Margins
1977
First Published
4.30
Average Rating
611
Number of Pages

До цього тому ввійшли вибрані повісті, оповідання й новели О. Кобилянської, що неодноразово друкувалися за життя і після смерті письменниці, перекладені багатьма мовами. Вони становлять кращу частину її розмаїтої художньої спадщини. Зміст. Повісті: Земля, В неділю рано зілля копала... Оповідання. Новели: Природа, Жебрачка, У св. Івана, Аристократка, Impromptu phantasie, Час, Банк рустикальний, Мужик, Битва, Рожі, Некультурна, Поети, Valse melancolique. Фрагмент, Покора, На полях, Під голим небом, Там звізди пробивались, За готар, Думи старика, Лист засудженого на смерть вояка до своєї жінки, Юда, Сниться... (Воєнний нарис)

Avg Rating
4.30
Number of Ratings
64
5 STARS
42%
4 STARS
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3 STARS
13%
2 STARS
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1 STARS
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Authors

Olha Kobylianska
Olha Kobylianska
Author · 17 books

A pioneering Ukrainian modernist writer; sister of Yuliian Kobyliansky. A self-educated and well-read woman, her first novellen were written in German, beginning in 1880. From 1891 she lived in Chernivtsi. Her travels and acquaintance with Lesia Ukrainka, Nataliia Kobrynska, Osyp Makovei, Ivan Franko, Vasyl Stefanyk, and Mykhailo Kotsiubynsky changed her cultural and political outlook, and she became involved in the Ukrainian women's movement in Bukovyna and began writing in Ukrainian. Many of her works—including the novels Liudyna (A Person, 1891) and Tsarivna (The Princess, 1895)—have as their protagonists cultured, emancipated women oppressed in a philistine, provincial society; semiautobiographical elements and the influence of the writings of George Sand and Friedrich Nietzsche are evident. A neoromantic symbolist, she depicted the struggle between good and evil and the mystical force of nature (eg, the short story ‘Bytva’ [Battle]), predestination, magic, and the irrational in many of her stories of peasant life and in her most famous novels, Zemlia (Land, 1902) and V nediliu rano zillia kopala (On Sunday Morning She Gathered Herbs, 1909). Her works are known for their impressionistic, lyrical descriptions of nature and subtle psychological portrayals. Kobylianska's works have been published in many editions and selections. The fullest collections were published in 1927–9 (9 vols) and 1962–3 (5 vols). In 1944 a literary memorial museum dedicated to her was opened in Chernivtsi.

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