Bookshelf

«Les sites de la mémoire russe», Ed. Fayard, 2007

Professeur de russe à l'Université de Genève depuis plus de 30 ans et Recteur du Centre universitaire russe de Genève, Georges Nivat est également traducteur et commentateur de Soljenitsyne et Siniavsky, auteur de nombreux ouvrage sur la culture et l'histoire des idées en Russie.
L'ouvrage est conçu comme une reconstruction du fonctionnement de la mémoire russe par liens entre tous les éléments qui la constituent. Le premier de ses trois volumes tente de répertorier la « géographie » de la mémoire russe : d'abord le paysage, mémorisé par tout Russe, canonisé par la peinture de la seconde moitié du XIXe siècle, les différents types de villes, bourgs, village et hameaux aux hiérarchisent l'espace russe d'une façon beaucoup plus différenciée qu'en Occident, les musées et grands monastères, les jardins, les nécropoles, et leur rôle social encore bien vivant, les lieux d'enseignement séculier et religieux, le théâtre également, et enfin les lieux « emportés » avec soi par l'émigration, en elle-même lieu de mémoire et moteur actuel du renouvellement de la mémoire russe depuis son « rapatriement ».

About the author

Nadia Sikorsky

Nadia Sikorsky grew up in Moscow where she obtained a master's degree in journalism and a doctorate in history from Moscow State University. After 13 years at UNESCO, in Paris and then in Geneva, and having served as director of communications at Green Cross International founded by Mikhail Gorbachev, she developed NashaGazeta.ch, the first online Russian-language daily newspaper, launched in 2007.

In 2022, she found herself among those who, according to Le Temps editorial board, "significantly contributed to the success of French-speaking Switzerland," thus appearing among opinion makers and economic, political, scientific and cultural leaders: the Forum of 100.

After 18 years leading NashaGazeta.ch, Nadia Sikorsky decided to return to her roots and focus on what truly fascinates her: culture in all its diversity. This decision took the form of this trilingual cultural blog (Russian, English, French) born in the heart of Europe – in Switzerland, her adopted country, the country distinguished by its multiculturalism and multilingualism.

Nadia Sikorsky does not present herself as a "Russian voice," but as the voice of a European of Russian origin (more than 35 years in Europe, 25 years spent in Switzerland) with the benefit of more than 30 years of professional experience in the cultural world at the international level. She positions herself as a cultural mediator between Russian and European traditions; the title of the blog, "The Russian Accent," captures this essence – the accent being not a linguistic barrier, not a political position but a distinctive cultural imprint in the European context.

Events
Most read

What can one expect from a film about real people whose fate we already know? Quite a lot, as it turns out. Over three and a half hours, the viewer follows the protagonists of Rays and Shadows, Xavier Giannoli’s latest film, along the road to hell paved with good intentions, or, more precisely, along the path from the pacifist illusions of the post-war period to active collaboration during the Nazi occupation of France.

Kunsthaus Zürich presents the first survey exhibition in Switzerland of the contemporary American artist Kerry James Marshall, organised in collaboration with the Royal Academy of Arts in London and the Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris.