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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2007
May
Wife
of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn to deliver keynote at U. of I. Summer Lab
Melissa
Mitchell, News Editor
217-333-5491; melissa@uiuc.edu
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Click
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| Nobel
Prize-winning Russian author Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
will be the focus of the Ralph and Ruth Fisher
Forum, one of the highlights of the Summer Research
Laboratory on Russia, Eastern Europe and Eurasia
from June 14-17. The wife and sons of the dissident
author will participate in the forum. The
88-year-old Solzhenitsyn remains active and continues
to write, but rarely travels far from home. Instead,
he said, wife Natalia is his public face. |
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Released
5/31/07
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
The wife of Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
will be the featured speaker at a University of Illinois conference
devoted to her husband’s contributions to modern Russian literature,
history and political life.
Natalia Solzhenitsyn will present the keynote talk at the Ralph
and Ruth Fisher Forum, beginning at 6:30 p.m. on June 14 in Room
314 of the Illini Union, 1401 W. Green St., Urbana. The theme of this
year’s forum is “Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn as Writer, Myth-Maker
and Public Figure”; the title of the keynote talk is “Another
Time, Another Burden: Solzhenitsyn After His Return to Russia.”
Also participating in the conference will be Solzhenitsyn’s sons,
Ignat and Stephan, who will chair panels. Ignat is the music director
of the Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia; Stephan, an urban planner
in Moscow.
The Fisher Forum, which takes place June 14-17, is one of the highlights
of the annual Summer
Research Laboratory on Russia, Eastern Europe and Eurasia, hosted
by the U. of I.’s Russian,
East European and Eurasian Center. The forum is named for the summer
lab’s founder, U. of I. professor emeritus of history Ralph Fisher,
and his wife.
The lab, a campus tradition since 1973, draws scholars from throughout
the world to conduct research and take part in other scholarly pursuits.
This year’s lab runs from June 11 through Aug. 3. In addition
to providing scholars with access to the U. of I. Library, which houses
the largest Slavic collection west of Washington, D.C., the lab features
workshops, discussion groups and film screenings.
Fisher Forum organizer Richard Tempest, a professor and the acting head
of the U. of I. department of Slavic
languages and literatures, is writing a book about Solzhenitsyn.
The dissident author – who won the Nobel Prize for literature
in 1970 – returned to Russia in 1994 after living in exile in
the United States for 20 years. He was expelled from the former Soviet
Union after his writings focused worldwide attention on the injustices
and inhumanity of the country’s forced labor camps, known as the
Gulag. The author drew upon his own experiences as a prisoner in the
Stalin-era camps in “One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich”
(1962), “The First Circle” (1968) and the three-volume history
“The Gulag Archipelago (1973-1975).
His more recently published titles include “The Red Wheel”
(1983-1991), a four-volume epic focused on the first World War and the
Russian revolution; “Rebuilding Russia (1990); “Russia in
the Abyss” (1998); and “Two Centuries Together” (2001-2002),
a history of Russian-Jewish relations.
Tempest said the 88-year-old Solzhenitsyn remains active and continues
to write, but rarely travels far from home. Instead, he said, wife Natalia
is his public face.
“She is his closest collaborator and edits and markets all his
work. She is also chair of the Russian Social Fund, a charity established
by Solzhenitsyn, which uses royalties from sales of his books to pay
pensions of victims of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin.
Although the author is known in Russia and throughout the world as a
leader in the struggle to promote personal freedom and human rights,
Tempest views Solzhenitsyn’s contributions even more broadly.
“For me, Solzhenitsyn is the 20th century – at least the
Russian 20th century,” the professor said. “He lived through
World War II, was a prisoner in the Gulag, a famous author, dissident
and manual worker. He’s connected to all kinds of events in the
20th century.
“He writes these sprawling Russian novels with family, war and
peace, historical, political and moral themes. His books are all about
respecting other opinions and cultures. But he also has this public
face that goes beyond literature.”
Tempest regards Solzhenitsyn not only as “a great Russian patriot,”
but also as a prophet.
“He is always aware of the future and changes that the future
might bring,” he said.
More information about the forum and the summer lab is available online
at www.reec.uiuc.edu.
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