Northwestern Events Calendar

Mar
6
2025

The Weakling, the Genius, the Bomb, and the Globe: Andrei Bitov on Writing Amidst Nuclear Ecologies

When: Thursday, March 6, 2025
5:00 PM - 7:00 PM CT

Where: Kresge Hall, 23055, 1880 Campus Drive, Evanston, IL 60208 map it

Audience: Faculty/Staff - Student - Graduate Students

Contact: Deanne Puloka   (847) 491-5636

Group: Slavic Languages and Literatures

Category: Academic

Description:

The Weakling, the Genius, the Bomb, and the Globe: Andrei Bitov on Writing Amidst Nuclear Ecologies

The talk will explore Andrei Bitov’s creative struggles—his own writer’s block and existence at loose ends, and that of his characters—as a response to the threat of nuclear annihilation, and as a sign of preoccupation with ecological and ontological finitude. Bitov’s continuous questioning of how to live, write, and relate to the world under conditions of universally shared vulnerability is particularly relevant today.  As Bitov’s protagonists are torn between two opposing dictums (one that calls for the wisdom of weakness, the other for the delusion of agency), his texts continue to search for a solution to the postmodern problem of futurity. Time and again he returns to the figure of a demiurgic genius who just might succeed in becoming both immanent and transcendent, overcoming the limitations of ordinary human life, and enduring beyond the end. Ultimately, Bitov concludes that genius consists in affirming discontinuous continuity—be it in the form of halting writing, partial understanding, cautious making, or tentative living—as both the only feasible and the only ethical mode of being in the world.  Bitov’s idea of discontinuous continuity offers a new inflection of ecological thought.

Julia Vaingurt is a Professor in the Department of Polish, Russian, and Lithuanian Studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago.  She is the author of Wonderlands of the Avant-Garde: Technology and the Arts in Russia of the 1920s (Northwestern UP,  2013) and Soft Matter: The Poetics of Weakness in Late Soviet Socialism (Northwestern UP, 2025), and a co-editor of The Human Reimagined: Posthumanism in Russia (Academic Studies Press, 2018).  Her scholarship investigates the aesthetics and ethics of science and technology, including bioethics, biopolitics, and bioengineering.  She  is currently working on a new book project about the relationship between epidemiology and literature.

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