Results 61 to 70 of about 115 (107)
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Refamiliarizing Viktor Shklovsky

Victorian Literature and Culture, 2018
My title is paradoxical, possibly wrong. Refamiliarizing means reintroducing the once known but since forgotten on the assumption that familiarity fosters understanding. The logic on view inheres in the root word, “familiar”: “known to a person from long or close association.” But Viktor Shklovsky (1893–1984), enfant terrible of the Russian Formalists ...
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Viktor Shklovsky and the Device of Ostensible Surrender

Slavic Review, 1975
One frequently discussed problem in Western approaches to postrevolutionary Russian literature has been the temptation to identify “rebels against the system” and to praise their work out of proportion to its merits. Writers attacked in the Soviet Union for their heretical views have a good chance of being lionized in the West.
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The Chaplin Vaccine: Immunization and Taylorism in Viktor Shklovsky's Theory and Fiction

Modernism/modernity, 2023
Abstract: The article examines early-Soviet figurations of cinema as a vaccine capable of inoculating workers with corporeal efficiency. Within this cultural fantasy, Charlie Chaplin was appropriated by the Soviet avant-garde to play an unlikely role of an expert in the theory and practice of labor.
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Shklovsky, Viktor (1893–1984)

2018
Born in St Petersburg, Russia, Victor Borisovich Shklovsky (or Shklovskii; Ви́ктор Бори́сович Шкло́вский) was a literary critic, autobiographical novelist, and a leading figure of Russian Formalism (1910–30). A charter founder of OPOYAZ (The Society for the Study of Poetic Language, 1917), he was also associated with the Moscow Linguistic Circle, and ...
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Viktor Shklovsky’s Heritage in Literature, Arts, and Philosophy

2019
This book examines the heritage of Victor Shklovsky in a variety of disciplines. To achieve this end, Slav N. Gratchev and Howard Mancing draw upon colleagues from eight different countries across the world—the United States, Canada, Russia, England, Scotland, the Netherlands, Norway, and China—in order to bring the widest variety of points of view on ...
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Strange Revolution: Viktor Shklovsky and the Formalism of Feeling

New Literary History
Abstract: This essay unearths the empiricist epistemology underwriting Viktor Shklovsky's early formalist theory, and argues that it provides a fundamental and largely unacknowledged link to the eighteenth-century tradition of sentiment. I contend that his call for attunement to the strangeness of relations is premised on a renewed encounter with ...
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BALLET DEFAMILIARIZATION: AVDOTYA PANAEVA, LEO TOLSTOY, OR VIKTOR SHKLOVSKY?

RSUH/RGGU Bulletin. "Literary Theory. Linguistics. Cultural Studies" Series
The article studies the device of defamiliarization (ostranenie) in the context of its connection not with excess but with deficiency. Having not only an aesthetic but also a social dimension defamiliarization emerges as a response to the exhaustion of forms, their decay and loss of expressiveness.
Anna A. Arustamova, Aleksandr V. Markov
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Viktor Shklovsky at 115

the minnesota review, 2008
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