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Red Cavalry

Front Cover
26 Reviews
W W Norton & Company Incorporated, 2003 - Fiction - 320 pages
One of the great masterpieces of Russian literature, the Red Cavalry cycle retains today the shocking freshness that made Babel's reputation when the stories were first published in the 1920s. Using his own experiences as a journalist and propagandist with the Red Army during the war against Poland, Babel brings to life an astonishing cast of characters from the exuberant, violent era of early Soviet history: commissars and colonels, Cossacks and peasants, and among them the bespectacled, Jewish writer/intellectual, observing it all and trying to establish his role in the new Russia. Drawn from the acclaimed, award-winning Complete Works of Isaac Babel, this volume includes all of the Red Cavalry cycle; Babel's 1920 diary, from which the material for the fiction was drawn; and his preliminary sketches for the stories--the whole constituting a fascinating picture of a great writer turning life into art.

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Review: Red Cavalry

User Review  - Jason Morton - Goodreads

The greatest piece of literature to emerge from Russia's Civil War. Also some of the best short story writing of all time. Read full review

Review: Red Cavalry

User Review  - Perez Malone - Goodreads

I wanted to be more into it than I was. Some of the stories really gripped me. Others not so much. I found the extreme brevity of many of them to actually deter my enjoyment. Sometimes, when I sit ... Read full review

All 26 reviews »

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Bitter glory: Poland and its fate, 1918 to 1939
Diplomacy and ideology: the origins of Soviet foreign relations, 1917-1930
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References from web pages

JSTOR: Procedures of Montage in Isaak Babel's Red Cavalry
The rest of the book is devoted to applying montage theory to Babel's Red Cavalry. In Chapters 2, 3, and 4 Schreurs considers the whole work through the ...
links.jstor.org/ sici?sici=0037-6752(199122)1%3A35%3A2%3C295%3APOMIIB%3E2.0.CO%3B2-9

Isaak Babel Red Cavalry Criticism
Isaak Babel Red Cavalry Criticism and Essays. ... Regarded as Babel's best work, Konarmiia (Red Cavalry) is a cycle of thirty-four short stories that ...
www.enotes.com/ short-story-criticism/ red-cavalry-isaak-babel

Literary Encyclopedia: Konarmiya
The narrative paradoxes of Red Cavalry are seen most clearly, however, not in the descriptions of warfare, but in the figure of the narrator, ...
www.litencyc.com/ php/ sworks.php?rec=true& UID=11550

Wisse — Nahum Goldmann Fellowship Alumni Magazine
Thus, Lyutov, the narrator of Red Cavalry at the front, is putting out a ... Red Cavalry describes the war between Poland and Soviet Russia in the summer of ...
members.ngfp.org/ Courses/ Wisse/ lesson3

Red Cavalry (Main Page)
One of the great masterpieces of Russian literature, the Red Cavalry cycle retains today the shocking freshness that made Babel's reputation when the ...
www.wwnorton.com/ catalog/ spring03/ 032423.htm

Red Cavalry - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Red Cavalry (Russian: Конармия) is a collection of short stories by Russian author Isaac Babel. It was first published in the 1920s, but many of the stories ...
en.wikipedia.org/ wiki/ Red_Cavalry

In These Times * Terrible Beauty
Red Cavalry was first published in English as early as 1929; ... Particularly in Red Cavalry, the rhythm of Constantine’s translation tends to be clunky, ...
www.inthesetimes.com/ issue/ 26/ 04/ culture2.shtml

Мигдаль - 3-я Международная научная конференция «Одесса и ...
The sentence that ends the third paragraph of the first story in Isaac Babel.s “Red Cavalry” has been translated by Nadia Helstein and Walter Morison: “In ...
www.migdal.ru/ migdal/ events/ science-confs/ 3/ 5850/ 5863/

20th Century Russian Literature
When Babel first began writing the individual stories of Red Cavalry, ... In Red Cavalry, Kirill Vasilyevich Lyutov follows the course of the Russian Civil ...
community.middlebury.edu/ ~beyer/ courses/ ru152s02/ authors/ babel/ study_guide/ index.html

ingentaconnect E Pluribus Unum: Isaac Babel's Red Cavalry As a ...
E Pluribus Unum: Isaac Babel's Red Cavalry As a Story Cycle. Author: Bojanowska, Edyta M.1. Source: The Russian Review, Volume 59, Number 3, July 2000 , pp. ...
www.ingentaconnect.com/ content/ bpl/ russ/ 2000/ 00000059/ 00000003/ art00005;jsessionid=5nvrtftfprcc5.alice?format=print

About the author (2003)

Isaac Babel was born in Odessa, Russia, in 1894. He won early success with stories about his native Odessa and about the exploits of the Bolshevik cavalry in the Polish campaign of 1920-21. During the 1930s his output was small, but his talent remained undiminished. He was arrested in May 1939 during the Great Purge, and his manuscripts were confiscated. His exact fate remains unknown. Although Babel's reputation was restored in 1956, he was still published only occasionally in the Soviet Union-the very strong Jewish element in his stories, as well as the ambiguous positions he took on war and revolution, made his stories uncomfortable for Soviet authorities. For a Russian reader, the Odessa Tales (1916) are particularly exotic. Their protagonists, members of the city's Jewish underworld, are presented in romantic, epic terms. The Red Cavalry stories are noted for their account of the horrors of war. In both cycles Babel relies on precisely constructed short plots, on paradox of situation and of character response, and on nonstandard, captivating language-be it the combination of Yiddish, slang, and standard Russian in the Odessa Tales or of uneducated Cossack speech and standard Russian in the Red Cavalry cycle. The result of such features is a prose heritage rare in the history of Russian literature. Isaac Babel passed away in 1941.

Nathalie Babel , his daughter, edited two other books of Babel's writing and is the author of Hugo and Dostoevsky .

Peter Constantine 's most recent translations are Sophoclesrsquo; Theban Trilogy , The Essential Writings of Machiavell i, and The Bird is a Raven by Benjamin Lebert, which was awarded the Helen und Kurt Wolff Translation Prize. He was awarded the PEN Translation Prize for Six Early Stories by Thomas Mann , and the National Translation Award for The Undiscovered Chekhov: Thirty-Eight New Stories . His translation of the complete works of Isaac Babel received the Koret Jewish Literature Award and a National Jewish Book Award citation. He has recently translated Gogolrsquo;s Taras Bulba , Tolstoyrsquo;s The Cossacks , and Voltairersquo;s Candide for Modern Library. He was one of the editors for A Century of Greek Poetry: 1900-2000 , and is a senior editor at Conjunctions .

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