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Otherland: A Journey with My Daughter
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
Otherland: A Journey with My Daughter
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Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Maria Tumarkin
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Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:320 | Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 162 |
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Category/Genre | Memoirs Family history and tracing ancestors |
ISBN/Barcode |
9781741666793
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Classifications | Dewey:A828 |
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Audience | |
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Random House Australia
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Imprint |
Vintage (Australia)
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Publication Date |
1 April 2010 |
Publication Country |
Australia
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Description
Shortlisted for the Douglas Stewart prize for non fiction and the Community Relations Commission Award in NS W and the Age Non-Fiction Book of the Year. I left too early, before tanks rolled into Moscow in 1991, and before Gorbachev was put under home arrest in a failed coup. I left before Russia and Ukraine became separate countries, before the KGB archives were opened, before the Russian version of Wheel of Fortune, before the word 'Gulag' appeared in textbooks. I left before Chechnya, before the mass renaming of cities and streets, before you could go into a shop and actually purchase the books of Brodsky, Pasternak and Nabokov. I left too early, I missed the whole point. I was not there when my generation was cornered by history. Maria Tumarkin travels with her Australian-born teenage daughter, Billie, back to Russia and Ukraine to have her experience first-hand the seismic shifts of her family's native country. For Maria the trip back is no simple stroll down memory lane. Splintered and scattered across the world, her generation has ended up inhabiting vastly different realities. Along with exploring the political and cultural fallout of a century of turmo
Author Biography
Born in 1974 in the former Soviet Union in a Russian Jewish family, which in 1989 immigrated to Australia. Maria has published two books, "Traumascapes" (2005) and "Courage" (2007). She lives in Melbourne with her two children and is currently working as a Research Fellow at the Institute for Social Research, Swinburne on the international "Social Memory and Historical Justice" project.
Reviews""For the most part her account is fascinating, even exhilarating, and there is barely a dead word in the book. Tumarkin's viewpoint is unfailingly insightful with an overlay of pungent Russian humour." "Age" ""The literary beauty of "Otherland"is essentially textual: multiple layers of memory and reflection, intertwining historical commentary, cultural and literary criticism, and personal reminiscence. It is at once a roadtrip of anecdotes peppered with yearning and longing as well as a politico-cultural window on a huge part of 20th century history." "Sydney Morning Herald" ""The literary beauty of "Otherland" is essentially textual: multiple layers of memory and reflection, intertwining historical commentary, cultural and literary criticism, and personal reminiscence. It is at once a roadtrip of anecdotes peppered with yearning and longing as well as a politico-cultural window on a huge part of 20th century history." --"Sydney Morning Herald
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