º£½ÇÉçÇø

skip to content
 

Out of the Shadows: An Exhibition at the University Library

Exhibit

An exhibition of previously unknown autographs of some of the leading writers of Russian post-1917 emigration curated by Vera Tsareva-Brauner opened in the University Library on 5 November 2018.

Entitled ‘Out of the Shadows’, this exhibition came about as a result of an almost serendipitous discovery made in 2016 in that very library: first editions of works by Ivan Bunin, the first Russian winner of the Nobel Prize for literature, Alexey Tolstoy, who was later to become known as ‘the Red Count’, author of the seminal work The Road to Calvary and Nadezhda Teffi, an acclaimed writer and memoirist. Due to a number of cataloguing errors dating back to the 1930s – early 1960s, none of these books have ever been seen or attributed before. The story behind this fortunate discovery and attempts to trace the provenance of books is worthy of a detective story.

But perhaps the most interesting layer was uncovered as a result of identifying the recipients of these books, which eventually led to a significant corpus of previously unpublished letters to Ivan and Vera Bunins which are now held in The Russian Archives in Leeds (RAL). This opened a fertile field of research that so far has uncovered some previously unknown facts not only about Ivan Bunin and some other leading figures of Russian emigration in pre-war France, but also about Anton Chekhov and his ‘Cherry Orchard’, the horrors of 1917 Revolution and Civil war and many other subjects. All this is in the letters, which would never have been researched, if it wasn’t for this chance discovery of living history, hand-written, poignant and authentic.

Releasing new archive material (over 350 letters) into circulation is always important, but the fact that it was made possible by three lines, handwritten by Bunin, makes it quite special.

Thanks to , the exhibition is now available online at , and it’s gratifying to get some positive responses from the Institute of World Literature and .

The stories of people behind the autographs as well as the corpus of letters from RAL will be published in the book, which is scheduled for publication in 2020.

Vera Tsareva-Brauner will also talk about this work at the 2019 BASEES Conference. There will also be a lecture at the UL scheduled for late April 2019.

Keep in touch

Ìý ÌýÌý

Slavonic News

PhD student Juliette Bretan presents BBC Radio 3 programme on Polish tango

14 May 2025

English PhD student Juliette Bretan recently presented a BBC Radio 3 programme on Polish tango. In the programme, Juliette traces the musical adventure of the tango and its interwar explosion eastwards in colder climes like Warsaw. A rich, unexpected history, encountering some of those who have brought it back to life...

Reconsidering Soviet Studies events for Easter Term 2025

7 May 2025

All of the events on the term card and listed below as text will be available via Zoom. Content notice: items below discuss themes of famine and war. "The Great Ukrainian Famine: Legacies of Violence in Ukraine and Beyond, 1932-2023" with Karolina Koziura of the European University Institute, Florence Wednesday 21 May, 5...