Alissa Arkadievna Ganyeva

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Alissa Arkadjewna Ganijewa ( Russian Алиса Аркадьевна Ганиева ; born September 23, 1985 in Moscow , Soviet Union ) is a Russian writer and literary critic.

Alissa Ganiyeva (2009)

Life

Alissa Ganijewa was born in Moscow in 1985 and is of Avar descent. She lived in Makhachkala in Dagestan until 2003 . She then attended the Moscow Gorky Literature Institute .

Ganijewa's works were printed in Russian periodicals such as “ Snamja ”, “Nowy Mir”, “Oktyabr” and “Questions of Literature”, but also in weekly newspapers such as “Literaturnaja Rossija” and “NG- Ex Libris”. Ganijewa is the editor of the literary supplement of the Moscow daily newspaper Nesavissimaja gaseta and lives in Moscow. She also writes fairy tales.

Since 2008 Ganijewa has been a member of the editorial team of the magazine "Literaturnaja utschoba".

Ganiyeva's debut work, "Salam tebe, Dalgat", which appeared in 2010 together with other 'Dagestan texts' by the author as a book under a male pseudonym , generated a lot of reactions. It was particularly emphasized that for the first time a work was not published about the Chechnya war - such as the stories of Makanin - and also not one of the traditional, folkloric and repetitive Dagestan folk literature, but a truly independent portrait of life in Dagestan of today - beginning of the 21st century.

On October 2nd, 2009 the presentation of the group “PoPuGan”, to which Ganiyeva belongs, took place in the Moscow “Museum of the Silver Age”.

At a meeting of cultural workers with President Medvedev, Ganyeva suggested promoting the translation of Russian literature into other languages. Medvedev supported this proposal "one hundred percent" and instructed the government of Vladimir Putin to make proposals by September 15, 2011, how the literary translation of Russian literature could be promoted.

In March 2015, she described how life in Russia had changed after the annexation of Crimea in 2014 . She spoke of an "information blockade" and how friends changed and she was "suspected of not loving her homeland". The fact that the majority are firmly convinced of what is being told on Russian television denotes them as "dangerous" and lamented the Russian tradition of denunciation .

In June 2017, she described the concerns of the young demonstrators against Putin: In June the demonstration was much more serious than in March, when it was all about corruption and it was "dangerous fun" beforehand to take part. Regarding the new (old) Russian national anthem , Ganiyeva said: "I can't sing this anthem".

Awards

  • Prize winner "For the most interesting debut" of the weekly magazine "Literaturnaja Rossija" (2005)
  • "Khrustalnaja rosa Wiktora Rozowa" (2007) and the Voloschinsk Literature Prize (2005)
  • Prize winner of the Moscow Gorky Literature Institute in the category “Untimely Thoughts” (2008)
  • "Oktjabr" magazine award for her literary criticism (2009).
  • “Debut” prize of the “Great Prose” competition under the pseudonym Gulla Khiratschew for the prose text “Salam tebe, Dalgat” (2009).
  • Finalist at the Yuri Pavlovich Kazakov Literature Prize (2010).

Works

Web links

Commons : Alice Ganieva  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Казбек Султанов о современной дагестанской литературе и действительности ( Memento from September 5, 2012 in the web archive archive.today ). Interview with Kazbek Sultanov
  2. Н. Рейдер. Разноцветный ПоПуГан ( Memento from January 9, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) // «ExLibris НГ», October 15, 2009.
  3. Проникнуть во все сферы ( Memento from April 8, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) Yeschednewdnij zhurnal from April 6, 2011
  4. "You feel suspicious" , TAZ, March 23, 2015
  5. YOUTH PROTESTING AGAINST PUTIN “Would you like to get in the van?” - “Sure, and you?” , Welt.de, June 16, 2017