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Yuri Mamleev information


Yuri Mamleev
Born(1931-12-11)11 December 1931
Moscow, USSR
Died25 October 2015(2015-10-25) (aged 83)
Moscow, Russia
GenreMetaphysical realism
Notable worksThe Sublimes (1966)

The Fate of the Existence

Eternal Russia

Yuri Vitalyevich Mamleev, also Mamleyev or Mamleiev (Russian: Юрий Витальевич Мамлеев, 11 December 1931 – 25 October 2015), was a prominent Russian novelist who began writing in the 1960s and won the Pushkin Prize in 2000.[1] He is considered the founder of metaphysical realism as a literary genre.[2] His best known work, The Sublimes (Russian: Шатуны), was a samizdat novel published in 1966 and translated into English in 2014 by Marian Schwartz.[3]

Mamleev was also well known as the founder of the Yuzhinsky Circle, an occultist, underground literary salon based out of his shared apartment on Yuzhinsky Lane in central Moscow. The illegal literary salon attracted many non-conformist and anti-Soviet artists, writers, intellectuals, and poets, including the future philosopher Aleksandr Dugin, Yevgeny Golovin, and Geydar Dzhemal.[4] He was deeply interested in Hindu and Buddhist doctrines and went on to lecture at Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales in Paris and Moscow State University.[5] Following Mamleev's immigration to the United States, Golovin took over leadership of the group.

In 1974, Mamleev left the USSR and emigrated to the United States where he taught at Cornell University until the fall of the Soviet Union. Post-dissolution, he returned to Moscow where he continued to live and write until his death in 2015.

  1. ^ Publications, Europa Europa (2004). International Who's Who in Poetry 2005. Taylor & Francis. p. 1020. ISBN 978-1-85743-269-5.
  2. ^ Radaeva, Ella (2021-02-26). "Expressionist Motives in the Work of Yuri Mamleev". Proceedings of the conference on current problems of our time: The relationship of man and society (CPT 2020). Vol. 531. Atlantis Press. pp. 11–14. doi:10.2991/assehr.k.210225.003. ISBN 978-94-6239-342-4. S2CID 233963213.
  3. ^ "Yuri Mamleyev". B O D Y. 2014-03-29. Retrieved 2022-03-03.
  4. ^ Shekhovtsov, Anton (2008-11-14). "The Palingenetic Thrust of Russian Neo‐Eurasianism: Ideas of Rebirth in Aleksandr Dugin's Worldview1". Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions. 9 (4): 491–506. doi:10.1080/14690760802436142. ISSN 1469-0764. S2CID 144301027.
  5. ^ Siniscalco, Luca (February 2019). "The Most Dangerous Philosopher in the World". Retrieved 1 June 2022.

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Yuri Mamleev

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Yuri Vitalyevich Mamleev, also Mamleyev or Mamleiev (Russian: Юрий Витальевич Мамлеев, 11 December 1931 – 25 October 2015), was a prominent Russian novelist...

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Pushkin Prize

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Vladimir Makanin (1998) Oleg Chukhontsev and Alexander Kushner (1999) Yuri Mamleev (2000) Yevgeny Rein (2003) Boris Paramonov (2005) Vladimir Sokolov (1995)...

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Geydar Dzhemal

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loosely-affiliated bohemian underground organisations (tusovka) associated with Yuri Mamleev. Some members of these groups had access to secret collections of the...

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List of orienteers

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Löwegren, Sweden Valborg Madslien, Norway Helena Mannervesi, Finland Michael Mamleev, Italy and Russia Daniel Marston, United Kingdom Bernard Marti, Switzerland...

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European Orienteering Championships

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Year Gold Silver Bronze Notes 2002 Michael Mamleev Yuri Omeltchenko Jamie Stevenson 5.2 km, 15 controls 2004 Thierry Gueorgiou Jarkko Huovila Emil Wingstedt...

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Orienteering World Cup

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Vojtěch Král 2 = Oleksandr Kratov 2 = / Mikhail Mamleev 2 = Matthias Müller 2 = Jörgen Mårtensson 2 = Yuri Omeltchenko 2 = Rudolf Ropek 2 = Janne Salmi 2...

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