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  • Zvenihora (1928) directed by Oleksandr Dovzhenko
    Feb 13 2026

    Show Notes:


    This week, Cameron returns to the beginning of Oleksandr Dovzhenko’s Ukrainian Trilogy with “Zvenihora.” The film, released in 1928, explores a thousand years of Ukrainian history — spanning from Varangian invasion to the rise of the Soviet Union. The film is a fascinating take on Soviet film, mashing together Ukrainian culture and the new, Soviet reality.


    You may have noticed this episode is two hours long….so, I decided to look into why I was finding inconsistent information on Dovzhenko’s life in the episode on “Earth.” Turns out, there’s a good reason for that. Oh, boy, do we get into that in this episode.


    Oleksandr Dovzhenko’s 1939 autobiography


    My notes on George Liber’s Alexander Dovzhenko: A Life in Soviet Film


    The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.


    Our links: Website | ⁠Discord⁠

    Socials: Instagram⁠ | BlueSky | Twitter⁠ | Facebook


    Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com.




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    1 Std. und 53 Min.
  • Anton Chekhov, Earliest Stories (w/ editors Rosamund Bartlett and Elena Michajlowska)
    Jan 21 2026

    Show Notes:


    This week, we see that every author starts somewhere in Anton Chekhov, Earliest Stories: Stories, Novellas, Humoresques, 1880-1882. To talk about Chekhov’s earliest published stories, Cameron sits down with Elena Michajlowska and Rosamund Bartlett. The pair not only edited the collection, but also oversaw the unusual editing process that involved 83 other translators across the world.


    They’ll talk about where Chekhov was this early in his career, the editing process and what kinds of stories we find among this juvanalia.


    Book tickets for Rosamund and Elena’s event at Pushkin House here.


    Follow the Anton Chekhov Foundation on Instagram @antonchekhovfoundation


    Read more on the foundation’s blog here.


    Check out their website antonchekhovfoundation.org


    Learn more about the Early Chekhov Translation Project here



    The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.


    Our links: Website | ⁠Discord⁠

    Socials: Instagram⁠ | BlueSky | Twitter⁠ | Facebook


    Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com.



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    1 Std. und 10 Min.
  • My five favorite films of the year + Sayat Nova, dir. by Sergei Parajanov
    Jan 1 2026

    Show Notes:

    This week, Cameron talks a little bit about director Sergei Parajanov’s “Sayat Nova” (also known as The Color of Pomegranates), and five other films he really liked this year.


    Want to see the video version of this episode? Check it out here: https://youtu.be/khXaVt0ilFc



    Also, sorry, the name of the theater is Dreamland Cinema. I forgot to say that in the video.


    An Analysis of the Color of Pomegranates by YouTuber Blythe


    Sinners and the Death of Black art by YouTube F. D. Signifier


    Goodnight Irene, dir. by Sterlin Harjo


    The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.


    Our links: Website | ⁠Discord⁠

    Socials: Instagram⁠ | BlueSky | Twitter⁠ | Facebook


    Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com.



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    42 Min.
  • Earth (1930) directed by Oleksandr Dovzhenko
    Dec 5 2025

    Show Notes:


    This week, Cameron dives into the final entry into Ukrainian director Oleksandr Dovzhenko’s Silent Trilogy, “Earth” (1930). The film’s deceptively simple plot—of a tractor delivery to a collectivizing village in Ukraine is followed by the murder of a local Bolshevik organizer—doesn’t hinder its avant-garde stylings, employing a montage of loose logical associations better described as dream logic, moving from people to fruit to threshing in a way that demands your attention.


    Yeah, that’s right — I’m arguing that a socialist realist work about tractors is super interesting. A novel concept for the podcast, I know.


    You can watch Earth (1930) in excellent quality here: “Earth” (1930) x biju


    Offscreen Dreams and Collective Synthesis in Dovzhenko’s Earth by Elizabeth A. Papazian

    All in the Foreground: A Study of Dovzhenko’s Earth by Gilberto Perez

    Dovzhenko: Folk Tale and Revolution by Gilberto Perez

    Death and life on Alexander Dovzhenko by Jonathan Rosenbaum

    The Dovzhenko Papers by Marco Carynnyk

    Who is Hidden behind the Figure of a Genius? The Context of Dovzhenko’s Work by Anna Tsymbal

    Subversions in Dovzhenko’s Earth by Romana M. Bahry

    “Ukranian masterpieces: Earth (1930) - Dovzhenko”

    Earth: Analysis of Film Form, Auteur Characteristics and Context



    The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.


    Our links: Website | ⁠Discord⁠

    Socials: Instagram⁠ | BlueSky | Twitter⁠ | Facebook


    Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com.




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    1 Std. und 14 Min.
  • Not Russian by Mikhail Shevelev (w/ Ally Pitts, host of A Russian & Soviet Movie Podcast)
    Nov 21 2025

    Show Notes:

    This week, Ally Pitts — host of A Russian & Soviet Movie Podcast — joins Cameron to talk about the book Not Russian by Mikhail Shevelev. The book follows veteran journalist Pavel Vladimirovich as an old friend’s sudden reappearance at the head of a terror attack forces him to reflect on his history as a Russian journalist and how things turned out this way.


    You can find Ally on his Twitter @Alistair_Pitts and on Instagram under @ally_pitts_movies_etc. You can find A Russian & Soviet Movie podcast anywhere you listen to your audio.


    Our prior episode with Ally on Anna Karenina film adaptations.


    The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.


    Our links: Website | ⁠Discord⁠

    Socials: Instagram⁠ | BlueSky | Twitter⁠ | Facebook


    Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com.




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    1 Std. und 54 Min.
  • Chevengur, chapters 1-25, by Andrei Platonov
    Oct 27 2025

    Show Notes:


    This week, Cameron dives into Andrei Platonov’s Chevengur, covering chapters 1 through 25. Through the late Russian Empire into the early Soviet Union, Sasha Dvanov is finally orphaned when his fisherman father drowns in an attempt to understand his all-knowing, deathless fish. Growing up in the shuffling shadow of the new world, he joins the Bolshevik party and seeks to spread communism.


    This episode covers his adventures trying to find out if the peasants have, after the abdication of the Tsar, suddenly begun to embrace communist lives. From anarchist militias to a Bolshevik Fyodor Dostoevsky, he finds little to approve of in the countryside.



    Check out our old episode covering The Cow and the Third Son.


    A Companion to Andrei Platonov’s “The Foundation Pit” by Thomas Seyfrid.


    Time out of line: Sequence and plot in Andrei Platonov’s Chevengur by by Hallie A. White


    The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.


    Our links: Website | ⁠Discord⁠

    Socials: Instagram⁠ | BlueSky | Twitter⁠ | Facebook


    Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com.



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    1 Std. und 11 Min.
  • The People Immortal by Vasily Grossman
    Sep 26 2025

    Show Notes:

    This week, Cameron returns to Vasily Grossman, covering his first novel of World War II, The People Immortal. The novel follows the Red Army through the early days of the war: losing battles, ceding ever more ground, and quickly losing hope.

    Although this novel doesn’t contain the philosophical and critical heights of his later two novels, The People Immortal yet captures Grossman’s foundational commitment to telling the truth. The truth of the Red Army being beaten back, the fact that some—tired of the abuses of the Soviet Union—welcomed the invaders, and what awaited people overtaken by the Wehrmacht.

    An early work, less mature, and yet one well worth reading.


    The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.


    Our links: Website | ⁠Discord⁠

    Socials: Instagram⁠ | BlueSky | Twitter⁠ | Facebook


    Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com.




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    1 Std. und 18 Min.
  • Deaf Republic by Ilya Kaminsky and Delicious Hunger by Hai Fan
    Sep 16 2025

    Show Notes:


    This week, Cameron dives into Ilya Kaminsky’s Deaf Republic and Hai Fan’s Delicious Hunger, trying to probe the question plaguing recent episodes: “What is the value of art during wartime?”


    Deaf Republic tells an all-too-familiar parable of a town under occupation, subjected to abuse and murder, and how the people there chose their own forms of resistance to occupation.


    Delicious Hunger tackles the issue from another angle: Hai Fan is the pen name for Ang Tiam Huat, a guerilla who fought for the Malaysian Communist Party for over a decade. His book fictionalizes the stories and struggles of his comrades during their years in the rainforest.


    Hai Fan’s interview during Ethos Books’ launch party for Delicious Hunger.


    The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.


    Our links: Website | ⁠Discord⁠

    Socials: Instagram⁠ | BlueSky | Twitter⁠ | Facebook


    Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com.



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    1 Std. und 20 Min.