#sergei-mosunov

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fromwww.dw.com
1 day ago

Russians living in exile cope with grief far from home

Trofimov's move to Germany was a spontaneous decision made after the war began, as he feared for his future and sought a more stable career.
Russo-Ukrainian War
fromVulture
3 days ago

Personal Chekhov: Seagull: True Story and Uncle Vanya, Scenes From Country Life

Molochnikov, who is 33, tall, and good-looking in the Jonathan Groff vein, greeted the audience the night I saw Seagull, personally thanking us for coming to see what he called 'my story.'
Arts
London
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Daunting, inspiring, comforting, terrifying: the writers who can make silence as eloquent as words

Wordsworth's snowy encounter on Fleet Street inspired reflections on silence and imagination's role in moral elevation.
Miscellaneous
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

Laszlo Krasznahorkai, Nobel Prize laureate in Literature: My Hungary is that of language, not of hussars'

László Krasznahorkai rejects symbolic interpretation of his work, insisting his literature contains no symbols, parables, or hidden meanings despite critical attempts to decode them.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Georgi Gospodinov: Jorge Luis Borges gave me an exhilarating sense of freedom'

Early reading fostered a lifelong devotion to books and writing, shaped by adventure, criminology, eroticism, Salinger, Borges, and Bulgarian poets.
Film
fromRoger Ebert
2 months ago

Craziness and Contradiction: Kirill Serebrennikov on "Limonov: The Ballad" | Interviews | Roger Ebert

Film depicts Eduard Limonov's turbulent, ego-driven life from Soviet underground to exile, literary success, and founding of a violent National Bolshevik movement embracing fascism.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Soviet attitudes framed local culture as backward': the record label standing up to Russian imperialism

Their gathering still had to be dispersed, but the enthusiasm that Ored Recordings inspires even among enforcers of the law speaks volumes about the power of what Khalilov and his friend and label co-founder Timur Kodzoko call punk ethnography: the recording of religious chants, laments and displacement songs at family gatherings, local festivals, in people's kitchens, to fight against the erasure of Circassian culture.
Music
Books
fromThe New Yorker
2 months ago

Briefly Noted Book Reviews

A tragicomic novel probes livestream fame and vulnerability, while a Volga travelogue examines contemporary Russia's identity, patriotism, and consequences of war and sanctions.
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