University / institution contact details
Position: Lecturer/Professor
University of Dresden
Department of Slavic Studies
Technische Universität Dresden
Bereich Geistes- und Sozialwissenschaften
Fakultät Sprach-, Literatur- und Kulturwissenschaften
Institut für Slavistik
01062 Dresden
klavdia.smola@tu-dresden.de
Teaches (T) and/or researches (R) in:
2. History of the Jewish People: TR
14: Modern: T
Regional and National (i.e. in North Africa, Greece, Eastern Europe, Germany, Middle East, Spain, India, South America, United States, etc): TR
6. Literature (other than Biblical and Rabbinic): TR
44: Early modern (including scientific, poetry): R
Recent: TR
46: Yiddish: R
7. Languages: R
55: Yiddish: R
8. Art, Architecture and Performing Arts: TR
Art (including iconography): TR
9. Contemporary Studies: TR
64: State of Israel: R
Jewish identity and assimilation: TR
Anti-Semitism: TR
Holocaust Studies: TR
Jewish Education: TR
Description
Klavdia Smola is professor and chair of Slavic Literatures and Cultures at the Department of Slavic Studies, University of Dresden (Germany). She obtained her PhD at the University of Tübingen, was assistant and visiting professor at the University of Greifswald, and research fellow at the universities of Jerusalem, Moscow, Barcelona, Constance and Cracow. She authors Types and Patterns of Intertextuality in the Prose of Anton Chekhov (2004, in German) and Reinvention of Tradition: Contemporary Russian-Jewish Literature (2019, forthcoming, in German, Böhlau-Verlag, and Russian, Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie). She (co-)edited Jewish Underground Culture in the late Soviet Union (Special Issue of the journal East European Jewish Affairs, 2018); Russia – Culture of (Non-)Conformity: From the Late Soviet Era to the Present (Special Issue of the journal Russian Literature, 2018, together with Mark Lipovetsky); Postcolonial Slavic Literatures after Communism (2016, together with Dirk Uffelmann); Jewish Spaces and Topographies in East-Central Europe: Constructions in Literature and Culture (2014, in German, together with Olaf Terpitz), and Eastern European Jewish Literatures of the 20th and 21st Centuries: Identity and Poetics (2013).
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