• A
  • A
  • A
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
Regular version of the site

HSE University Joins Digital Archive Project of Silver Age Literature

Marginal notes and corrections by Alexander Blok on a publication of his work. RO IRLI RAN. F. 654. Op. 2. Ed. khr. 2

Marginal notes and corrections by Alexander Blok on a publication of his work. RO IRLI RAN. F. 654. Op. 2. Ed. khr. 2
© literature-archive.ru

 

Autograph is a digital archive that grants researchers access to digitized manuscripts of Russian writers of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Until now, the manuscripts were only available in archives that are closed to researchers and the public and located in different cities and countries around the world.

As Elena Penskaya, Head of the School of General and Applied Philology, explains, Autograph appeared in 2014 thanks to a group of researchers from the Russian State Archive of Literature and Art (RGALI). The project, which allows students, scholars, and lovers of literature alike from around the globe to study manuscripts in digital format, almost immediately gained the support of the Pushkin House and the Russian Science Foundation.

With the backing of the Russian Science Foundation, HSE University became a member of the project in 2019. According to Penskaya, this was a logical step for the university, since HSE University collaborates with a wide range of international universities and archives that preserve the literary heritage of the Russian emigration. In addition, HSE University is one of the leading institutions in the development of digital technology.

Head of the School of General and Applied Philology of HSE

‘Seeing the writers’ manuscripts allows you to see familiar texts in a new light: you can view every stage, every movement in the creative process—from the writer’s first notes in his or her diary, to the rough and final handwritten drafts, to the handwritten corrections on the pages of published works, newspaper clippings, notebook margins, and letters. Unfortunately, in the vast majority of cases, all of this information was previously inaccessible: archival collections are housed in different cities, and sometimes in different countries. They are not always readily available. Digital archives present a solution to this problem. Now, no matter where you are—whether you’re in Moscow or St. Petersburg, in Russia or abroad—you can work with a manuscript copy right on your computer and even enlarge the image of the original on your screen so that you can view the document up close and discern fragments that are illegible or have been erased or crossed out by the author.’

The digital archive has received materials from the Anna Akhmatova Museum at the Fountain House and the Russian State Library. Currently, the archive holds 12 sites dedicated to Russian writers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries with more than 20,000 digitized manuscript pages.

Not only Russian researchers, but also Slavic scholars from universities in the USA, Canada, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Germany, Great Britain, and Serbia work with the online archive. Most of the users are students and graduate students.

Over the next three years, Autograph will be focused on collecting a digital history of texts from the first third of the twentieth century. The ultimate plan is to cover the past century in its entirety

Currently, the HSE School of General and Applied Philology, in cooperation with its partners, is preparing websites for five writers: Mikhail Bulgakov, Andrey Platonov, Mikhail Sholokhov, Isaac Babel, and Mikhail Zoshchenko. Until 1993, most of these archival materials were held in so-called ‘special storage’ (spetskhran). Still today, the indicatory stamp ‘NV’ (Ne vydaiutsia – ‘Not issued’) is imprinted on the files holding these materials. Even after these ideological barriers were removed, however, too many logistical obstacles remained, keeping these materials inaccessible. Moreover, historically, Russian literature of this period is closely connected not only with Russian culture of the Silver Age and Soviet life of the 1920s and 30s, but also the culture of Russian emigration, wherein passing literary archives to foreign collections became common practice.

‘One of the most important problems in the textual study of twentieth-century Russian literature is the need for a comprehensive textual history that is based on materials from the Russian and foreign repositories and the need to make these sources accessible to researchers in their entirety. Autograph is an important step towards completing this non-trivial task,’ says Elena Penskaya.

See also:

‘Mandelstam Street’ Exhibition Opens at the State Literature Museum with Support of HSE University

On March 16, the HSE Madelstam Centre together with Vladimir Dal State Literature Museum opened a museum dedicated to poet Osip Mandelstam and his wife Nadezhda. Below, HSE News Service talks about the exposition ‘Mandelstam Street: Osip and Nadezhda’.

Authorship Proven by Mathematics

Marking Mikhail Sholokhov's 115th anniversary (1905-1984), linguists Boris Orekhov of the HSE and Natalya Velikanova of the Moscow State University confirmed his authorship of the epic novel about the Don Cossacks. The researchers were able to attribute the novel using the text distance measure proposed by John Burrows. Termed Burrows' Delta, it provides a simple and reliable method of attributing or confirming the authorship of various texts. 

Library Night at HSE: Shakespeare, Museums and Quests

Almost 40 teams took part in the ‘Through the pages of Basmania’ quest, organized by the Higher School of Economics as part of an annual citywide event, Library Night. Event participants also staged passages from Romeo and Juliet and attended lectures about theatre at HSE library.

International Students Explore Russian Literature in HSE’s Preparatory Year Programme

HSE’s Preparatory Year Programme for international students includes not only intensive Russian language training but also subject specific courses. One such course is ‘Russian Literature’, which introduces international students to classic works by Russian writers such as Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, and Chekhov. In the course, students read and discuss select texts in the original Russian, which helps them gain a better understanding of the Russian culture and history.

Translation Studies Expert Speaks at School of Philology

On September 26 and 27, the HSE School of Philology hosted Professor Brian Baer of Kent University (Ohio, USA) for a lecture entitled ‘The Translator’s Biography in Soviet and Post-Soviet Russia: Art, Politics, Identity’, followed by a workshop on ‘Teaching Translation Studies’. Following his lecture and workshop, Professor Baer spoke with the HSE News Service about his career as a translator, the role of the translator in society and his recommendations for international readers looking for exposure to Russian literature.

Russian Sincerity Today – A Conversation with Professor Ellen Rutten

On May 23, Ellen Rutten, Professor of Russian and Slavic Studies at the University of Amsterdam, delivered a lecture at HSE on her new book, ‘Sincerity after Communism’. An expert on Slavonic literature and culture, Professor Rutten is involved in numerous projects, including the Digital Emotions group, Sublime Imperfections, and ‘Russian Literature’, a journal where she serves as editor-in-chief.

From HSE to the Sorbonne and Back

Alexey Lukashin, graduate of the HSE master’s programme ‘Comparative Studies: Russian Literature in Cross-cultural Perspective’, studies how real people often copy literary characters and how they themselves can become unusual characters. He is now writing a thesis on this at the Sorbonne and plans to go for his doctorate at HSE.

HSE Develops Interactive Web Version of Tolstoy’s War and Peace

The HSE School of Linguistics, along with Samsung Electronics and experts from the group Tolstoy Digital, has launched the web version of the project ‘Living Pages,’ which offers users a new visual and linguistic analysis of Leo Tolstoy’s iconic novel War and Peace.

Debating the Next Nobel Laureate

On October 8, 2015, the winner of this year’s Nobel Prize in Literature will be announced. The favourites among bookmakers are the Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami, Belarusian author Svetlana Alexievich, and Kenya’s Ngugi wa Thiong’o. HSE scholars share their opinions on the most likely contenders.

HSE Develops Mobile App Based on Tolstoy’s War and Peace

HSE’s School of Linguistics, along with Samsung and the Leo Tolstoy State Museum, has developed a mobile application called ‘Living Pages,’ which offers users a new way of reading Leo Tolstoy’s novel War and Peace. The programme’s launch coincides with the Russia’s Year of Literature.