- Событие прошло

The Silk Road Meets the Soviet Union
The Silk Road Meets the Soviet Union
Hamid Ismailov is an Uzbek journalist and writer who was forced to flee Uzbekistan in 1992 due to what the state dubbed ‘unacceptable democratic tendencies’. A writer whose works are banned in his home-country, he is the author of numerous books including acclaimed Russian-language novels, The Dead Lake, The Railway and The Underground. The Devil’s Dance – translated by Donald Rayfield and published by Tilted Axis – is the first of his Uzbek-original novels to appear in English.
The Devils’ Dance weaves the stories of Queen Oyxon in nineteenth-century Turkestan and Abdulla Qodiriy, one of the best writers of twentieth-century Uzbekistan. When imprisoned by the NKVD in Tashkent, Qodiriy attempts to mentally reconstruct his novel about the famed Uzbek queen, a victim to the forces of the Great Game – the battle for supremacy over Central Asia between the British and Russian empires.
The Devils’ Dance brings to life the extraordinary culture of 19th century Turkestan, a world of lavish poetry recitals, brutal polo matches, and a cosmopolitan and culturally diverse Islam rarely described in western literature. Hamid Ismailov’s virtuosic prose recreates this multilingual milieu in a digressive, intricately structured novel, dense with allusion, studded with quotes and sayings, and threaded through with modern and classical poetry.
Join Hamid and Donald as they speak to journalist Rosie Goldsmith about this masterful marriage of contemporary international fiction and the Central Asian literary traditions. With a short introduction by Jemimah Steinfeld, Deputy Editor of Index on Censorship.
Find Events
May | June | July | August | September | October | November | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Fri02 | Sat03 | Sun04 | Mon05 | Tue06 | Wed07 | Thu08 | Fri09 | Sat10 | Sun11 | Mon12 | Tue13 | Wed14 | Thu15 | Fri16 | Sat17 | Sun18 | Mon19 | Tue20 | Wed21 | Thu22 | Fri23 | Sat24 | Sun25 | Mon26 | Tue27 | Wed28 | Thu29 | Fri30 | Sat31 | Sun01 | Mon02 | Tue03 | Wed04 | Thu05 | Fri06 | Sat07 | Sun08 | Mon09 | Tue10 | Wed11 | Thu12 | Fri13 | Sat14 | Sun15 | Mon16 | Tue17 | Wed18 | Thu19 | Fri20 | Sat21 | Sun22 | Mon23 | Tue24 | Wed25 | Thu26 | Fri27 | Sat28 | Sun29 | Mon30 | Tue01 | Wed02 | Thu03 | Fri04 | Sat05 | Sun06 | Mon07 | Tue08 | Wed09 | Thu10 | Fri11 | Sat12 | Sun13 | Mon14 | Tue15 | Wed16 | Thu17 | Fri18 | Sat19 | Sun20 | Mon21 | Tue22 | Wed23 | Thu24 | Fri25 | Sat26 | Sun27 | Mon28 | Tue29 | Wed30 | Thu31 | Fri01 | Sat02 | Sun03 | Mon04 | Tue05 | Wed06 | Thu07 | Fri08 | Sat09 | Sun10 | Mon11 | Tue12 | Wed13 | Thu14 | Fri15 | Sat16 | Sun17 | Mon18 | Tue19 | Wed20 | Thu21 | Fri22 | Sat23 | Sun24 | Mon25 | Tue26 | Wed27 | Thu28 | Fri29 | Sat30 | Sun31 | Mon01 | Tue02 | Wed03 | Thu04 | Fri05 | Sat06 | Sun07 | Mon08 | Tue09 | Wed10 | Thu11 | Fri12 | Sat13 | Sun14 | Mon15 | Tue16 | Wed17 | Thu18 | Fri19 | Sat20 | Sun21 | Mon22 | Tue23 | Wed24 | Thu25 | Fri26 | Sat27 | Sun28 | Mon29 | Tue30 | Wed01 | Thu02 | Fri03 | Sat04 | Sun05 | Mon06 | Tue07 | Wed08 | Thu09 | Fri10 | Sat11 | Sun12 | Mon13 | Tue14 | Wed15 | Thu16 | Fri17 | Sat18 | Sun19 | Mon20 | Tue21 | Wed22 | Thu23 | Fri24 | Sat25 | Sun26 | Mon27 | Tue28 | Wed29 | Thu30 | Fri31 | Sat01 | Sun02 | Mon03 | Tue04 | Wed05 | Thu06 | Fri07 | Sat08 | Sun09 | Mon10 | Tue11 | Wed12 | Thu13 | Fri14 | Sat15 | Sun16 | Mon17 | Tue18 | Wed19 | Thu20 | Fri21 | Sat22 | Sun23 | Mon24 | Tue25 | Wed26 | Thu27 | Fri28 | Sat29 | Sun30 |
SUBSCRIBE
Receive our digest once a week with quality Russian events and articles