EmigrEs, and the Left 3. Performing Exile: The Golden Cockerel at the Berlin State Opera 4. Nabokov, Berlin, and the Future of Russian Literature 5. Queering the Russian Diaspora Conclusion Appendix: The Russian Poets Club Meeting Minutes, Berlin, 1928 Notes Bibliography Index
A groundbreaking book-an innovative, compelling, and important contribution to the study of Russian and Russophone cultural life during the interwar era. This is a bold and necessary corrective to narratives concerning global Russian culture in the postrevolutionary period." - Kevin M. F. Platt, University of Pennsylvania "Utkin digs deep into the world of Russian Berlin, a liminal site that allowed Russian artists displaced by the Bolshevik Revolution to begin to imagine what emigration might mean. He reminds us of the fluidity of the historical moment and the diverse choices Russian creators made. A unique and significant study." - Catherine Ciepiela, Amherst College