<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Haunted by its unburied past, late Soviet and post-Soviet culture has produced unique mourning and memorial practices -- this book details these practices and provides new interpretations of the cultural artifacts produced in Russia from the 1930s through the 2010s.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>Haunted by its unburied past, late Soviet and post-Soviet culture has produced unique mourning and memorial practices - this book details these practices and provides new interpretations of the cultural artifacts produced in Russia from the 1930s through the 2010s.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><i>Warped Mourning</i> is pioneering and thought-provoking. It reads (or rereads) a dazzling range of texts, films, and images to reveal their obsession with the past . . . [B]rilliant close readings . . . A work of great ambition that engages a century of thinking about trauma.--Polly Jones "<i>Times Literary Supplement</i>"<br><br>[<i>Warped Mourning</i> is] a nuanced, thought-provoking and comprehensive study of mourning and memory that integrates cultural artifacts and leading theoretical concepts.--Josephine Von Zitzewitz "<i>The Slavonic & East European Review</i>"<br><br>As mourning narratives are the main objects of Etkind's book, he investigates memoirs, fiction and non-fiction writings, and movies in search of mnemonic footprints of the gulag experience, trying to trace the gulag as a determinant of Soviet and post-Soviet cultural and intellectual life . . . Memory of the Soviet Union in Russia is an ongoing contestation, and Etkind's book is an important contribution to understanding the politics of memory in Russia.--Daria Khlevnyuk "<i>European Journal of Cultural and Political Sociology</i>"<br><br>Etkind presents a rich, intelligent, and profound account of responses to the devastating loss of human life in Russia's Soviet period. . . . This brilliant book will be indispensable for scholars of mourning theories.--C. A. Rydel "<i>CHOICE</i>"<br><br>Etkind's brilliant and lucid work presents the first serious account of theoretical challenges to mourning theories in the context of Soviet terror. It is entirely possible that the very terms of that terror--its policies of falsification, its endemic uncertainty, its capacious inclusion of the perpetrators themselves--will undercut many of the assumptions that have governed mourning and melancholia for the last hundred years.--Nancy Condee "University of Pittsburgh"<br><br>Illuminating, rigorous in its analysis, and stimulating, <i>Warped Mourning</i> draws on a wide range of theoretical models of memory expounded by Freud, Benjamin, and Derrida and presents an innovative theory of mourning grounded in Soviet and post-Soviet Russia . . . Etkind persuasively presents a thoroughly constructed theory of mourning with bright empirical insights. The author marries the history of his own family with the histories of victims of the gulag who became the objects of investigation in his book. This personal involvement makes the writing passionate and committed. It also helps sharpen the theoretical precision in the attempts to understand the suffering of others and analyze the subsequent remembrance of this suffering. Such compassionate writing makes the reading process engaging and involving as well. The book will definitely be of interest to all those who are interested in memory, trauma, and Russian history.--Yuliya Yurchuk "<i>Ab Imperio</i>"<br><br>In <i>Warped Mourning: Stories of the Undead in the Land of the Unburied</i>, Alexander Etkind shows why mourning is more conducive to cultural analysis. Where trauma is unsymbolized and melancholia is contained within the self, mourning is often an address to the other . . . Etkind peruses a broad array of writings and artifacts, offering interpretations inflected by insights from psychoanalysis and critical theory.--Anna Fishzon "<i>New Books in Psychoanalysis</i>"<br><br>Mr. Etkind ranges expertly through cultural theory, finding in film, literary criticism, linguistics, art and philosophy the effect of the Stalinist trauma on later Soviet and now Russian generations.--<i>The Economist</i><br><br>The cultural memory of traumas and catastrophes are a particularly rich area of investigation, and <i>Warped Mourning</i> makes its own unique and highly significant contribution to this field by convincingly arguing that the memory practices of late and post-Soviet culture deserve separate study . . . Etkind argues that the trend toward the gothic in late and post-Soviet literature confirms his broad characterization of Soviet Russian culture as unable or unwilling to remember the past, settling rather for a 'warped' repetition of it. <i>Warped Mourning</i> offers a reading of twentieth-century Russian culture that resists any attempt to normalize it.--Harriet Murav "<i>Slavic Review</i>"<br><br>The scope of authors the book surveys is impressively broad . . . [T]his is a provocative and intriguing book, one that offers a powerful corrective to the frequent laments regarding historical amnesia in post-Soviet Russia. It prompts scholars of memory to think more broadly and creatively about the forms that remembrance may take in culture, especially in situations when a more direct engagement with the past may be obstructed or blocked . . . Published when it was, this book itself constitutes a work of mourning for the crimes of the past and a warning about the future, even as it reminds us that the work of mourning is always--intrinsically--incomplete.--Olga Shevchenko "<i>Somatosphere</i>"<br><br>There is undoubtedly much that is new and exciting in this study of the impact of state violence on the form and content of art and scholarship in post-Stalin Russia.--Victoria Donovan "<i>The Russian Review</i>"<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Alexander Etkind is Professor of Russian Literature and Cultural History at the University of Cambridge, where he is also a Fellow at King's College. His most recent book is <i>Internal Colonization: Russia's Imperial Experience</i> (2011).
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