ISBN-13: 9783039105465 / Angielski / Miękka / 2013 / 234 str.
-This is an interesting and important book, the first attempt to encapsulate the highly idiosyncratic uvre and career of Evgeny Popov, a major and controversial figure in the late Soviet and post-Soviet literary landscape.- (Michael Pushkin, University of Birmingham)
-Morris is excellent in his treatment of the writer s attitude towards the past and history; and he differentiates between Popov s more nuanced and ambiguous view of the Soviet experiment and those writers, likewise liberals, who have adopted a confessional stance.- (Robert Porter, University of Bristol)
-A broad contextualization of the works of this important Russian author.- (Christine Engel, University of Innsbruck)
This is the first book devoted to the writings of Evgeny Popov (born 1946), a major and controversial figure in the late Soviet and post-Soviet literary landscape. The author uses a wide range of primary and secondary sources, many of them in Russian, alongside detailed analysis of the novels and stories themselves. The introduction charts the course of Popov s personal and professional biography, including major turning points such as the Metropole affair of 1979. A chapter on critical contexts provides a clear account of the history of Popov s reception. Other chapters focus on the first collection of short stories and the complexities of narrative voice, the concept of the non-elucidatory principle at the heart of Popov s poetics, and the short story cycles in Metropole and Catalogue, from the late 1970s and early 1980s. Finally the author addresses the key phenomenon of Popov s self-fictionalization in both his shorter and longer works up to the present day."