VOYNOVICH, VLADIMIR


Meaning of VOYNOVICH, VLADIMIR in English

born Sept. 26, 1932, Stalinabad, Tadzhik S.S.R., U.S.S.R. [now Dushanbe, Tajikistan] in full Vladimir Nikolayevich Voynovich Soviet dissident writer known for his irreverent and perceptive satire. After serving in the Soviet army from 1951 to 1955 and attending the Moscow Pedagogical Institute (1957-59), Voynovich worked as a skilled labourer and then as an editor of radio programs. He published such well-received fiction as the short story "My zdes zhivyom" (1961; "We Live Here") and the novellas Khochu byt chestnym (1963; "I Want to Be Honest") and Dva tovarishcha (1964; "Two Comrades"), all of which concern pressures to conform to Soviet urban life. In 1974, after publishing a letter in defense of dissident writer Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Voynovich was expelled from the Writers' Union of the U.S.S.R. and was forbidden to work as a professional writer. In 1980 he settled in West Germany. His Soviet citizenship was revoked in 1981 but was restored in 1990. In the 1980s he was a visiting writer at Princeton University and the University of Southern California. Voynovich's best-known work is the acclaimed underground novel Zhizn i neobychaynyye priklyucheniya soldata Ivana Chonkina (1975; The Life and Extraordinary Adventures of Private Ivan Chonkin), about a naive and unsophisticated man who battles the Soviet bureaucracy. The pseudoepic, autobiographical Ivankiada: ili rasskaz o vselenii pisatelya Voynovicha v novuyu kvartiru (1976; The Ivankiad: The Tale of the Writer Voynovich's Installation in His New Apartment) details his personal battles with the Soviet bureaucracy to obtain a two-room apartment. After he emigrated, he continued to write slyly humorous accounts of the vagaries of life under the Soviet system in works such as Pretendent na prestol: novye priklyucheniya soldata Ivana Chonkina (1979; Pretender to the Throne: The Further Adventures of Private Ivan Chonkin), Anti Sovetsky Sovetsky Soyuz (1985; The Anti-Soviet Soviet Union), Moskva 2042 (1987; Moscow 2042), and Shapka (1988; The Fur Hat). He also wrote film scripts and plays.

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