ABSTRACT

This book considers Russian, Czech and Slovak fiction in the late communist and early post-communist periods. It focuses on the most innovative trend to emerge in this period, on those writers who, during and after the collapse of communism, characterised themselves as 'liberators' of literature. It shows how these writers in their fiction and critical work reacted against the politicisation of literature by Marxist-Leninist and dissident ideologues, rejecting the conventional perception of literature as moral teacher, and redefining the nature and purpose of writing. The book demonstrates how this quest, enacted in the works of these writers, served for many critics and readers as a metaphor for the wider disorientation and crisis precipitated by the collapse of communism.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|22 pages

The fiction of the Changes

Context and reception

chapter 2|14 pages

Deaths of authors

Venedikt Erofeev, Bohumil Hrabal, Pavel Vilikovský

chapter 3|20 pages

Giving a shape to one's fate

Evgenii Popov, Petr Placák, Peter Pišt'anek

chapter 4|21 pages

Subverting realism

Aleksandr Ivanchenko, Tat'iana Tolstaia, Dušan Mitana

chapter 5|35 pages

Writing as being

Jiří Kratochvil, Zuzana Brabcová, Daniela Hodrová, Michal Ajvaz, Jáchym Topol

chapter 6|21 pages

Empty words

Vladimir Sorokin, Ján Litvák, Ivan Kolenič

chapter 7|27 pages

Learning to live with emptiness

Viktor Pelevin, Václav Kahuda, Vlado Balla

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion

To speak or not to speak