Lithuanian stories about Siberia

The article focuses on the Siberian stories published in the period of independent Lithuania. The main attention is paid to three works published at the beginning of the 21st century: 'Oi, ta Vorkuta' (Oh, That Vorkuta, 2002) by Viktoras Alekna, 'Virš mūsų poliarinė pašvaistė' (P...

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Main Author: Gustaitienė, Asta
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://vdu.lvb.lt/VDU:ELABAPDB4693952&prefLang=en_US
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spelling ftlitinstagrecon:oai:elaba:4693952 2023-05-15T18:42:55+02:00 Lithuanian stories about Siberia Gustaitienė, Asta 2010 http://vdu.lvb.lt/VDU:ELABAPDB4693952&prefLang=en_US eng eng http://vdu.lvb.lt/VDU:ELABAPDB4693952&prefLang=en_US Comparative studies, Daugavpils : Daugavpils university academic press Saule, 2010, Vol. 3, iss. 2, p. 119-130 ISSN 1691-5038 Lithuanian fiction Autobiographies Literary fairy-tale Exiles in literature info:eu-repo/classification/udc/82.09 info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2010 ftlitinstagrecon 2021-12-02T01:18:20Z The article focuses on the Siberian stories published in the period of independent Lithuania. The main attention is paid to three works published at the beginning of the 21st century: 'Oi, ta Vorkuta' (Oh, That Vorkuta, 2002) by Viktoras Alekna, 'Virš mūsų poliarinė pašvaistė' (Polar Lights Above Us, 2005) by Nijolė Ambrazaitytė, and 'Nelaukta kelionė' (Unexpected Journey, 2007) by Juzė Avižienytė-Žukauskienė. The article does not refer to the books written by various former Soviet agents of nomenclature, where they try to justify or provide an explanation of their activity and to create a rather pleasant image of themselves. The generic characteristics of the Siberian stories are discussed applying E. D. Hirsch's theory. The article aims to show the blurred boundaries of the genre (between a memoir and an autobiography). Though the main features of memoir literature-reflections of external processes and expression of collective consciousness or collective offence-are stronger in the analyzed stories, these stories also demonstrate some characteristics of autobiographical novel: the personal history of an individual or attempts to experience God. Besides, the narrators of these stories use various elements and structural details characteristic of the genres of fairytale, anecdote, short story or others. Article in Journal/Newspaper Vorkuta Siberia LAEI VL (Lithuanian Institute of Agrarian Economics Virtual Library)
institution Open Polar
collection LAEI VL (Lithuanian Institute of Agrarian Economics Virtual Library)
op_collection_id ftlitinstagrecon
language English
topic Lithuanian fiction
Autobiographies
Literary fairy-tale
Exiles in literature
info:eu-repo/classification/udc/82.09
spellingShingle Lithuanian fiction
Autobiographies
Literary fairy-tale
Exiles in literature
info:eu-repo/classification/udc/82.09
Gustaitienė, Asta
Lithuanian stories about Siberia
topic_facet Lithuanian fiction
Autobiographies
Literary fairy-tale
Exiles in literature
info:eu-repo/classification/udc/82.09
description The article focuses on the Siberian stories published in the period of independent Lithuania. The main attention is paid to three works published at the beginning of the 21st century: 'Oi, ta Vorkuta' (Oh, That Vorkuta, 2002) by Viktoras Alekna, 'Virš mūsų poliarinė pašvaistė' (Polar Lights Above Us, 2005) by Nijolė Ambrazaitytė, and 'Nelaukta kelionė' (Unexpected Journey, 2007) by Juzė Avižienytė-Žukauskienė. The article does not refer to the books written by various former Soviet agents of nomenclature, where they try to justify or provide an explanation of their activity and to create a rather pleasant image of themselves. The generic characteristics of the Siberian stories are discussed applying E. D. Hirsch's theory. The article aims to show the blurred boundaries of the genre (between a memoir and an autobiography). Though the main features of memoir literature-reflections of external processes and expression of collective consciousness or collective offence-are stronger in the analyzed stories, these stories also demonstrate some characteristics of autobiographical novel: the personal history of an individual or attempts to experience God. Besides, the narrators of these stories use various elements and structural details characteristic of the genres of fairytale, anecdote, short story or others.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Gustaitienė, Asta
author_facet Gustaitienė, Asta
author_sort Gustaitienė, Asta
title Lithuanian stories about Siberia
title_short Lithuanian stories about Siberia
title_full Lithuanian stories about Siberia
title_fullStr Lithuanian stories about Siberia
title_full_unstemmed Lithuanian stories about Siberia
title_sort lithuanian stories about siberia
publishDate 2010
url http://vdu.lvb.lt/VDU:ELABAPDB4693952&prefLang=en_US
genre Vorkuta
Siberia
genre_facet Vorkuta
Siberia
op_source Comparative studies, Daugavpils : Daugavpils university academic press Saule, 2010, Vol. 3, iss. 2, p. 119-130
ISSN 1691-5038
op_relation http://vdu.lvb.lt/VDU:ELABAPDB4693952&prefLang=en_US
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