English, asked by Akshikiski4563, 5 months ago

Explain human suffering as revealed in svetlanas ASolitary human voice from Chernobyl

Answers

Answered by kakkarneha16
0

Answer:

Nobel laureate Svetlana Alexievich on writing her 'Red ... Each is a history of one small, human destiny. ... Also read: Second-Hand Time: A novel of voices.

Answered by s52352953
1

Answer:

Svetlana Alexievich has published five books in her lifetime, but each of them, she says, is a chapter from a single story, of people who lived a Soviet life. From the women who worked at the front during World War II to the young soldiers who returned home from the Soviet-Afghan war in zinc coffins, from the Chernobyl nuclear disaster and the confusion and fury that followed the initial euphoria of perestroika, Alexievich spoke to hundreds of people to record an oral history of a collective nation that she was a part of. The Belarusian journalist received the Nobel prize for literature in 2015 “for her polyphonic writings, a monument to suffering and courage in our time".

Svetlana Alexievich has published five books in her lifetime, but each of them, she says, is a chapter from a single story, of people who lived a Soviet life. From the women who worked at the front during World War II to the young soldiers who returned home from the Soviet-Afghan war in zinc coffins, from the Chernobyl nuclear disaster and the confusion and fury that followed the initial euphoria of perestroika, Alexievich spoke to hundreds of people to record an oral history of a collective nation that she was a part of. The Belarusian journalist received the Nobel prize for literature in 2015 “for her polyphonic writings, a monument to suffering and courage in our time".

In an exclusive email interview, Alexievich talks of how, even though the “Red Empire" is no more, the “red human" survives. Edited excerpts

Explanation:

hope.it help u

Similar questions