Valentin Rasputin

Valentin Rasputin
Rasputin in 2011
Rasputin in 2011
BornValentin Grigoryevich Rasputin
(1937-03-15)15 March 1937
Ust-Uda, East Siberian Oblast, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Died14 March 2015(2015-03-14) (aged 77)
Moscow, Russia
Alma materIrkutsk State University
GenreFiction
Years active1966–2015
Notable worksFarewell to Matyora

Valentin Grigoryevich Rasputin (/ræˈspjtɪn/;[1] Russian: Валентин Григорьевич Распутин; 15 March 1937 – 14 March 2015) was a Soviet and Russian writer. He was born and lived much of his life in the Irkutsk Oblast in Eastern Siberia. Rasputin's works depict rootless urban characters and the fight for survival of centuries-old traditional rural ways of life, addressing complex questions of ethics and spiritual revival.

Biography

Valentin Rasputin was born in the village of Ust-Uda in East Siberian Oblast. His father, Grigory Rasputin, worked for a village cooperative store, and his mother was a nurse. Soon after his birth the Rasputin family moved to the village of Atalanka [ru] in the same Ust-Udinsky District, where Rasputin spent his childhood.[2]

Both villages, then located on the banks of the Angara River, do not exist in their original locations any more, as the Bratsk Reservoir flooded much of the Angara Valley in the 1960s, and the villages were relocated to higher ground.[3] Later, the writer remembered growing up in Siberia as a difficult, but happy time:

"As soon as we kids learned how to walk, we would toddle to the river with our fishing rods; still a tender child, we would run to the taiga, which would begin right outside the village, to pick berries and mushrooms; since young age, we would get into a boat and take the oars..."[4]

When Rasputin finished the 4-year elementary school in Atalanka in 1948, his parents sent the precocious boy to a middle school and then to high school in the district center, Ust-Uda, some 50 km away from his home village. He became the first child from his village to continue his education in this way.[5]

Rasputin graduated from Irkutsk University in 1959 and started working for local Komsomol newspapers in Irkutsk and Krasnoyarsk. He published his first short-story in 1961.

An important point in Rasputin's early literary career was a young writers' seminar in September 1965 in Chita led by Vladimir Chivilikhin (Владимир Чивилихин), who encouraged the young writer's literary aspirations and recommended him for membership in the prestigious Union of Soviet Writers. Since then Rasputin has considered Chivilikhin his "literary godfather".[5]

In 1967, after the publication of his Money for Maria, Rasputin was indeed admitted to the Union of Soviet Writers. Over the next three decades he published a number of novels – many became both widely popular among the Russian reading public and critically acclaimed.

Rasputin being awarded the Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" by President Vladimir Putin, 2002

In 1980, after researching the Battle of Kulikovo for two years, Rasputin was baptised by an Orthodox priest in nearby Yelets.[6]

Rasputin's literary work is closely connected to his activism on social and environmental issues. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s Rasputin, called by some[by whom?] the leading figure of the "Siberian environmental lobby",[7] took an active part in the campaign for protection of Lake Baikal and against the diversion of Siberian fresh water to Central Asian republics. In the 1990s he participated in the nationalist opposition movement. Having spent most of his adult life in Irkutsk, Rasputin remained one of the leading intellectual figures of this Siberian city.

He was a guest for many events in the city of Irkutsk, including the unveilings of the monuments to Tsar Alexander III, Alexander Vampilov and Alexander Kolchak. He organized the readers' conference in Irkutsk Central Scientific Library named after Molchanov-Sibirsky.

Rasputin's daughter Maria died in the 2006 crash of S7 Airlines Flight 778, and his wife died six years later. He died in Moscow on 14 March 2015, a day short of his 78th birthday. Patriarch Kirill of the Russian Orthodox Church conducted his funeral service, and President Vladimir Putin paid his respects.

Rasputin's writing

Rasputin is closely associated with a movement in post-war Soviet literature known as Village Prose (деревенская проза). Beginning in the time of the Khrushchev Thaw (оттепель), village prose was praised for its stylistic and thematic departures from socialist realism. Village prose works usually focused on the hardships of the Soviet peasantry, espoused an idealized picture of traditional village life, and implicitly or explicitly criticized official modernization projects. Rasputin's 1979 novel Farewell to Matyora, which depicts a fictional Siberian village which is to be evacuated and cleared so that a hydroelectric dam can be constructed further down the Angara River, was considered the epitome of this genre.[8][9][10] The opening paragraph below is a good example of Rasputin's writing style (exceptional even for the village prose writers), and the novel's theme of natural cycles disrupted by modernization:

Once more spring had come, one more in the never-ending cycle, but for Matyora this spring would be the last, the last for both the island and the village that bore the same name. Once more, rumbling passionately, the ice broke, piling up mounds on the banks, and the liberated Angara River opened up, stretching out into a mighty, sparkling flow. Once more the water gushed boisterously at the island’s upper tip, before cascading down both channels of the riverbed; once more greenery flared on the ground and in the greens, the first rains soaked the earth, the swifts and swallows flew back, and at dusk in the bogs the awakened frogs croaked their love of life. It had all happened many times before. (From Rasputin's novel Farewell to Matyora, translated by Antonina W. Bouis, 1979)

Rasputin's nonfiction works contain similar themes, often in support of relevant political causes. He directed particularly trenchant criticism at large-scale dam building, like the project that flooded his own hometown, and water management projects, like the diversion of the Siberian rivers to Central Asia. He argued that these projects were destructive not simply in an ecological sense, but in a moral sense as well.[11]

In Siberia, Siberia (first published in 1991), Rasputin compares what he considers modern moral relativism with the traditional beliefs of the people of Russkoye Ustye, who believed in reincarnation. According to Rasputin, when burying their dead, the Russkoye Ustye settlers would often bore a hole in the coffin, to make it easier for the soul to come back to be reborn; but if the deceased was a bad person, they would drive an aspen stake through the grave, to keep his soul from ever coming back into the world of living again. The writer is not ambiguous as to which category the souls of the "modernizers" should belong:

When reflecting on the actions of today's "river-rerouting" father figures, who are destroying our sacred national treasures up hill and down with the haste of an invading army, you involuntarily turn to this experience: it would not be a bad idea for them to know that not everything is forgiven at the time of death.[12]

Some critics accused Rasputin of idealizing village life and slipping into anti-modern polemics. The journal Voprosy literatury published an ongoing debate on the question, "Is the Village Prose of Valentin Rasputin Anti-Modern?"[13]

Political views

By the end of perestroika Rasputin became publicly active. He criticized Mikhail Gorbachev's reforms from patriotic and nationalistic positions. His repetition (at the 1st Congress of People's Deputies of the Soviet Union) of Stolypin's statement "You need great upheavals. We need a great country" («Вам нужны великие потрясения. Нам нужна великая страна») made it a phrase commonly used by the anti-liberal opposition.

He also signed several open letters, most notably the "Letter of Russian Writers" (also known as the "Letter of Seventy Four") addressed to the President and the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union and published in the Literary Newspaper and Nash Sovremennik in 1990.[14][15] 74 writers expressed concern regarding the rise of Russophobia in mass media and "fabrication of the "Russian fascism" myth while the Zionist ideology is getting quick rehabilitation and idealization". The letter was criticized by opponents who labeled the signers as "antisemites"; many of them later signed what is considered their answer — the "Letter of Forty-Two". Rasputin himself argued that his alleged antisemitic statements have been exaggerated and taken out of context.[16] In July 1991, Rasputin along with 11 other public and political figures signed another open letter "A Word to the People".

In 1992, Valentin Rasputin joined the National Salvation Front (a coalition of radical opposition forces), nominally belonging to its leadership. He later supported the CPRF and its leader, Gennady Zyuganov.[17]

In 2014, he signed a public letter supporting the annexation of Crimea by Russia in 2014.

Awards

A fragment of the 2017 Russian postcard featuring Rasputin and his quote: "Literature has only one goal – to help humans by giving them warmth and kindness"

Bibliography

  • Василий и Василиса, 1966 (Vasili and Vasilissa; Published in English translation by Progress Publishers, 1981) ISBN 99923-812-0-5
  • Деньги для Марии, 1967 (Money for Maria; Published in English translation by Raduga Publishers, 1998) ISBN 5-05-002447-1
  • Последний срок, 1970 (The Last Term)
  • Живи и помни, 1974 (Live and Remember; Published in English translation by Northwestern University Press, 1992) ISBN 0-8101-1053-9
  • Прощание с Матёрой, 1976 (Farewell to Matyora; Published in English translation by Northwestern University Press, 1991) ISBN 0-8101-1329-5
  • Век живи — век люби: Рассказы, 1982 (You Live and Love: Stories; Published in English translation by Vanguard Press, 1986) ISBN 0-8149-0916-7
  • Пожар, 1985 (The Fire)
  • Дочь Ивана, Мать Ивана, 2004 ("Ivan's daughter, Ivan's mother")
  • Siberia on Fire: Stories and Essays, 1989 (compiled and translated into English by Gerald Mikkelson and Margaret Winchell for Northern Illinois University Press) ISBN 0-87580-547-7
  • What Should I Tell the Crow?, (short story), from The New Soviet Fiction, Abbeville Press, 1989 ISBN 0-89659-881-0
  • Ivan’s Daughter: Short Stories and a Novella, 2016 (compiled and translated into English by Margaret Winchell for Three String Books, an imprint of Slavica Publishers) ISBN 978-0-89357-454-3

Non-fiction:

Adaptations

  • 1969 — Rudolfio, dir. Dinara Asanova — story of the same name
  • 1978 — French Lessons, dir. Yevgeny Tashkov — story of the same name
  • 1979 — Money for Maria, dir. György Lengyel (Hungary) — story of the same name
  • 1980 — The Last Frontier, dir. Timo Bergholm (Finland) — novel The Last Term
  • 1980 — Meeting, dir. Alexander Itygilov — story of the same name
  • 1980 — Selling Bear Fur, dir. Alexander Itygilov — story of the same name
  • 1981 — Farewell, dir. Elem Klimov — novel Farewell to Matyora
  • 1983 — We Live and Love from the Special Case anthology, dir. Valery Pendrakovsky — story of the same name
  • 1981 — Vasily and Vasilisa, dir. Irina Poplavskaya — story of the same name
  • 1985 — Money for Maria, dir. Vladimir Andreev, Viktor Khramov — story of the same name
  • 1987 — Farewell, Little Island, dir. Sándor Reisenbüchler (Hungary) — novel Farewell to Matyora
  • 1991 — Rudolfio, dir. Vasily Davidchuk — story of the same name
  • 2008 — Live and Remember, dir. Aleksandr Proshkin — novel of the same name

See also

References

  1. ^ "Rasputin". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  2. ^ Валентин Григорьевич Распутин (Valentin Rasputin)
  3. ^ Translator's Introduction to Valentin Rasputin (1996). Siberia, Siberia. Northwestern University Press. pp. 12-13. ISBN 0-8101-1575-1.
  4. ^ Valentin Grigoriyevich Rasputin, biography (in Russian)
  5. ^ a b Ivan Pankeev (Иван ПАНКЕЕВ) Valentin Rasputin Archived 25 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine (in Russian)
  6. ^ Interview with Rasputin on his 65th birthday Archived 18 July 2006 at the Wayback Machine Izvestiya (in Russian)
  7. ^ Ronnie D. Lipschutz, Ken Conca (1993) The State and Social Power in Global Environmental Politics. Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-08107-3.
  8. ^ Kathleen Parthe (1992) Russian Village Prose: The Radiant Past. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  9. ^ Dale E. Peterson (1994). ""Samovar Life": Russian Nurture and Russian Nature in the Rural Prose of Valentin Rasputin". The Russian Review. 53 (1): 81–96. doi:10.2307/131296. JSTOR 131296.
  10. ^ Dale E. Peterson (1981). "Solzhenitsyn Back in the U.S.S.R.: Anti-Modernism in Contemporary Soviet Prose". Berkshire Review. 16: 64–78.
  11. ^ “Argument in a Controversy: Cause for Alarm,” Sovietskaya Rossiya, 3 January 1986, Current Digest of the Soviet Press: Vol. XXXVIIII, No. 1 (3 February 1986)
  12. ^ Valentin Rasputin (1996). Siberia, Siberia. Translated by Margaret Winchell, Gerald Mikkelson. Northwestern University Press. p. 330. ISBN 0-8101-1575-1.
  13. ^ Voprosy literatury: “Is Rasputin’s Rural Prose Antimodern?”/Current Digest of the Soviet Press vol. XXIX, no. 24 (pp. 14–15, 24): 1972
  14. ^ Irina Prokhorova, Arch Tait (2013). 1990: Russians Remember a Turning Point. — London: Quercus Publishing, Mikhail Prokhorov Foundation, p. 96 ISBN 978-0-85705-200-1
  15. ^ About Russophobia full text at the Zavtra newspaper No 46(259), 17 November 1998 (in Russian)
  16. ^ Elisabeth Rich, Laura Weeks (1995). "Valentin Rasputin". South Central Review. 12 (3/4): 45–69. doi:10.2307/3190230. JSTOR 3190230.
  17. ^ Valentin Rasputin (3 October 2007). "Писатель Валентин Распутин: Для того, чтобы Россия поднялась на ноги нужен такой человек, как Зюганов!" [Writer Valentin Rasputin: Recovery of Russia needs a man like Zyuganov!]. KPRF.ru. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 18 February 2013.

Read other articles:

Artikel ini membahas mengenai bangunan, struktur, infrastruktur, atau kawasan terencana yang sedang dibangun atau akan segera selesai. Informasi di halaman ini bisa berubah setiap saat (tidak jarang perubahan yang besar) seiring dengan penyelesaiannya. Stasiun Pondok Rajeg b23 Bangunan Stasiun Pondok Rajeg sebelum dibongkarLokasiJatimulya, Cilodong, Depok, Jawa Barat 16413IndonesiaKetinggian+121 mOperatorKereta Api IndonesiaDaerah Operasi I JakartaLetak dari pangkalkm 41+615 lintas Jakarta—...

 

Повстання у Дагестані 1877 року Російсько-дагестанські війни Дата: 13 квітня—27 листопада 1877 Місце: ДагестанЧечняТерська область Привід: Боротьба за незалежність: Результат: капітуляція Алібека-Хаджі Сторони Російська імперія дагестанські народи, чеченці Командувачі О.Сви

 

Matt Hughes Nombre Matthew Allen HughesNacimiento Hillsboro, Illinois,  Estados Unidos13 de octubre de 1973 (50 años)Alma máter Eastern Illinois University, Lincoln College, Hillsboro High School, Southwestern Illinois CollegeEquipo Miletich Fighting SystemsFinney's HIT Squad[1]​Peso 77 kg (169 lb)Estatura 1,75 m (5′ 9″)Nacionalidad EstadounidenseAños activo 1998-2013EstadísticasTotal 54Victorias 45 • Por nocaut 17 • Por sumisión 18 ...

2023 FIL World Luge ChampionshipsVenueOberhof, GermanyDates27–29 January←20222024→ 2023 FIL World Luge ChampionshipsIndividualmenwomenDoublesmenwomenIndividual sprintmenwomenDoubles' sprintmenwomenRelayteamvte The 2023 FIL World Luge Championships was the 51st edition and held from 27 to 29 January 2023 at the Oberhof bobsleigh, luge, and skeleton track in Oberhof, Germany.[1] Schedule Nine events were held.[2] All times are local (UTC+1). Date Time Events 27 January 09:...

 

2000 compilation album by various artistsCaroline Now!: The Songs of Brian Wilson and the Beach BoysCompilation album by various artistsReleasedAugust 4, 2000 (2000-08-04)Recorded1998 (1998)–2000 (2000)GenreIndie rockLength77:14LabelMarinaProducerStefan Kassel, Frank Lähnemann Caroline Now!: The Songs of Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys is a 2000 tribute album devoted to songs by the Beach Boys, consisting of cover versions recorded by independent artists.&#...

 

Skyscraper in Boston, Massachusetts, US Not to be confused with Millennium Place. Millennium TowerMillennium Tower in 2017Location within MassachusettsGeneral informationStatusCompletedTypeResidential, RetailLocation1 Franklin Street Boston, Massachusetts, US[1]Coordinates42°21′21.01″N 71°3′33.91″W / 42.3558361°N 71.0594194°W / 42.3558361; -71.0594194Construction startedSeptember 17, 2013CompletedSeptember 07, 2015OpenedJune 01, 2016 [2]Cost...

Jamaican rhythm section and production duo This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Sly and Robbie – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2010) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Sly and RobbieSly Dunbar (left) and Robbie Shakespeare in the late 1970s.Background info...

 

South African Netflix drama This article contains content that is written like an advertisement. Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links, and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view. (January 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Queen SonoPromotional release posterGenre Crime drama Action Thriller Created byKagiso LedigaWritten by Kagiso Lediga Karabo Lediga Camilo Saloojee Christopher Steenkamp ...

 

City in Alabama, United States City in Alabama, United StatesJemisonCityMotto: Community - Government - AgricultureLocation of Jemison in Chilton County, Alabama.Coordinates: 32°57′32″N 86°44′37″W / 32.95889°N 86.74361°W / 32.95889; -86.74361CountryUnited StatesStateAlabamaCountyChiltonGovernment • MayorEddie ReedArea[1] • Total11.42 sq mi (29.57 km2) • Land11.35 sq mi (29.38 km2...

Italian comics artist (born 1983) Sara PichelliPichelli at Special Edition NYCin Manhattan, 2014Born (1983-04-15) 15 April 1983 (age 40)Porto Sant'Elpidio, ItalyNotable worksRunaways, X-Men: Pixie Strikes Back, Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man, Guardians of the Galaxy vol. 3 2011 Eagle Award for Favorite Newcomer Artist Sara Pichelli (born 15 April 1983) is an Italian comics artist best known for first illustrating the Miles Morales version of Ultimate Spider-Man. After starting her career in...

 

Перший Хрестовий похідЧастина Хрестових походівЗдобуття Єрусалима як найбільше досягнення походуДата1096-1099МісцеБлизький Схід (Анатолія, Левант, Палестина)Результат Перемога хрестоносцівТериторіальнізміни Створено Єрусалимське королівство та інші держави хрестонос...

 

DuckGeografiaPaís  Estados UnidosEstado Carolina do NorteCounty of North Carolina Condado de DareÁrea 9,63 km2Área da água 35,02 %Altitude 4 mCoordenadas 36° 10′ 11″ N, 75° 45′ 19″ ODemografiaPopulação 742 hab. (2020)Densidade 77,1 hab./km2 (2020)FuncionamentoEstatuto vila dos Estados Unidos (en)HistóriaFundação 1 de maio de 2002IdentificadoresCódigo postal 27949Code FIPS 37-18060GNIS 10252922406400TGN 2074386Prefixo telefônico 252Website (en) ...

Patrick Faber Plaats uw zelfgemaakte foto hier Persoonlijke informatie Volledige naam Patrick Franciscus Maria Faber Geboortedatum 7 mei 1964 Geboorteplaats 's-Hertogenbosch Nationaliteit  Nederland Sportieve informatie Discipline Hockey Olympische Spelen 1988 Portaal    Sport Patrick Franciscus Maria Faber ('s-Hertogenbosch, 7 mei 1964) is een voormalig Nederlands hockeyspeler. Faber speelde in clubverband voor de Amsterdamsche Hockey & Bandy Club. Tussen 1986 en 1988 spee...

 

Beauty pageant competition For the state pageant affiliated with Miss USA, see Miss Hawaii USA. For the state pageant affiliated with Miss World America, see Miss Hawaii World. Miss HawaiiFormation1948TypeBeauty pageantMembership Miss AmericaWebsiteOfficial website The Miss Hawaii competition is the pageant that selects the representative for the State of Hawaii in the Miss America pageant, and the name of the title held by that winner. Hawaii first competed at Miss America in 1948 and has tw...

 

هذه مقالة غير مراجعة. ينبغي أن يزال هذا القالب بعد أن يراجعها محرر مغاير للذي أنشأها؛ إذا لزم الأمر فيجب أن توسم المقالة بقوالب الصيانة المناسبة. يمكن أيضاً تقديم طلب لمراجعة المقالة في الصفحة المخصصة لذلك. (أغسطس 2020) هذه المقالة يتيمة إذ تصل إليها مقالات أخرى قليلة جدًا. فض...

Simfoni Luar Biasaposter filmSutradara Awi Suryadi Produser Delon Tio Ditulis oleh Maggie Tiojakin Awi Suryadi SkenarioMaggie Tiojakin Awi SuryadiCeritaDelon TioPemeranChristian BautistaIra WibowoIra Maya SophaMaribethValerie ThomasVerdi SolaimanGista PutriStanly SaklilVicky PutraDistributorNation Pictures & PrimetimeTanggal rilis29 September 2011Durasi100 menitNegara IndonesiaBahasa Indonesia Simfoni Luar Biasa merupakan film drama Indonesia yang dirilis pada 29 September 2011 yang disut...

 

Non-Latin Morse code for Russian Cyrillic Russian Morse codeLanguage(s)RussianClassificationnon-Latin Morse code for Russian CyrillicSucceeded byMTK-2vte The Russian Morse code approximates the Morse code for the Latin alphabet. It was enacted by the Russian government in 1856.[1][2] To memorize the codes, practitioners use mnemonics known as напевы (loosely translated melodies or chants). The melody corresponding to a character is a sung phrase: syllables containing the...

 

Indian Navy Admiral In this Indian name, the name Swaminathan is a patronymic, and the person should be referred to by the given name, Krishna. Vice AdmiralKrishna SwaminathanAVSM, VSMBornBangalore, Karnataka, IndiaAllegiance IndiaService/branch Indian NavyYears of serviceJuly 1987 - presentRank Vice AdmiralCommands heldWestern FleetINS Vikramaditya (R33)INS Mysore (D60)INS Kulish (P63)INS Vinash (K47)INS Vidyut (K48)Awards Ati ...

Former Australian federal electoral division This article does not cite any sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Division of Coolgardie – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) CoolgardieAustralian House of Representatives DivisionCreated1901Abolished1913NamesakeCoolgardie...

 

Angolan government minister This article is an orphan, as no other articles link to it. Please introduce links to this page from related articles; try the Find link tool for suggestions. (April 2019) Mateus de Brito Júnior was the Angolan minister for public works and urbanization in the 1994 government of Jose Eduardo dos Santos.[1] References ^ Hunter, Brian. (Ed.) (1995) The Statesman's Year-Book 1995-96. 132nd edition. London: Macmillan. p. 79. ISBN 0333620747 External links...

 

Strategi Solo vs Squad di Free Fire: Cara Menang Mudah!