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Lecture “Sketching the Underground: Imperial Russia’s Natural Resource Frontiers”

Published: April 5, 2024; Author: Julia Sonrisa

 April 11, 2024    12:15 PM-02:00 PM EDT

Heyman Center for the Humanities

Address: East Campus, Residence Hall, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, United States

Lecture “Sketching the Underground: Imperial Russia’s Natural Resource Frontiers”

Russian fin-de-siècle fictional and quasi-fictional mining narratives, which are set in the imperial outlands of the Urals and the Donets Coal Basin (in today’s Ukraine), expose a paradox: stories about the local, embodied experiences of natural resource extraction in these colonized territories portray decline, regression, and exhaustion, i.e., experiences of postponed or failed modernization that contradicted official discourse about the mining of iron and coal making Russia modern. First-hand accounts of extraction zones by writers and journalists in the 1880s and 1890s (such as Vasilii Nemirovich-Danchenko, Dmitrii Mamin-Sibiriak, Aleksandr Kurpin, and Aleksandr Serafimovich) portray mining sites as antithetical to modernity’s ideology of progress. They also reveal how writers came face-to-face with the earth’s geological layers and fossilized organic matter, materializations of deep time that dwarfed human timescales and pitted the underground against the forward-pointing temporal arrow of modern progress and Promethean. In this talk, I argue that, besides telling alternative stories about Russia’s experience of modernization, writers of mining narratives needed to make normal concessions in the face of challenging new representational demands. They arrived at the nebulous, hybrid sketch genre, which produced a unique poetics of becoming modern.

Speaker

Colleen McQuillen is a scholar of Russian modernism who researches the ways that literature extends into, influences, and refracts visual and material culture. Her primary field of research is the period known as the Silver Age, which is the focal point of her first book The Modernist Masquerade: Stylizing Life, Literature and Costumes in Russia. Her current book project, Mining the Earth: Narratives and Natural Resources in Russia at the Fin de Siècle, demonstrates that Russian writers traveling to natural resource extraction zones in the Urals in the 1880s and in Donbas in the 1890s exposed the intertwined scourges of environmental and civilizational decline, which subverted the official rhetoric of progress underpinning the imperial industrial modernization project. Her scholarly engagement with the issue of humanity’s relationship to its material environments further finds expression in the volume The Human Reimagined: Posthumanism in Russia which she co-edited. She is also interested in Polish modernism, art activism, and theories of creative collaboration.

Please email [email protected] to request disability accommodations. Advance notice is necessary to arrange for some accessibility needs.

Time: 12:15

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