Northern Lights Are Our Friends: Soviet Deportations and Siberian Nature in Children's and Young Adult Literature

Mateusz Świetlicki, Sylwia Kamińska-Maciąg
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract:Although their history dates back to the sixteenth century and the policies of Tsarist Russia, Siberian exiles—in the cultural memory of central and eastern Europe—are usually associated with the Gulag and the policies of Lenin and Stalin during the revolution, collectivization, the Great Terror, and the Second World War. As a result of the mass repressions, millions of adults and children of various nationalities, including Poles, Ukrainians, Lithuanians, and Russians, were deported to remote areas of the Soviet Union—Siberia, the Ural Mountains, and Kazakhstan. The article examines children's and young adult books about these deportations that not only showcase the totalitarian character of Stalinism but also contrast human brutality with the goodness and innocence of nature surrounding the child protagonists transported deep into the USSR. Thus, the novels' chronotope seems to convey the testimony of traumatic events in the history of post-Soviet nations and provide young readers with a sense of hope epitomized by the vastness of the snows of Siberia.
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北极光是我们的朋友:儿童和青少年文学中的苏联驱逐和西伯利亚自然
摘要:尽管西伯利亚流亡者的历史可以追溯到16世纪和沙皇俄国的政策,但在中欧和东欧的文化记忆中,他们通常与古拉格以及列宁和斯大林在革命、集体化、大恐怖和第二次世界大战期间的政策联系在一起。大规模镇压的结果是,包括波兰人、乌克兰人、立陶宛人和俄罗斯人在内的数百万不同民族的成年人和儿童被驱逐到苏联的偏远地区——西伯利亚、乌拉尔山脉和哈萨克斯坦。这篇文章考察了关于这些驱逐的儿童和青少年书籍,这些书籍不仅展示了斯大林主义的极权主义特征,而且还将人类的残暴与被深深运送到苏联的儿童主人公周围的善良和天真进行了对比。因此,小说的时间轴似乎传达了后苏联国家历史上创伤性事件的证词,并为年轻读者提供了一种希望感,这种希望感体现在西伯利亚的广阔积雪上。
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CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
38
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