Kherson poetry : the July 2023 Slavonic item of the month

Cover of book, showing an ink pen facing off a bomb.
Front cover

The Ukrainian city of Kherson has often been in the headlines since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.  Kherson was occupied in early March 2022, but many of us will remember inspirational footage of its citizens demonstrating against the Russian occupiers, waving Ukrainian flags and singing Ukrainian songs.  September saw the Kherson Region (Khersonsʹka oblastʹ) claimed by Russia to have been legally annexed in an internationally condemned move, while Kherson’s liberation by the Ukrainian army took place in November.  Recovering from months of occupation and destruction, Kherson then suffered seriously from flooding and pollution caused by the June 2023 destruction of the Kakhovka dam. Continue reading “Kherson poetry : the July 2023 Slavonic item of the month”

More new Ukrainian books

As the University’s financial year draws to a close, our department works hard with our various suppliers to try to ensure that books ordered in 2022/23 will arrive before the end of July where at all possible.  Our Ukrainian supplier and all their local agents have done an amazing job this year, supplying us with scores of books over the months.  Their final 22/23 parcels are currently being unpacked but here are some of their earlier deliveries (on history and cultural history, literature, architecture, and the Russian war) from the late spring and summer.

These books can all be found in iDiscover, but please write to slavonic@lib.cam.ac.uk if you have got any questions.

Mel Bach

Amelina (1986-2023) and Vakulenko (1972-2022)

The last week saw the terrible news of the death of the writer Victoria Amelina from injuries sustained in the Russian missile attack on a restaurant in Kramatorsk a few days beforehand.  Amelina was a celebrated writer and prominent activist and investigator – and the finder of the murdered writer Volodymyr Vakulenko’s hidden war diary. Continue reading “Amelina (1986-2023) and Vakulenko (1972-2022)”

New Ukrainian ebooks : the June 2023 Slavonic items of the month

Screenshot of a Ukrainian ebook on the East View platform

The provider East View has recently started to stock Ukrainian ebooks that libraries can buy (libraries require special licensing), and we recently bought an initial 30 volumes, including a couple of Crimean Tatar titles that I wrote about in another post and don’t cover again here.

All the books listed in the table were published in Kyïv or Kharkiv.  Except for a few in English translation, they are all in Ukrainian.  The list displays a little clumsily since the blog software doesn’t much like Excel formatting, but I have given rough section headings and there are four columns for the book entries: title, author/editor, date, URL to take Cambridge readers straight into the book. Continue reading “New Ukrainian ebooks : the June 2023 Slavonic items of the month”

30 rokiv prysutnosti : modern Ukrainian artists

It is rather hard to concentrate on anything other than the unfolding news in Russia, but Russia’s war against Ukraine is still taking lives – plus we should remember that the Putin/Prigozhin disagreement has always, essentially, been about how best to eliminate Ukraine.

So let’s look at 30 rokiv prysutnosti (30 years of presence), a 3-volume introduction to dozens of modern Ukrainian artists, published in 2021 and 2022.

‘The Russians are coming’ (2015)

Continue reading “30 rokiv prysutnosti : modern Ukrainian artists”

Nova Kakhovka

In a previous blog post, last May, I shared a map showing Ukraine’s agricultural land.  With the shocking news this week of the Russian destruction of the Kakhovka dam (while some sit on the fence in terms of culpability, the facts point to the Russians), we are left to wonder with horror what changes to the people, livestock, agriculture, and more have been wreaked and will continue to be wreaked. Continue reading “Nova Kakhovka”

‘Pislia 24-ho’ (After the 24th) and other new Ukrainian books

Among this week’s new Ukrainian arrivals was our first work of fiction about Russia’s full-scale war against Ukraine: Vladyslav Ivchenko’s book of stories Pisli︠a︡-24-ho (After the 24th), referring to 24 February 2022, the date of Russia’s open invasion.  Its cover shows a black-and-white urban view through a window taped against missile damage. We also received the latest 6 volumes of the Misi͡at͡sʹ viĭny : khronika podiĭ : promovy ta zvernenni͡a prezydenta Ukraïny Volodymyra Zelensʹkoho set, which provides a chronicle of the ongoing war through monthly collections of the Ukrainian President’s speeches.  In this week’s delivery from our Ukrainian supplier, we received months 6-11.

Continue reading “‘Pislia 24-ho’ (After the 24th) and other new Ukrainian books”

English-language titles on the Russian invasion of Ukraine

Following on from the recent post on new arrivals about the Russo-Ukrainian war, I wanted to highlight a few recent English-language items which deal with last year’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia.

The Ukrainian novelist Andrey Kurkov’s Diary of an Invasion was published last autumn. It gathers together his writings and broadcasts about the events of 2022; the publisher describes it as “a remarkable record of a brilliant writer at the forefront of a 21st-century war”. Another collection of reportage, War Diary of the Ukrainian Resistance, was released on 23rd February 2023: it is the work of staff at the Kyiv Independent online newspaper, combining articles which they have published along with personal accounts of their experiences since the start of the invasion.

The voices of ordinary Ukrainians, and how they have been dealing with the conflict, have been captured in another recent anthology, Queer Ukraine : An Anthology of LGBTQI+ Ukrainian Voices During Wartime, and by the Swedish academic Gregg Bucken-Knapp in his graphic novel Messages from Ukraine. In the immediate aftermath of the invasion, Bucken-Knapp contacted Ukrainian migration and information professionals, offering help: “He found himself filling in the visual gaps as he read their text messages–trying to imagine their immediate circumstances as they chose to stay and volunteer or fight, or sought safety elsewhere. In graphic form, Messages from Ukraine explores the varied experiences of the people who sent these messages: those who were forced to flee home and seek safety elsewhere in Ukraine or abroad, those who remained to take part in war efforts, those who were abroad at the time and witnessed the unfolding of events from afar, and those who found themselves trapped in Ukrainian cities under siege.” This last title has been published as an Open Access ebook, and can therefore be read freely around the world.

Rebecca Gower