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Tomas Venclova - Magnetic North: Conversations with Tomas Venclova

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Interweaves Eastern European postwar history, dissidence, and literature to expand our understanding of the significance of this important Lithuanian writer.

Magnetic North: Conversations with Tomas Venclova is a book in the European tradition of works such as Conversations with Czeslaw Milosz and Aleksander Wats classic My Century. Taking the form of an extendedinterview with Lithuanian poet Tomas Venclova, the book interweaves Eastern European postwar history, dissidence, and literature. Venclova, who personally knew Akhmatova, Pasternak, Milosz, Brodsky, and many others, was also one of the five founding members of the Lithuanian Helsinki Group, one of the first human rights organizations in Eastern Europe. Magnetic North provides an in-depth account of ethical choices and artistic resistance to totalitarianism over a half century. It also details Venclovas artistic work, expanding our understanding of the significance of this writer, whose books are central to contemporary European culture.

The publication of this book was supported by the Lithuanian Culture Institute.

Tomas Venclova is a Lithuanian poet, writer, scholar, and translator. He is Professor Emeritus of Slavic Languages and Literatures at Yale University. Ellen Hinsey is the author of numerous works of poetry, essay, and literary translation. Her most recent book is Mastering the Past: Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe and the Rise of Illiberalism.

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MAGNETIC NORTH Magnetic North Conversations with Tomas Venclova is a book in - photo 1
MAGNETIC NORTH
Magnetic North: Conversations with Tomas Venclova is a book in the European tradition of works such as Conversations with Czeslaw Milosz and Aleksander Wats classic My Century. Taking the form of an extended interview with Lithuanian poet Tomas Venclova, the book interweaves Eastern European postwar history, dissidence, and literature. Venclova, who personally knew Akhmatova, Pasternak, Milosz, Brodsky, and many others, was also one of the five founding members of the Lithuanian Helsinki Group, one of the first human rights organizations in Eastern Europe. Magnetic North provides an in-depth account of ethical choices and artistic resistance to totalitarianism over a half century. It also details Venclovas artistic work, expanding our understanding of the significance of this writer, whose books are central to contemporary European culture.
The publication of this book was supported by the Lithuanian Culture Institute.
Tomas Venclova is a Lithuanian poet, writer, scholar, and translator. He is Professor Emeritus of Slavic Languages and Literatures at Yale University. Ellen Hinsey is the author of numerous works of poetry, essay, and literary translation. Her most recent book is Mastering the Past: Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe and the Rise of Illiberalism.
Recent works by Tomas Venclova
WORKS IN LITHUANIAN
Eumenidi girait: Nauji eilraiai ir vertimai
Optimizmo paiekos pesimizmo amiuje: Ryt Europos
nuojautos ir pranaysts , with Leonidas Donskis
Grimai Lietuvon , with Czesaw Miosz
Pertrkis tikrovje
Visi eilraiai: 19562010
Vilnius: asmenin istorija
Kitaip: poezijos vertim rinktin
Vilniaus vardai
WORKS IN ENGLISH
The Junction: Selected Poems of Tomas Venclova
Vilnius: City Guide
WORKS IN RUSSIAN
Sobesedniki na piru: Literaturnye esse
Stati o Brodskom
See for a complete list of works by Tomas Venclova.
C ONTENTS By Ellen Hinsey A CKNOWLEDGEMENTS Earlier versions of some - photo 2
C ONTENTS
By Ellen Hinsey
A CKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Earlier versions of some material in this volume have appeared elsewhere, in English and other languages. appeared in German, translated by Claudia Sinnig, as Vom Gerben der SeeleAnna Achmatowa: Erinnerungen im Gesprch mit Ellen Hinsey, Schreibheft 81 (2013): 8394; and Joseph Brodsky, Zwilling: Erinnerungen im Gesprch mit Ellen Hinsey, Schreibheft 81 (2013): 6582, respectively. We wish to thank the proprietors and publishers of these works for their kind permission to reprint.
Excerpts from Tomas Venclovas Arrival in Atlantis, Commentary, and For R.K., in The Junction: Selected Poems of Tomas Venclova , edited by Ellen Hinsey, translated by Ellen Hinsey, Constantine Rusanov, and Diana Senechal (Tarset, UK: Bloodaxe Books, 2008), are reprinted courtesy of Bloodaxe Books. Excerpts from Venclovas Instruction, A projector flickers in the somewhat cramped hall, Sestina, Thanksgiving Day, The twenty-four hours cross the middle, and Winter Dialogue, in Winter Dialogue , translated by Diana Senechal (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1997), are reprinted courtesy of Northwestern University Press.
C HRONOLOGY
1937
Tomas Venclova is born on September 11 in Klaipda, Lithuania, to Eliza Venclovien (ne Rakauskait) and Antanas Venclova.
1939
Following Hitlers annexation of Klaipda on March 22, the family moves to Kaunas, Lithuanias interwar capital.
After the signing of the secret protocol of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact in August, Lithuania falls within the German, then the Soviet, sphere of influence.
September 1: Germany invades Poland.
September 17: USSR invades Poland.
1940
June 14: Stalin demands acceptance of Soviet troops into Lithuania and a change of government. Antanas Venclova is appointed minister of education of the new Soviet-installed Peoples Government. On August 3, Lithuania is annexed by the USSR. The Venclova family relocates to Vilnius.
1941
June 14: the Soviets begin deportations of Lithuanians to Siberia. Between June 14 and 18, approximately eighteen thousand people are deported.
June 22: Germany attacks the USSR. The Soviet Lithuanian government, including Venclovas father, is ordered to evacuate. Antanas Venclova survives a ten-hour bombing in Minsk. Separated from his wife and son, who remain in Vilnius, he joins the Soviet Lithuanian government-in-exile in Moscow. A self-appointed provisional government collaborating with German troops proclaims Lithuanias independence, but it is ordered to disperse by the Nazis on August 5.
In early July, Venclovas mother is arrested and held in Lukiks Prison. Venclova is taken in by relatives. Eliza Venclovien is released in September 1941.
Establishment of the Kaunas and Vilnius ghettos. Under the German occupation, 94 percent of Lithuanias Jews (nearly 200,000) are killed by Nazi death squads, with the participation of Lithuanian collaborators.
194144
Venclova spends the war years at his maternal grandfather Merkelis Rakauskass house in Freda, a suburb of Kaunas, and with other relatives in Lithuanian villages.
1944
In July and August, the Soviets retake Lithuania and impose Soviet rule. Some sixty thousand Lithuanians, including a large part of the countrys intellectuals, flee the Soviet Army and find themselves in displaced persons camps in West Germany. Antanas Venclova returns from Moscow. In September, Tomas Venclova begins elementary school in Freda.
1946
The family resettles in Vilnius.
1947
Venclova enters high school in Vilnius.
1950
Venclova meets Ramnas (Romas) Katilius, a future physicist.
1954
Venclova enrolls in Vilnius University.
1956
Khrushchevs Secret Speech to the Twentieth Party Congress of the Communist Party. Uprising in Pozna, Poland. Suppression of the Hungarian Revolution.
195660
A group of like-minded young people forms in Vilnius, including Venclova, Ramnas Katilius, Pranas Morkus, Juozas Tumelis, Aleksandras tromas, and Natasha Trauberg.
September 1957August 1958
Venclova takes academic leave, attends a vocational school for truck drivers.
1958
Venclova participates in the samizdat publishing venture Eglut. His first samizdat poetry collection, Pontos Axenos , appears. The student almanac Kryba (Creation), in which Venclova is involved, is banned by the authorities. On October 23, Boris Pasternak is awarded the Nobel Prize.
1959
At a meeting of the Lithuanian Writers Union, Venclova is accused of being a follower of Pasternak, which he does not deny (January). Venclova begins his private war against the Soviet regime. A purge of the Department of Lithuanian Philology at Vilnius University in connection with the Kryba affair. Venclova visits Pasternak in Peredelkino (December 14).
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