Recovering the Past for the Future: Guilt, Memory, and Lidiia Ginzburg's Notes of a Blockade Person

In this article, Emily Van Buskirk uses archival manuscripts to peel back layers of Lidiia Ginzburg's palimpsestic Notes of a Blockade Person. She finds in Notes the fragmentary, distanced, and carefully contained traces of Ginzburg's “A Story of Pity and Cruelty,” an intense narrative abo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Slavic review 2010-07, Vol.69 (2), p.281-305
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description In this article, Emily Van Buskirk uses archival manuscripts to peel back layers of Lidiia Ginzburg's palimpsestic Notes of a Blockade Person. She finds in Notes the fragmentary, distanced, and carefully contained traces of Ginzburg's “A Story of Pity and Cruelty,” an intense narrative about guilt and remorse. Relying on Ginzburg's own scholarship, Van Buskirk argues that the author's transformations of experience across multiple texts were inspired by Aleksandr Herzen. Herzen provided a model for developing—out of a family tragedy, personal failure, guilt, and remorse—an elevated memoir that would serve history. Yet Ginzburg's notion of character, her ethics, and her documentary aesthetic were born of a different era and gave rise to different kinds of narratives, written in the third person about a slighdy generalized other, in a single situation. In Ginzburg's attempts to represent the typical Leningrad intellectual's blockade experiences there are tensions (characteristic of documentary literature) between desires for universality and specificity. Self-examination battles against self-exposure, while a commitment to literature of fact withstands an aversion to autobiography.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Abuse
Aesthetics
Autobiographical literature
Blockade
Blockades
Cruelty
Embargoes & blockades
Emotions
Ethics
Ginzburg, Lidiia
Guilt
History
Intellectuals
Leningrad
Literary characters
Literary criticism
Literature
Memory
Mothers
Narratives
Otters
Person
Pity
Russian history
Russian literature
Saint Petersburg, Russia
Scholarship
SIEGE OF LENINGRAD REVISITED: NARRATIVE, IMAGE, SELF
Slavic studies
U.S.S.R
World War Two
Written narratives
title Recovering the Past for the Future: Guilt, Memory, and Lidiia Ginzburg's Notes of a Blockade Person
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