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DLCL Writer in Residence Vladimir Sorokin

VLADIMIR SOROKIN (b. 1955) is the “resident genius” of late-Soviet and contemporary Russian fiction. One of the leaders of the Moscow underground scene of the 1980s, he continues to challenge dominant ideologies. His shockingly imaginative experimental texts, which were completely banned during the Soviet period, comprise a set of profound statements on the novelistic genre. His novel The Queue, for instance, depicts one of everyone's “favorite” Soviet pastimes – waiting in line – and consists solely of snatches of conversation, roll calls, jokes, howls of rage, and amorous moans.

His recent novel, Day of the Oprichnik, is a haunting, absurd and terrifying vision of Russia in 2028. This is a place dominated by futuristic technology, a draconian “divine monarch,” and members of an elite who get high on hallucinogenic, genetically modified fish. The narrative follows the strange life and times of Andrei Danilovich Komiaga, a fearsome oprichnik (the term refers to the medieval prototype of the Soviet KGB and the Russian FSB), and culminates in an excessive and darkly humorous scene depicting a KGB orgy.

Works in English

  • (New York Review Books Classics, 2007)
  • (New York Review Books Classics, 2008)
  • (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2011)
  • (New York Review Books Classics, 2011)

Vladimir Sorokin Reception

Tuesday, October 18, 3:30pm

Oregon Courtyard (near Building 260)

Open only to èצӰ Students and Faculty

Vladimir Sorokin Public Reading

Wednesday, October 19, 5:15pm

Pigott Hall (Bldg. 260) 113

Ilya Kabakov & Vladimir Sorokin

‘A Conceptual Dialogue’ convened by Nariman Skakov

Wednesday, October 26, 5:15pm

Levinthal Hall, èצӰ Humanities Center

Co-sponsored by the èצӰ Humanities Center

Vladimir Sorokin

Graduate Workshop ‘Русское как образ/Russianness as Image’ (conducted in Russian, closed to the general public)

November 2, 2011

Because the number of places is limited, we invite applications from graduate students who would like to attend either or both of the workshops. Applicants should send a 1-page statement and CV to Nariman Skakov, Assistant Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures (nariman.skakov [at] stanford.edu (nariman[dot]skakov[at]stanford[dot]edu)). Those selected will be responsible for their own travel arrangements and accommodation.

Vladimir Sorokin

Graduate Workshop 'Oprichnina' (conducted in Russian, closed to the general public)

November 9, 2011

Because the number of places is limited, we invite applications from graduate students who would like to attend either or both of the workshops. Applicants should send a 1-page statement and CV to Nariman Skakov, Assistant Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures (nariman.skakov [at] stanford.edu (nariman[dot]skakov[at]stanford[dot]edu)). Those selected will be responsible for their own travel arrangements and accommodation.

Screening of Target (2010), directed by Alexander Zeldovich, script by Vladimir Sorokin

Discussants: Alexander Zeldovich, Vladimir Sorokin, Gregory Freidin (Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures, èצӰ), Tom Luddy (Co-Director, Telluride Film Festival)

Thursday, November 10, 6:00pm

Braun Corner (Bldg. 320), Room 105

Co-sponsored by Film and Media Studies