词条 | Svetlana Boym |
释义 |
Svetlana Boym ({{lang-ru|Светла́на Ю́рьевна Бо́йм}}; 1959[1] – August 5, 2015)[2] was the Curt Hugo Reisinger Professor of Slavic and Comparative Literatures at Harvard University, and a media artist, playwright and novelist.[3] She was an associate of the Graduate School of Design and Architecture at Harvard University. Much of her work focused on developing the new theoretical concept of the off-modern. BiographyBoym was born in Leningrad, USSR. She studied Spanish at the Herzen Pedagogical Institute in Leningrad.[4] She received an M.A. from Boston University and a Ph.D. from Harvard.[5] Boym passed away on August 5, 2015, aged 56, in Boston, Massachusetts, following a year-long battle with cancer.[5] WritingBoym's written work explored relationships between utopia and kitsch, memory and modernity, and homesickness and the sickness of home.[6] Her research interests included 20th-century Russian literature, cultural studies, comparative literature and literary studies. In addition to teaching and writing, Boym also sat on the Editorial Collective of the interdisciplinary scholarly journal Public Culture. Boym was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Cabot Award for Research in Humanities, and an award from the American Council of Learned Societies. She won a Gilette Company Fellowship which provided her half a year study at the American Academy in Berlin.[7] Artistic practiceIn 2006, an exhibition showing Boym's media art opened in Factory Rog-Metelkovo, an art space in Ljubljana during the City of Women Festival. After that, she exhibited her work in various spaces including the Center for Book Arts in New York in 2008, and Galerija 101 in Kaunas in 2009. She also curated the exhibit "Territories of Terror: Memories and Mythologies of Gulag in Contemporary Russian-American Art" at Boston's University Art Gallery in 2006.[8] The exhibition featured works by Vitaly Komar, Alexander Melamid, Leonid Sokov, Grisha Bruskin, Eugene Yelchin, Irina Nakhova and Vadim Zakharov. The exhibition tackled the dual imperative of Gulag history and mythology, map and territory.[9] Boym also edited the exhibition catalogue that accompanied the exhibition.[9] Selected bibliographyBooks
Articles
Notes and references1. ^https://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/23/arts/international/svetlana-boym-56-scholar-of-myth-and-memory-dies.html 2. ^Obituary, newyorker.com; accessed August 8, 2015. 3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.powells.com/biblio?isbn=0465007082|title=The Future of Nostalgia|author=Frank Wilczek|work=powells.com}} 4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.eurozine.com/authors/boym.html|title=Eurozine - Svetlana Boym|work=eurozine.com}} 5. ^1 {{cite web|url=http://slavic.fas.harvard.edu/news/memoriam-professor-svetlana-boym|title=In Memoriam: Professor Svetlana Boym|work=harvard.edu}} 6. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/20071016163348/http://friezefoundation.org/biography/profile/svetlana_boym/ Profile], FreizeFoundation.org; accessed August 8, 2015. 7. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.americanacademy.de/home/person/svetlana-boym|title=Svetlana Boym - Gillette Company Fellow, Class of Fall 2003|publisher=American Academy in Berlin|accessdate=March 10, 2012}} 8. ^Profile, fas.harvard.edu; accessed August 8, 2015. 9. ^1 {{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122930060|title=Territories of terror : mythologies and memories of the Gulag in contemporary Russian-American art|last=1959-2015.|first=Boym, Svetlana,|date=2006|publisher=Boston University Art Gallery|isbn=1881450252|location=Boston, Mass.|oclc=122930060}} External links
14 : 1959 births|2015 deaths|Deaths from cancer in Massachusetts|American literary critics|American people of Russian-Jewish descent|Jewish American novelists|Boston University alumni|Harvard University alumni|Harvard University faculty|Guggenheim Fellows|Writers from Saint Petersburg|20th-century American novelists|Novelists from Massachusetts|20th-century American non-fiction writers |
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