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Burying the Undead: Coming to Terms with the Soviet Past in Novels by Ol’ga Slavnikova and Sergei Lebedev
Author(s) -
Alena Heinritz
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
auc studia territorialia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2336-3231
pISSN - 1213-4449
DOI - 10.14712/23363231.2018.4
Subject(s) - art history , art , history , psychoanalysis , sociology , psychology
I ask how novels by Ol’ga Slavnikova and Sergei Lebedev reflect the possibility of reconciliation between the post-Soviet present and the Soviet past in Russia and the contemporary politics of history. Both novels will be read in the context of “magical historicism” (Etkind), a genre that uncovers the legacy of traumatic past events in the present time using elements of the grotesque. After discussing the concepts of spectrality (Marx, Derrida) and hauntings by the “unburied” (Etkind), I argue that specters and other similar figures reflect mediality. In the two case studies, I present haunting as a reflection of the problems that arise in the attempt to delineate communism and the Soviet past in discourse. Discursive delineation, I argue, is a precondition for coming to terms with the Soviet past. Keywords: Lebedev; Slavnikova; Russian literature; communism; reconciliation; spectrality; trauma DOI: 10.14712/23363231.2018.4

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