| Yevgeny Zamyatin (1884–1937)Incluye los nombres: Zamiatin E., Zamjatin E., Zamiatine E, E Zamiatine, E. Zamyatin, Y. Zamiatin, E.I. Zamiatin, Eugen Samjatin, E. I. Zamjatin, Evgeny Zamyatin ... (Ver la lista completa), Zamiatin Eugene, Eugene Zamiatin, Evgeni Zamiatin, Eugene Zamyatin, Evgeny Zamiatin, Yeugeny Zamyatin, Vevgeny ZAMYATIN, Yevgeni Zamyatin, Yevgeny Zamyatin, Yevgeni Zamyatin, Yevgeny Zamyatin, Evgeniy Zamyatin, Yevgeny Zamiatin, Evgueny Zamiatin, Euvgeny Zamiatin, Evgeny Zamïatin, Evgenij Samjatin, Yevgeni Zamiatin, Evgenii Zamiatin, Vevgeny Zamjatin, Evgenij Zamjatin, Evgenyi Zamyatin, Evgenij Zamjatin, Yegevny Zamyatin, Yevgeny Zamyatin, Evgenii Zamyatin, Evgenij Zamyatin, Jevgeni Zamjatin, Jewgeni Samjatin, Yevgeny Zamyatin, Evgueni Zamiatin, Zamyatin Yeugeny, Jewgenij Samjatin, Evgeniĭ Zamyatin, Jewgenij Zamjatin, Yevgueni Zamiatin, Jergenij Zamjatin, Jevgenij Zamjatin, Yevgueni Zamiatin, Evgenij Zamjátin, Eugène Zamiatine, Zamiatine Evgueni, Jevgenij Samjatin, Zamiatine/Evgueni, Ievgueni Zamiatin, YEVGHENIY ZAMYATIN, Yevgheniy Zamyatin, Ievgueni Zamiatine, ザミャーチン, Zamiatine Evguéni, Evgenij I. Zamjatin, Ievguêni Zamiátin, Evgenif8 Zamk8latin, Ėvgenij I. Zamjatin, YEUGUENI I. ZAMIATIN, Е.И. Замятин, Zamyatin Y. Zamyatin E., יבגני זמיאטין, Evgenij Ivanovic Zamjatin, Yevgeny (Eugene) Zamiatin, Evgeny Ivanovich Zamyatin, Eugene Ivanovich Zamiatin, Yevgeniy Ivanovic Zamyatin, Yevgeny Ivanovich Zamyatin, Evgenij Ivanovič Zamâtin, Evgenii Ivanovich Zamiatin, Evgenii Ivanovich Zamyatin, Evgenii Ivanovich Zamiatin, Yevgenyi Ivanovich Zamyatin, Jevgeni Ivanovitsj Zamjatin, Evgeniĭ Ivanovich Zamyatin, Eugène Ivanovich Zamiatine, Evgenii Ivanovitsj Zamjatin, Evgueni Ivanovitch Zamiatin, Evgueni Ivanovitch Zamiatine, Евгений Замятин, Евгений Замятин, Evgeniˆi Ivanovich Zamíàtin, Yevgeny Zamyatin Mirra Ginsburg, Evgenij Ivanovič Zamâtin, Evgeniˆi Ivanovich Zamiatin, Evgueniï Ivanovich Zamiatin, Eugène Ivanovich Zamiatine, Евге́ний Замя́тин, Evgeniĭ Ivanovich Zami︠a︡tin, Jevgenij Ivanovič Zamjatin, Mirra (TRN) Yevgeny/ Ginsburg Zamyatin, Yevgeny Ivanovich (1884-1937) Zamiyatin, Замятин Евгений Иванович, Евгений Иванович Замятин, Yevgeny illustration by Richard Powers Zamyatin, Evgenii Ivano Yevgeny(Author) ; Zamiatin Zamyatin, Richard Illustrated Artwork Powers Zamyatin, FORM, Introduction) Yevgeny Zamyatin (Author) Clarence B, Mirra Ginsburg,Mirra (TRN) Ginsburg,Evgenii Ivanovich Zameiiatin Zamyatin, Yevgeny 7,878 (9,020) | 213 | 2,652 | (3.86) | 32 | 0 | Zamyatin studied at the Polytechnic Institute in St. Petersburg and became a professional naval engineer. His first story appeared in 1908, and he became serious about writing in 1913, when his short novel A Provincial Tale (1913) was favorably received. He became part of the neorealist group, which included Remizov and Prishvin. During World War I, he supervised the construction of icebreakers in England for the Russian government. After his return home, he published two satiric works about English life, "The Islanders" (1918) and "The Fisher of Men" (1922). During the civil war and the early 1920s, Zamyatin published theoretical essays as well as fiction. He played a central role in many cultural activities---as an editor, organizer, and teacher of literary technique---and had an important influence on younger writers, such as Olesha and Ivanov. Zamyatin's prose after the Revolution involved extensive use of ellipses, color symbolism, and elaborate chains of imagery. It is exemplified in such well-known stories as "Mamai" (1921) and "The Cage" (1922). His best-known work is the novel We (1924), a satiric, futuristic tale of a dystopia that was a plausible extrapolation from early twentieth-century social and political trends. The book, which directly influenced George Orwell's (see Vol. 1) 1984, 1984, was published abroad in several translations during the 1920s. In 1927 a shortened Russian version appeared in Prague, and the violent press campaign that followed led to Zamyatin's resignation from a writers' organization and, eventually, to his direct appeal to Stalin for permission to leave the Soviet Union. This being granted in 1931, Zamyatin settled in Paris, where he continued to work until his death. Until glasnost he was unpublished and virtually unknown in Russia. (Bowker Author Biography) — biografía de Nosotros … (más) |
Obras de Yevgeny Zamyatin También por Yevgeny Zamyatin Los mejores socios por obrasseite (13), LolaWalser (10), Arbieroo (8), Lorenzo_Giannini (8), graffiti.living (8), catherinedarley (7), pharvey4 (7), ColorfulTsukuru (7), zenosbooks (7), perfectleft (7), dianahelwink (6), aquaticus (6), iijjaallkkaa (6) — más Añadidos recientementeSwatiRavi (1), quavmo (1), vancampen (1), judepais (1), Bram-Kaandorp (1), sdpbooks (1), Gordana_Antolovic (1), JAGC74 (1), AlainCipit (2), MicheleFusco (1) Bibliotecas heredadasMiembros favoritosMiembros: gangleri, dkarenart, tcg17321, languagehat, jgladieu, bmorphism, BenKline, bibliopolitan, AuntieReb, j.a.lesen, miembro privado, StunnedTuna, sporcloid, TrueChic, saintmadness, ENCPress, PLHarreman, zenomax, Tijl, joemowens (ver más 12), theblastedmohab, Kenwilliams, gatabella, miembro privado, clong, parcequilfaut, tros, jelundberg, the_red_shoes, tarshaan, LolaWalser, miembro privado
Yevgeny Zamyatin tiene 1 un evento pasado. (show)  An Evening of Poetry with Barbara Murphy & David Huddle (Burlington) Join Barbara E. Murphy and David Huddle for an evening of poetry! ABOUT THE AUTHORS: A native of Ivanhoe, Virginia, David Huddle has lived in Vermont for over four decades. He is the author of nineteen novels, short story collections, essays, and volumes of poetry, including Glory River and Blacksnake at the Family Reunion. He teaches at the Bread Loaf School of English and the Rainier Writing Workshop. " Huddle is a source of light in an often gray world," says Booklist.
Barbara Murphy's work has appeared in several literary journals including New England Review, Green Mountains Review, The Threepenny Review, and Michigan Quarterly Review. She was nominated for a Pushcart Prize and is the recipient of a Vermont Council on the Arts fellowship. Murphy has worked as president of Johnson State College in Vermont since 2001 and has been recognized for her leadership roles in higher education. She lives and works in northern Vermont with her husband Tom Garrett.
ABOUT THE BOOKS: An account of spiritual survival through the practice of literary art, the poems in David Huddle s eighth collection, Dream Sender, move among a variety of poetic forms and voices. Here, a bear wonders why he could not have been a raccoon, a bird, or a meadow; and a five-year-old thrills to the forbidden taste of whiskey as he eavesdrops on his parents after-dinner conversation. By turns outrageous and pragmatic, Huddle s poems acknowledge the powerful and disturbing currents of the contemporary world as they also explore the comfort and familiarity we find there. Huddle's poems illuminate the nature of relationships between family, friends, and even animals, celebrating their shortcomings, embarrassments, and eccentricities. At once frank and compassionate, Dream Sender finds both humor and poignancy in human imperfections.
Barbara Murphy's "Almost Too Much both tactfully and relentlessly interrogates our human experience in these dehumanizing times. There's not a sliver of false hope in these pages, but reading them, we catch glimpses of the paradox of our lives, that 'The sound of geese /overhead, their thin cries clear /as night through the ceilings and roof / of the house, is either the saddest /sound we will ever know / or one of great lifting joy.' Barbara Murphy's quietly brilliant poems move us readers toward usable truth," says David Huddle.
DATE: Thursday, September 10th at 7pm
LOCATION: Phoenix Books Burlington
ADMISSION: Tickets are $3 per person, and include a coupon for $5 off a book by one of our featured authors! Tickets will be available at either Phoenix Books location starting on August 27th, and coupons expire at closing the evening of the event. Seating is limited. (phoenixbooksvt)… (más)
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