Lexington Books
Pages: 220
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7391-0333-3 • Hardback • January 2002 • $108.00 • (£83.00)
Domnica Radulescu is Associate Professor of Romance Languages at Washington and Lee University.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Ethics, Consciousness, and the Potentialities of Literature - Teaching Narratives of Exile
Chapter 3 Telling Gypsy Exile: Pushkin, India, and Romani Diaspora
Chapter 4 Nabokov's Lolita and the Post-War Émigré Consciousness
Chapter 5 The Exile as Autobiographer: Nabokov's Homecoming
Chapter 6 The Rhetoric of Andrei Codrescu: a Reading in Exilic Fragmentation
Chapter 7 Exile and Polish Cinema: from Mickiewicz and Slowacki to Kieslowski
Chapter 8 Alienations of Exilic Return: Russian Immigrants and "Ingathering" in Hebron
Chapter 9 Memory in Exile: Notes on Milosz, Identity, and Writing
Chapter 10 Binarism versus Sythesis: Eastern European and Generic Exile
Chapter 11 Theorizing Exile
Realms of Exile presents a fascinating mosaic of inquiries into an experience that turns out to be all too characteristic of the twentieth century. The ten essays Radulescu has gathered examine exile in its theoretical and experiential modes and in its metaphysical and political dimensions, as experienced by individuals as well as by entire displaced peoples across the map of eastern Europe. Collectively, the essays show just how influential the concept of exile remains in our culture. This volume makes a significant contribution to exile studies and recommends itself to anyone interested in what our recent past means.
— Thomas Seifrid, University of Southern California