Provincializing National Literatures

Thu Mar 26 2026 at 10:00 am to 06:00 pm UTC-04:00

CGIS South | Cambridge

Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies
Publisher/HostDavis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies
Provincializing National Literatures
Advertisement
The talk shows how late Soviet claims of cultural equality masked a Russocentric canon-making regime.
About this Event

In April 1978, students poured into the streets of Tbilisi to block a constitutional amendment that would have downgraded Georgian from its status as the republic’s state language. Their success—rare in late Soviet politics—casts a sharp light on a broader settlement already in place: a formal rhetoric of equality alongside a cultural order that increasingly normalized a single privileged horizon, with Russian language and Russian culture positioned as the medium of the “new historical community”—the Soviet people—proclaimed by the 1977 Brezhnev Constitution.

The talk approaches this settlement through an unlikely but revealing object: the six-volume History of Multinational Soviet Literature (1970–74). Read as a meta-canonical apparatus, the History shows how “multinational literature” functioned less as a descriptive category than as a canon-making regime—codifying evaluative criteria, organizing inter-republican hierarchies, and consolidating a Russocentric center–periphery order under the banner of “unity and diversity.” Rather than treating these effects as abstract, the lecture reconstructs the concrete canon-forming mechanisms by which “multinational literature” organized inter-republican hierarchies and consolidated a Russocentric center–periphery order.

Against this framework, Georgia offers a striking archive of both complicity and exit. The talk traces three field positions embodied by three Georgian figures: Georgii Lomidze as an institutional architect of the all-Union canon; Akaki Bakradze’s late-Soviet demand to re-anchor universality in emphatic national content; and Guram Dochanashvili’s earlier, reader-centered vision of a lateral “world republic of literature-lovers.” Methodologically, the talk offers a transferable model of cultural imperialism by showing how canon-making practices provincialize “national literatures” while claiming universality—and, through the Georgian cases, it specifies the repertoire of counter-strategies of cultural self-assertion—an argument with implications for Soviet/Slavic studies, comparative and world literature, and the cultural history of empire.

Advertisement

Event Venue & Nearby Stays

CGIS South, 1730 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, United States

Tickets

USD 0.00

Icon
Concerts, fests, parties, meetups - all the happenings, one place.

Ask AI if this event suits you:

More Events in Cambridge

Boys Go To Jupiter
Wed, 25 Mar at 07:00 pm Boys Go To Jupiter

The Sinclair Music Hall

Wobbly Wednesdays
Wed, 25 Mar at 09:00 pm Wobbly Wednesdays

Middle East - Zuzu

Faith & Veritas 2026, Harvard University
Thu, 26 Mar at 03:00 pm Faith & Veritas 2026, Harvard University

Harvard University

Bill McKibben, \u201cA Fresh Start for Our Cities"
Thu, 26 Mar at 06:30 pm Bill McKibben, “A Fresh Start for Our Cities"

Harvard University Graduate School Of Design

Strutman Lane, The Far Out
Thu, 26 Mar at 07:00 pm Strutman Lane, The Far Out

Middle East - Upstairs

Drom Presents: Ceza
Thu, 26 Mar at 07:00 pm Drom Presents: Ceza

Sonia

The Old 97's
Thu, 26 Mar at 07:00 pm The Old 97's

The Sinclair Music Hall

Boys Go To Jupiter at The Sinclair
Thu, 26 Mar at 08:00 pm Boys Go To Jupiter at The Sinclair

The Sinclair

Cambridge is Happening!

Never miss your favorite happenings again!

Explore Cambridge Events