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Russian Hybrids: Identity in the Translingual Writings of Andreï Makine, Wladimir Kaminer, and Gary Shteyngart
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2017
Abstract
Authors writing in a language other than their native tongue have become a common phenomenon in an era of increased international mobility. This article is devoted to three Russian-born émigré writers—Andreï Makine (b. 1957), Wladimir Kaminer (b. 1967), and Gary Shteyngart (b. 1972)—all of whom have achieved literary stardom with books written in French, German, and English, respectively. Although each of the three authors has a distinctive style and ideological position, in his own way each projects a “Russian” persona to the western public. Using the notion of cultural hybridity, Adrian Wanner explores the various strategies these authors have adopted in fashioning an identity for themselves that is tailored to meet the demands of the reading public in their respective host nations while exploiting the cachet of the Russian “brand name” in today's global literary economy.
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References
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3. In her recent book on translation, Emily Apter makes the following comment on translingual writers: “Producing work directly in a non-native tongue [ … ] , many artists seem to bypass the act of translation, subsuming it as problematic within a larger project of cultural or self-representation. In this picture, ‘global’ signifies not so much the conglomeration of world cultures arrayed side by side in their difference, but rather a problembased monocultural aesthetic agenda that elicits transnational engagement.” Apter, Emily, The Translation Zone: A New Comparative Literature (Princeton, 2006), 99 Google Scholar.
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27. Kaminer also makes use of this word in Militärmusik, where a young Afghan who has been sold into the Soviet Army by his fellow tribesmen is said to have been born in the town of Chui, pronounced “khui” in German (Militdrmusik, 179). Since the meaning of the name is never explained, it remains hidden to the vast majority of Kaminer's German readers. The word functions as a sort of “insider joke” accessible only to those who know Russian.
28. Given that Shteyngart has lived in the United States since the age of seven, his accent in English is, not surprisingly, negligible. He claims that he lost his Russian accent at age fourteen. See Shteyngart, Gary, “Sixty-Nine Cents,” New Yorker, 3 and 10 September 2007, 70 Google Scholar.
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30. This is not necessarily the attitude of all translingual writers. For example, the Russian-born Olga Grushin, author of the novel The Dream Life of Sukhanov (2006), declared in an interview in February 2006 that it was her conscious intention “to imbue [her] English with a Russian feel” in order to “convey a very Russian sensibility overall.“ See “10 Questions with Olga Grushin” at www.polidcs-prose.com/grushin.htm (last consulted 23 May 2008) .
31. See Makine, , La terre et le del de Jacques Dorme (Paris, 2003), 215 Google Scholar.
32. Thierry Laurent, in a recent monograph on Makine, refers to this idiom as “un français déstructuré et abâtardi” (a hybrid, mongrelized French). Laurent, , Andreï Makine, Russe en exil (Paris, 2006), 58 Google Scholar.
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35. This does not mean that Makine considers French per se superior to Russian. For him, the appeal of the French language lies precisely in its foreignness, which allows the writer a sort of “de-familiarization,” the principle of ostranenie promoted by die Russian formalists. On this, see Safran, Gabriella, “Andreï Makine's Literary Bilingualism and the Critics,” Comparative Literature 55, no. 3 (Summer 2003): 246-65CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Rubins, Mariia, “Russko-frantsuzskaia proza Andreïa Makina,” Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie, no. 66 (2004): 208-29Google Scholar. In an interview with a Québécois newspaper, Makine declared himself an ad mirer of Viktor Shklovskii's concept of ostranenie. See Guylaine Massoutre, “'II faut être intolérant dans la littérature.’ Entretien avec Andreï’ Makine—La vie imprévisible,” Le Devoir, 25-26 March 2006 atwww.ledevoir.com/2006/03/25/105056.html (last consulted 23 May 2008).
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41. In his 2003 interview with Sovershenno Sekretno, Makine mentioned his “enormous respect” for Solzhenitsyn and noted his unhappiness with the way the writer was treated by Russian critics after his return to Moscow. See Khabarov, “Smes’ frantsuzskogo s krasnoiarskim.“
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50. Kaminer's story “Ein verlorener Tag” illustrates his reluctance to engage the issue of his Jewishness. See on this Wanner, , “Wladimir Kaminer,” 592-93Google Scholar.
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53. Radio Svoboda, 19 April 2005, at www.svoboda.org/programs/ut/2005/ ut.041905.asp (last consulted 23 May 2008). This comment has become outdated very fast. While Shteyngart is indeed the first Russian immigrant since Nabokov to write a bestseller in English, it has already become clear that he will not be die last. In recent years, at least five other successful Russian immigrant authors have appeared on the American literary scene: Lara Vapnyar with There Are Jews in My House (2003) and Memoirs of a Muse (2006), David Bezmozgis with Natasha (2004), Olga Grushin with The Dream Life of Sukhanov (2006), Anya Ulinich with Petropolis (2007), and Ellen Litman with The Last Chicken in America (2007).
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56. Ibid., 6.
57. “Stripped Books: Gary Shteyngart and Jeffrey Eugenides” at www.bookslut.com/features/2005_04_005044.php (last consulted 23 May 2008).
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61. It is important to note that the manipulation of cliches, understood in their literal meaning as photographic imprints, is also a crucial element of Makine's artistic technique, as Hélène Mélat and Maria Rubins have observed. Photographs play an important role in almost all of Makine's novels, where they serve both as an element of the plot and as a metaphor for how literature creates a fragmentary illusion of reality. See Melat, Helene, “Andreï Makine: Testament français ou Testament russe?” La revue russe, no. 21 (2002): 41–49 CrossRefGoogle Scholar, especially the section “Le cliche comme art de vivre et refuge” (44-45), and Rubins, , “Russko-frantsuzskaia proza Andreïa Makina,” 213-16Google Scholar. Makine's modernist self-reflectiveness, which hints at a deeper level of transcendence, becomes in Shteyngart and Kaminer a self-ironic postmodern game.
62. For example, both Shteyngart and Makine include a scene in their novels in which a little girl is offered to the narrator by her mother or grandmother for sexual gratification. Both narrators react with horror and moral revulsion. See Shteyngart, , Absurdistan, 287-88Google Scholar, and Makine, , La terre et le del de Jacques Dorme, 26–27 Google Scholar.
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64. Rossiiskaia gazeta, 8 October 2004 at www.rg.ru/2004/10/08/karminer.html (die misspelling “karminer” is correct; last consulted 23 May 2008).
65. Radio Svoboda, 19 April 2005; Natasha Grinberg, “Can't Live Long without Writing: A Conversation with Gary Stheyngart” at www.webdelsol.com/Literary_Dialogues/interview-wds-shteyngart.htm (last consulted 23 May 2008).
66. See “Stripped Books: Gary Shteyngart and Jeffrey Eugenides.“
67. “If the epic background of war and revolution brings Pasternak to mind, it is also true that Proust's esthetic quest in search of a timeless time can be perceived subtly woven into these pages.” Brombert, Victor, “Torn between Two Languages,” New York Times Book Review, 17 August 1997, 8 Google Scholar.
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