Kolyma tales
Memory and Fiction
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2317-4765.rus.2020.175155Keywords:
Shalamov, narrative, fiction, memoryAbstract
The prose of Varlam Tikhonovitch Shalamov (1907-1982), survivor of the Soviet forced labor camps during Stalin’s regime, is a monument to the fundamental role of storytelling in human struggle against death and oblivion. Having established some general considerations on Shalamov’s experience in gulag, as it was portrayed in his work, I propose to reflect, from the analysis of two of his short stories, both included in the first volume of the Tales of Kolyma series, about the author’s relation with literature and writing.
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References
CHALÁMOV, Varlam. Contos de Kolimá 1. São Paulo: Ed. 34, 2016.
CHALÁMOV, Varlam. “Sobre a prosa”, in: Contos de Kolimá 3: O artista da pá. São Paulo: Ed 34, 2016.
LEVI, Primo. Se é isto um homem. Rio de Janeiro: Ed. Rocco, 1988.
HOMERO. Odisseia. São Paulo: Ed. Hedra, 2011.
RAMOS, Graciliano. Memórias do cárcere. Rio de Janeiro: Ed. Record. 2008.
ROSA, João Guimarães. “A hora e a vez de Augusto Matraga”. In: ROSA, João Guimarães. Sagarana. Rio de Janeiro: Ed. Nova Fronteira. 2006.
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