Janko Lavrin

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Janko Lavrin
Lavrin, 1920s
Born(1887-02-10)February 10, 1887
DiedAugust 13, 1986(1986-08-13) (aged 99)
Occupation(s)Novelist, poet, critic, translator, and historian
SpouseNora Fry Lavrin

Janko Lavrin (10 February 1887 – 13 August 1986) was a Slovene novelist, poet, critic, translator, and historian. He was Professor

Tolstoy.[1]

Biography

Lavrin was born in

Returning to Russia in 1917, Lavrin decided to stay in the UK. He found work as a journalist, becoming part of the circle around

A. R. Orage. In 1919 Bernard Pares helped Lavrin to get a teaching job at the University of Nottingham,[3] and he became Professor of Slavonic Studies there in 1923.[1]

Lavrin was a friend of the Russian critic

Nora Fry.[2] In 1934-5 he edited The European Quarterly with Edwin Muir.[1] During World War II he joined the BBC, broadcasting to occupied Europe. He rejoined Nottingham University part-time in 1944.[2]

He encouraged a teaching assistant, Monica Partridge, to begin a doctorate. In 1949 she was appointed as an Assistant Lecturer to Lavrin.[4]

After Lavrin's retirement in 1952[2] Monica Partridge would lead the university's department of Slavic studies.[5] Meanwhile Lavrin continued to write and translate.[2]

Works

  • В стране вечной войны: Албанские эскизы (In the country in the spring of war: Albanian sketches), Petrograd, 1916.
  • "Dostoevsky and His Creation: a psycho-critical study", London, 1920
  • Tolstoy: a psycho-critical study, London, 1922
  • Studies in European literature, London, 1929
  • Aspects of modernism: from Wilde to Pirandello, London, 1935
  • An introduction to the Russian novel, New York and London, 1943
  • Dostoevsky: a study, New York, 1943
  • Pushkin and Russian literature, London, 1947
  • Tolstoy: an approach, London, 1948
  • From Pushkin to Mayakovsky: a study in the evolution of literature, London, 1948
  • Ibsen: an approach, London, 1950
  • Nikolai Gogol, 1809-1852: a centenary survey, London, 1951
  • Goncharov, New Haven, 1953
  • Russian writers: their lives and literature, 1954
  • Lermontov, London, 1959
  • Russia, Slavdom and the Western World, London, 1969
  • Nietzsche: a biographical introduction, 1971
  • A panorama of Russian literature, London, 1973
  • "Introduction to the Work of .

References

External links