Editorial Reviews
Slavic Review
Loewen puts together a formidable account in one volume, and the poets' defense of their vocation, as well as their own eventual neglect of the practical rules of self-preservation, are dutifully documented and retold….Loewen's efforts are credible and painstaking…he presents a clear and powerful introduction to one of the largest chapters in the literary history of the twentieth century and crystallizes a topic that remains a cornerstone in the landscape on conscience.
David M. Bethea
The Most Dangerous Art provides a subtle and far-reaching analysis of how poetic culture engaged with political reality in the Soviet era. By focusing on the autobiographical prose of Pasternak, Mandelstam, and Tsvetaeva and by showing how the 'orientation toward authenticity' (Lydia Ginzburg) in such writing places these works and their authors at the center of a force field involving the individual, the state, and the larger human community, Donald Loewen shows once again why 'the Poet' has been such an indispensable figure, indeed perhaps the indispensable figure, in the history of Russian self-consciousness. A beautifully written and powerfully argued study.
CHOICE - May 2008
Recommended.
Sibelan Forrester
After introducing their broader context, Donald Loewen studies autobiographical prose by three of the greatest Russian poets: Mandelshtam, Pasternak, and Tsvetaeva. Loewen brings out the complexity of these documents of informed resistance. The Most Dangerous Art offers important insights for readers who care about the relationship of poetry and prose, literature and politics, creativity and oppression in an era when poetry was a matter of life and deathdangerous stuff indeed.
CHOICE, May 2008 - .
Recommended.
Fall 2009 Slavic and East European Journal
The Most Dangerous Art is passionately argued and very smoothly written.
July 2010 Slavic Review
Loewen puts together a formidable account in one volume, and the poets' defense of their vocation, as well as their own eventual neglect of the practical rules of self-preservation, are dutifully documented and retold….Loewen's efforts are credible and painstaking…he presents a clear and powerful introduction to one of the largest chapters in the literary history of the twentieth century and crystallizes a topic that remains a cornerstone in the landscape on conscience.
CHOICE
Recommended.
Russian Review, July 2009 - Belinda Cooke
The greatest strength of the book is its unearthing and tracking of key literary debates between these writers and their opponents within the establishment, citing reviews and articles from newspapers and journals of the time.
Slavic and East European Journal
The Most Dangerous Art is passionately argued and very smoothly written.
Canadian Slavonic Papers, June- September 2009 - Natasha Kolchevska
Loewen's approach in The Most Dangerous Art provides a synthesis of the familiar and the original: each chapter opens with a summary of earlier scholarship on the increasingly difficult situation for writers during the Soviet Union's first forty years, the proceeds to often passionate but informed analyses of the autobiographical works in question.... The Most Dangerous Art is well organized, meticulously researched and lucidly argued.... The volume makes a substantive contribution to the field and will be of particular use to emerging scholars, since it presents both the context and the impact, especialy for the poets' lives, in a single volume.
Choice
Recommended.
May 2008
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