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Lydia Chukovskaya (1907–1996)

Auteur de Sofia Petrovna

21 oeuvres 550 utilisateurs 24 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Daughter of the famous critic Kornei Chukovsky, Lydia Chukovskaya is a fiction writer and memoirist of note. Her two novels, Sofia Petrovna (1965), which was translated as The Deserted House, and Going Under (1972), dealt with the Stalin period. The former work is a portrait of a woman whose psyche afficher plus gradually dissolves under the impact of the purges. A close friend of Anna Akhmatova, Chukovskaya preserved a detailed account of their encounters, highly important for understanding the poet's biography and views. Chukovskaya became a leading dissident, and was expelled from the Writers' Union in 1974. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins

Œuvres de Lydia Chukovskaya

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Chukovskaya, Lydia
Nom légal
Чуковская, Лидия Корнеевна
Autres noms
Chukovskaya, Lydia Korneievna
Uglov, A. (pseudonym)
Chukovskaia, Lidiia
Tschukowskaja, Lydia
Date de naissance
1907-03-24
Date de décès
1996-02-08
Sexe
female
Nationalité
Russia
Lieu de naissance
Helsingfors, Russian Empire
Lieu du décès
Peredelkino, Russia
Lieux de résidence
St. Petersburg, Russia
Moscow, Russia
Peredelkino, Russia
Professions
poet
novelist
memorist
editor
Relations
Chukovsky, Kornei (father)
Marshak, Samuil (mentor)
Bronstein, Matvei (husband)
Akhmatova, Anna (friend)
Organisations
Writer's Union of the USSR
Prix et distinctions
Andrei Sakharov Prize For Writer's Civic Courage (1990)
Courte biographie
Lydia Korneievna Chukovskaya was a daughter of a literary critic and children's writer and grew up in a home in St. Petersburg frequented by prominent literary figures. She was educated at the Institute for the History of the Arts. Her first job, which lasted 10 years, was as an editor at the state children's publishing house. She published her first short story, "Leningrad-Odessa", under the pseudonym A. Uglov. At about the same time she met and married a young Jewish physicist, Mikhail (Matvei) Bronstein. In 1937, he was arrested on a false charge and executed in the Gulag. She was never told of his fate. Lydia befriended others whose loved ones had also disappeared, including the poet Anna Akhmatova. She went on to become an established poet and writer herself and one of the senior editors on a liberal monthly, Literatur Naya Moskva. Her real breakthrough was a short story, "Sofia Petrovna," written in 1939-1940; it was circulated clandestinely in the late 1950s and appeared in Paris in 1965 under the title "Opustely Dom" ("An Abandoned House"). It was banned in the Soviet Union. Her second major book, Spusk pod Vodu ("Descent Into Water"), also never appeared in her own country. In 1974, Lydia was expelled from the Writers' Union for defending Boris Pasternak and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. She was monitored closely by the KGB, and only her important literary status in the West saved her from arrest. Her most important work was the two-volume journal, which she kept at great personal risk, of her meetings and conversations with Anna Akhmatova in the days of Stalin's Great Terror, Zapiski Akhmatovoi ("Akhmatova's Notes"). It was published in Paris in 1979-1980 and banned in her own country. Her works finally became legally available for Soviet readers beginning in 1988.

Membres

Critiques

> ENTRETIENS AVEC ANNA AKHMATOVA par Lydia Tchoukovskaia Albin Michel
Se reporter au compte rendu de Sanda STOLOJAN
In: Revue Esprit Nouvelle série, No. 49 (1) (Janvier 1981), pp. 209-210… ; (en ligne),
URL : https://esprit.presse.fr/article/stolojan-sanda/entretiens-avec-anna-akhmatova-p...… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Joop-le-philosophe | Jan 7, 2021 |
> Audejean Christian. Lydia Tchoukovskaia : La maison déserte, traduit du russe par Serge Duchesne (Calmann-Lévy).
In: Revue Esprit Nouvelle série, No. 447 (6) (JUIN 1975), pp. 1078-1079. … ; (en ligne),
URL : https://esprit.presse.fr/article/christian-audejean/lydia-tchoukovskaia-la-maiso...

> 1937 : l’attente
Bouleversant par sa sobriété et sa pudeur, Sophia Pétrovna, traduit parfois par La maison déserte, raconte comment la terreur s’immisce dans la vie d’une femme modeste et sans histoire et la détruit. [...]
[...] Par-delà le récit de la tragédie de Sophia et celle de ses proches, on saisit avec effroi comment une société qui bascule dans la paranoïa et la suspicion devient invivable.
--M.-M. Ferrand - BIBLIO 46 Livres de Russie
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Joop-le-philosophe | 14 autres critiques | Feb 6, 2019 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
21
Membres
550
Popularité
#45,355
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
24
ISBN
50
Langues
9
Favoris
1

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