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Session Submission Type: Panel
As our field continues to transform itself by decolonializing and decanonizing Russian literary history, the often sidelined and forgotten voices of Russophone women writers speak to us in powerful new ways. Women engaged in conversations with their peers – men as well as women, nationally and internationally. This series of four panels includes papers that address dialogues among the most well-known noblewomen and famous men, including Nadezhda Khvoshchinskaia, Dostoevsky, and Turgenev; Sofia Khvoshchinskaia, Varvara Tsekhovskaia, Zinaida Gippius, and Karamzin; Evgeniia Tur and Turgenev; Karolina Pavlovna and Friedrich Schiller; Maria Zhukova; Avdotia Panaeva and Chernyshevsky; and the husband-and-wife teams of the Dostoevskys and the Tolstoys. We include not only novels, but crime fiction, memoirs by midwives and by actors, novels in verse, poetry and drama, movie scripts, and a panel devoted to translations.
Marginalization, Intersectionality, and the Petersburg Myth in Maria Zhukova’s 'Nemaia' - Kelly Gallagher, The Ohio State U
'Being well read is not always a virtue in an author': Evgeniia Tur, Ivan Turgenev, and Nadezhda Khvoshchinskaya - Hilde M. Hoogenboom, Arizona State U
Bravaia Liza v. Bednaia Liza: Women Writers Re-imagine a Canonical Plot - Charlotte Rosenthal, U of Southern Maine
Quadrille by Karolina Pavlova: Dancing Pairs and Parallel Plotlines - Anastasiia Loginova, U of Wisconsin - Madison