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Nina Kossman (Russian: Нина Косман [Kosman]; born in Moscow, USSR) is a bilingual Russian-American author, short story writer, poet, memoirist, playwright, translator of Russian poetry, editor, and artist.[1]

Nina Kossman (Нина Косман)
BornMoscow
OccupationAuthor
LanguageEnglish, Russian
CitizenshipAmerican
Alma materBennington
GenreHistorical Fiction, Migrant Literature, Immigration in Literature, Immigrant Literature, Bilingual Poetry, Russian poetry, Jewish Literature

Life and career


Nina Kossman was born in Moscow, emigrated from the Soviet Union in 1972, and spent some time in Israel, Ohio, Vermont, California, and Mexico; currently, she resides in New York. She has authored, edited, translated, or both edited and translated more than nine books in English and Russian. She is the recipient of an NEA (National Endowment for the Arts) fellowship [2][3] and grants from the Foundation for Hellenic Culture and the Onassis Public Benefit Foundation.[4][5] Her work has been translated from English into French;[6][7] Russian;[8][9][10] Spanish;[11][12][13][14] Hebrew;[15][16][17] Persian;[18] Chinese;[19] Italian;[20] Bulgarian;[21][22] Danish;[23] Albanian,[24][25] Greek, and Dutch, while Behind the Border, her book of short stories about her childhood in the Soviet Union, has been translated into Japanese.[26] In addition to writing in English (her second language), she writes poetry and prose in her first language, Russian, and has an extensive list of publications in major Russian-language journals, in and outside of Russia.[27] In 2021, she became the founding editor of EastWest Literary Forum, a bilingual literary magazine, published in Russian & English.

Literary critic Cynthia Haven writes in The Bookhaven: “Twenty years ago, critic Harold Bloom wrote to the young poet Nina Kossman to tell her that her “intensely eloquent” translations of the poet Marina Tsvetaeva manage to “capture the doom-eager splendor of a superbly gifted poet.” W.S. Merwin wrote that these are “direct, strong, audible translations,” adding, “I hear Tsvetaeva’s voice, more of it, and in a new pitch, which makes something clear in her poems that I had only guessed at bIn her review of Kossman’s book “Other Shepherds", poet and literary critic Emma Lee writes,[28]

Poet and literary critic Emma Lee writes in her review of Kossman’s book “Other Shepherds": “Nina Kossman was born in Russia and is bilingual in Russian and English. Initially, she wrote in Russian because ‘English was the language I had to use in the outside world—at school, in the city, etc. Instead, my poems sprang from the interior world, and at that age, I resisted the outside world and created—possibly at the expense of a comfortable co-existence with my peers—a world of my own.’ The themes of alienation in Marina Tsvetaeva’s poems spoke to Kossman’s experience.” [29]

Canadian culture and literary critic Donald  Brackett writes about Kossman in his review of her book published in Critics at Large: “Alienation and nostalgia are, of course, the bread and butter of most exiles, but in the case of Kossman, displaced in America during its own time of social and political upheaval (one hauntingly like our own era today), those emotional states, shared by the older poet, were intangibles that could potentially damage or even destroy a person if they gave in to them without resistance but which could, as Tsvetaeva herself so clearly demonstrated in a model manner, also transform themselves into the raw material for the art of poetry. Initially, consumed by and consuming what she called this “cocktail of nostalgia, alienation, and immersion in Tsvetaeva” enabled Kossman to embark upon the writing of her own poems, initially in Russian despite the fact that she was now living in English.” [30]

Russian literary critic and poet Daniil Chkonia writes in his introduction to Kossman's poems in Emigrantskaya Lira, a major Russian poetry journal: "Nina Kossman's poems … combine ancient Greek myths with modern sensibility…She skillfully interweaves historical/cultural layers with events of our time, creating her own picture of life, in its continuity and unity."[31] 

Aleksey Sinitsyn, a Russian literary critic and novelist, writes in his review of the Russian edition of Kossman’s novel: “...this is intellectual prose of outstanding artistic merit [...] The author manages to show subtleties of communication between the individual and the collective, the factual and the mythological, the historical and the personal, and to demonstrate the connection that makes the fate of an individual inseparable from the fate of her people."[32]

Another Russian critic, Olga Bugoslavskaya, writes in her review of Kossman's novel "Queen of the Jews": “…our former compatriot Nina Kossman offers her own version of a love story, set against a backdrop of animosity. ... Her novel… is poetic, beautiful and stylistically original. It rehabilitates the concept of the literary use of ideology and points out a fatal mistake we all make when we begin to rely on common cliches, averting our eyes from reality.”  [33]


Early life and Family


Nina Kossman emigrated from the Soviet Union with her family in 1972 and came to the US in 1973.  Her father, Leonid Kossman, was a notable linguist, philologist, author of textbooks on German phraseology and English usage and grammar for Russian speakers, and journalist,[34] who had emigrated from Russia twice (in 1918 and in 1972). He managed to leave Riga (Latvia) three days before the occupation of Latvia by the Nazi army. All the remaining members of his family, including his wife (Teresa Jacobi) and mother (Ruth Brenson), perished in the Holocaust in Riga. Nina Kossman’s maternal grandfather was killed by Stalinists during the Great Terror;[35][36] his wife, Nina Kossman's maternal grandmother, was sentenced to a term in a GULAG camp as "a member of a family of an enemy of the people".[37] Nina Kossman's mother, Maya Borisovna Shternberg, was a notable biologist,[38] [39][40] whose career was cut down by Lysenkoism.[41] Her paternal great-grandfather was Isidor Brenson, a notable physician and historian of Baltic medicine.[42][43][44][45][46]


Selected Bibliography



Books



Selected Poems in Anthologies



Selected Poetry in Literary Journals



Selected Short Stories in Literary Magazines



Plays



Art



References


  1. "Kossman, Nina | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  2. "Literature Fellowships". www.arts.gov. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  3. Ball, Don (December 2008). NEA Literature Fellowships: 40 Years of Supporting American Writers. DIANE Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4379-0732-2.
  4. Kossman, Nina, ed. (2001-03-22). Gods and Mortals: Modern Poems on Classical Myths. ISBN 0195133412.
  5. Kossman, Nina (2021-06-19). Gods and Mortals: Modern Poems on Classical Myths: Kossman, Nina: 978…. ISBN 978-0195133417.
  6. "Eurolitkrant". eurolitkrant.com. Retrieved 2021-09-24.
  7. Macor, Isabelle (2021-05-03). "Six poèmes de Nina Kossman (Etats-Unis)". Recours au poème (in French). Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  8. "Между пением и тишиной — Интерпоэзия". interpoezia.org. Retrieved 2021-09-24.
  9. "Нина Косман. ДОЛИНА ЗАКРЫТЫХ ГЛАЗ". Лиterraтура. Электронный литературный журнал. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  10. "Стихотворения — Артикуляция" (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  11. "Poesía internacional: Nina Kossman (Rusia/Estados Unidos)". Revista Kametsa (in European Spanish). 2021-05-19. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  12. Review, Nueva York Poetry. "66. POESÍA RUSA. NINA KOSSMAN". www.nuevayorkpoetryreview.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  13. "Nina Kossman". Retrieved 2022-09-11.
  14. Sucerquia, María Del Castillo (2022-06-13). "LOS APACHES Y EL POETA | NINA KOSSMAN". Ablucionistas (in Mexican Spanish). Retrieved 2022-09-11.
  15. "וּבְעִבְרִית | עמק העיניים העצומות". הספרנים (in Hebrew). 2020-11-11. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  16. רופין, דפנה (2022-06-02). "קופסת פח". סלונט (in Hebrew). Retrieved 2022-09-11.
  17. רופין, דפנה (2022-04-13). "הצלחת". סלונט (in Hebrew). Retrieved 2022-09-11.
  18. "شعری از نینا کوسمان ترجمه ی رُزا جمالی". پیاده رو (in Persian). Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  19. 野鬼Diablo (2022-02-21). "[美国]妮娜•科斯曼 诗行(外五首)[英汉对照,童天鉴日 译]". Mp.weixin.qq.com. Retrieved 2022-06-24.
  20. "settembre 2022 – Un'anima e tre ali – Il blog di Paolo Statuti". Un'anima e tre ali - Il blog di Paolo Statuti (in Italian). Retrieved 2022-09-11.
  21. "ФЛАШ ЗОНА БГ". ФЛАШ ЗОНА БГ (in Bulgarian). 2021-12-15. Retrieved 2022-09-11.
  22. "ФЛАШ ЗОНА БГ". ФЛАШ ЗОНА БГ (in Bulgarian). 2022-03-17. Retrieved 2022-09-11.
  23. Dorri, Farzaneh (2016-08-12). "A bomb said to a city. by Nina Kossman. In Danish by Farzaneh Dorri". FARZANEH DORRI (in Danish). Retrieved 2021-09-24.
  24. "BISEDA ME NJË BOMBË". Telegrafi (in Albanian). 2022-04-14. Retrieved 2022-09-11.
  25. donika (2022-04-15). "Nina Kossman: Edhe një gjë tjetër për luftën". ObserverKult. Retrieved 2022-09-11.
  26. "レーニンよりママが好き!". www.bookoffonline.co.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  27. "Нина Косман — Журнальный зал".
  28. Mall, © Stanford University 450 Serra; Stanford; Complaints, California 94305 723-2300 Terms of Use | Copyright. "Do Nina Kossman's new translations of Tsvetaeva capture her "doom-eager splendor"? See what you think". The Book Haven. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  29. ""Other Shepherds" Nina Kossman (Poets & Traitors Press) – book review". Emma Lee's Blog. 2021-01-06. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  30. Large, Critics at. "Found in Translation: Across a Bridge of Words". Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  31. "Эмигрантская лира - 2019-2-1". sites.google.com. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  32. "Роман "Царица иудейская", рецензия | БЛОГ ПЕРЕМЕН. Peremeny.Ru". www.peremeny.ru. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  33. "Мёртвые фантомы против живой жизни — Артикуляция" (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  34. "Косман, Леонид Степанович", Википедия (in Russian), 2021-06-06, retrieved 2021-06-28
  35. EDT, Marc Bennetts On 09/08/15 at 6:51 AM (2015-09-08). "A Drive to Remember Stalin's Victims Is Being Threatened by Putin's Push to Revise History". Newsweek. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  36. "Remembering the Soviet Union's Disappeared". The Atlantic. 17 November 2015.
  37. "Штернберг (Кокель) Евгения Яковлевна". Бессмертный барак (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  38. "The Possible Participation of Growth Stimulants and Nucleic Acids in the Mechanism of the Action of Phytochrome". 1967.
  39. "Устная история - Штернберг М. Б." oralhistory.ru. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  40. "Ценность научной истины: локальная история | ИПЭЭ РАН". sev-in.ru. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  41. "Lysenkoism", Wikipedia, 2022-10-16, retrieved 2022-10-26
  42. "Izidors Brensons", Vikipēdija (in Latvian), 2020-01-09, retrieved 2021-06-28
  43. "Isidorus Brennsohn", Wikipedia, 2021-03-30, retrieved 2021-06-28
  44. "Леонид Косман. Воспоминания". berkovich-zametki.com. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  45. "Исидор Бренсон. Очерки моей жизни". berkovich-zametki.com. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  46. "Исидор Бренсон. Очерки моей жизни". berkovich-zametki.com. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
  47. "Ismul, the Boy Warrior by Nina Kossman | Sept 2021 | Carmina Magazine". carminamagazine.com. Retrieved 2021-10-27.
  48. "Orpheus by Nina Kossman | Sept 2021 | Carmina Magazine". carminamagazine.com. Retrieved 2021-10-27.
  49. "Agamemnon's Shadow Speaks by Nina Kossman | Sept 2021 | Carmina Magazine". carminamagazine.com. Retrieved 2021-10-27.



На других языках


- [en] Nina Kossman

[ru] Косман, Нина Леонидовна

Ни́на Леони́довна Ко́сман (англ. Nina Kossman) — русский и американский двуязычный прозаик, поэт, переводчик русской поэзии, редактор, драматург, художник, автор книг на русском и английском языках[1].



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