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The Tears & Smiles of Things by Sodomora (w/ translators Dr. Roman Ivashkiv and Sabrina Jaszi)
Manage episode 443490529 series 2871878
Show Notes:
This week, Matt and Cameron dive into Andriy Sodomora’s short story collection The Tears & Smiles of Things with the help of its translators Roman Ivashkiv and Sabrina Jaszi. The collection draws together Sodomora’s reflections on life, ancient texts, and the difficulties of translation. The book holds the subtitle “Stories, Sketches, Meditations.” It’s never easy to tell which is which — if indeed a clear delineation can be made at all — but Jaszi and Ivashkiv do their best to help the pair untangle it.
Roman Ivashkiv teaches Slavic languages, literatures, and cultures at the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa. His research interests include translation, comparative literature, and language pedagogy. Currently, he is writing a monograph on transmesis (i.e., fictional representation of translation and translators) in contemporary Ukrainian literature and film.
Sabrina Jaszi is a translator of Uzbek, Russophone, and Ukrainian literature based in Oakland, CA. She is a co-founder of the Turkoslavia translation collective and journal, both dedicated to Turkic and Slavic literature in translation. Currently, she is writing a dissertation on modern Central Asian literature at UC Berkeley.
Major themes: Reading antiquity, Tears and smiles, Translating translators
We have included links where you can purchase a copy of The Tears & Smiles of Things later in these notes.
25:40 - *Room without a Shadow, excuse me
01:09:30 - The Gates of Europe: A History of Ukraine by Serhii Plokhy
01:09:38 - Timothy Snyder’s history of Ukraine Yale courses on Youtube
01:10:02 - Victoria Amelina, whose book Women Looking at War: A War and Justice Diary is set to be published in February 2025.
01:10:12 - The publication section of Harvard’s Ukrainian Research Institute.
01:10:15 - Lost Horse Press
01:11:22 - Stanislav Aseyev’s In Isolation: Dispatches from the Occupied Donbas
The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.
Buy this book with our affiliate links on Bookshop or Amazon!
Our links: Website | Discord
Socials: Instagram | BlueSky | Twitter | Facebook
Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com or call our voicemail at 209.800.3944
Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands
157 Episoden
Manage episode 443490529 series 2871878
Show Notes:
This week, Matt and Cameron dive into Andriy Sodomora’s short story collection The Tears & Smiles of Things with the help of its translators Roman Ivashkiv and Sabrina Jaszi. The collection draws together Sodomora’s reflections on life, ancient texts, and the difficulties of translation. The book holds the subtitle “Stories, Sketches, Meditations.” It’s never easy to tell which is which — if indeed a clear delineation can be made at all — but Jaszi and Ivashkiv do their best to help the pair untangle it.
Roman Ivashkiv teaches Slavic languages, literatures, and cultures at the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa. His research interests include translation, comparative literature, and language pedagogy. Currently, he is writing a monograph on transmesis (i.e., fictional representation of translation and translators) in contemporary Ukrainian literature and film.
Sabrina Jaszi is a translator of Uzbek, Russophone, and Ukrainian literature based in Oakland, CA. She is a co-founder of the Turkoslavia translation collective and journal, both dedicated to Turkic and Slavic literature in translation. Currently, she is writing a dissertation on modern Central Asian literature at UC Berkeley.
Major themes: Reading antiquity, Tears and smiles, Translating translators
We have included links where you can purchase a copy of The Tears & Smiles of Things later in these notes.
25:40 - *Room without a Shadow, excuse me
01:09:30 - The Gates of Europe: A History of Ukraine by Serhii Plokhy
01:09:38 - Timothy Snyder’s history of Ukraine Yale courses on Youtube
01:10:02 - Victoria Amelina, whose book Women Looking at War: A War and Justice Diary is set to be published in February 2025.
01:10:12 - The publication section of Harvard’s Ukrainian Research Institute.
01:10:15 - Lost Horse Press
01:11:22 - Stanislav Aseyev’s In Isolation: Dispatches from the Occupied Donbas
The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.
Buy this book with our affiliate links on Bookshop or Amazon!
Our links: Website | Discord
Socials: Instagram | BlueSky | Twitter | Facebook
Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com or call our voicemail at 209.800.3944
Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands
157 Episoden
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