history / europe / former soviet republics

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history / europe / former soviet republics

Seed in snow

poems
2016
"This first US publication of Knuts Skujenieks -- one of Latvia's foremost contemporary poets -- is the author's most important and widely-translated body of work. Convicted in 1962 of anti-Soviet sentiment, Skujenieks wrote these poems during seven years of imprisonment at a labor camp in Mordovia. Vivid and expressive, this collection overcomes the physical experience of confinement in order to assert a limitless creative freedom. A Love Poem I would like clarity. To exclude A relationship's tangled yarn. Not a word. Let reaction suffice. So. Only so. And if the two of us Are pitched alone against the world, That we can instantly swing about From face-to-face And stand back to back. Would that be too much? But a poem cannot be written If one awaits the bullet From the back, And not from the front. Knuts Skujenieks was born in 1936 in Latvia, where he studied philology and history at the University of Latvia. In 1962, he was convicted of anti-Soviet activity and served a seven-year prison sentence in the Mordovia gulag. While there, he sent out many poems in letters to his wife, which were first published in 2002 as Sekla sniega (Seed in Snow). A polyglot, Skujenieks has translated into Latvian such poets as Lorca, Ritsos, Neruda, Vallejo, Galczinsky, and Transtromer. He has received the highest literary and state honors in Latvia, as well as awards across Europe, including Sweden's Tomas Transtromer prize, and his poetry has been translated into more than thirty languages. He currently lives in Salaspils, Latvia"--.

Great catastrophe

Armenians and Turks in the shadow of genocide
2015
Examines the effects of the Armenian massacres that occurred from 1915 to 1923, discussing how that incident still resonates and influences their people and government in the present day.
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