Tomas Venclova
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Tomas Venclova (born on September 11, 1937 in Klaipėda) is a Lithuanian scholar, poet, author and translator of literature.
Tomas Venclova is son of poet and Soviet politician Antanas Venclova. He was educated at the Vilnius University. As an active participant in the dissident movement he was deprived of Soviet citizenship in 1977 and had to emigrate[1]. He is one of the founders of Lithuanian Helsinki Watch group (December 1, 1976). Since 1980 he has been a member of the department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at Yale University, after receiving his PhD from the department in 1985. He is currently a full Professor. He is author of collections of poems, poetry-translations, essays, articles.
Like many of the best scholars of his generation in the Soviet Union, Venclova studied at Tartu and was strongly influenced by the brand of structuralism prevalent there in the 1970s and 1980s. In Venclova's case, the rigorously analytical structuralism of Yurii Lotman's early work on poetry was particularly influential. Venclova was also fond, at least in his work and teaching in the eighties, of making use of Saussure's work on hidden anagrams (see Jean Starobinski's Words upon Words.
[edit] Books and other publications
Neustoychivoe Ravnovesia - Unstable Equilibrium: 8 Russian Poetic Texts (1986)
Rozmowa w Zimie (1989)
Aleksander Wat: Life and Art of an Iconoclast (1996)
Winter Dialogue: Poems (1997)
Forms of Hope: Essays (1999)
[edit] References
- ^ Tomas Venclova. Vilnius. R. Paknys Publishing House, Vilnius, 2002.