Skip to product information
1 of 1

I Saw It

Regular price $109.00
Sale price $109.00 Regular price $109.00
Sale Sold out
In this ground-breaking book, based on archival and field research and previously unknown historical evidence, Maxim D. Shrayer introduces the work of Ilya Selvinsky, the first Jewish-Russian poet ...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 01 March 2013
View Product Details
In this ground-breaking book, based on archival and field research and previously unknown historical evidence, Maxim D. Shrayer introduces the work of Ilya Selvinsky, the first Jewish-Russian poet to depict the Holocaust (Shoah) in the occupied Soviet territories. In January 1942, while serving as a military journalist, Selvinsky witnessed the immediate aftermath of the massacre of thousands of Jews outside the Crimean city of Kerch, and thereafter composed and published poems about it. Shrayer painstakingly reconstructs the details of the Nazi atrocities witnessed by Selvinsky, and shows that in 1943, as Stalin’s regime increasingly refused to report the annihilation of Jews in the occupied territories, Selvinsky paid a high price for his writings and actions. This book features over 60 rare photographs and illustrations and includes translations of Selvinsky’s principal Shoah poems.
files/i.png Icon
Price: $109.00
Pages: 340
Publisher: Academic Studies Press
Imprint: Academic Studies Press
Series: Studies in Russian and Slavic Literatures, Cultures, and History
Publication Date: 01 March 2013
Trim Size: 9.21 X 6.14 in
ISBN: 9781618111692
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

“This beautifully close reading of a major Soviet poet restores for us an important vision of the Holocaust.”
— Timothy Snyder
Maxim D. Shrayer (PhD Yale University) is Professor of Russian, English, and Jewish studies at Boston College. A bilingual writer and translator, Shrayer has authored and edited a number of books, among them the path-breaking critical studies The World of Nabokov’s Stories and Russian Poet/ Soviet Jew, the acclaimed literary memoir Waiting for America: A Story of Emigration, and the collection Yom Kippur in Amsterdam. Shrayer’s two-volume Anthology of Jewish-Russian Literature won a 2007 National Jewish Book Award, and in 2012 he received a Guggenheim Fellowship. For more information, visit www.shrayer.com.