Yana Zavatskaya

Yana Zavatskaya
BornMarch 11, 1970 
OccupationWriter, science fiction writer, prose writer, translator, poet, blogger, opinion writer 
Political partyDie Linke, Communist Party of Germany (1990) 

Yana Yulievna Zavatskaya (Russian: Яна Юльевна Завацкая;[1] born 11 March 1970 in Leningrad)[2] is a Soviet Russian prose writer and translator.[3][4] Laureate of the 2019 "Running on Waves" Prize.[2] Yana Zavatskaya is a social fiction writer. She also is a blogger (at LiveJournal, listed in the Top 100 bloggers).[5] She writes for the Pravda.ru.[6]

Her father was a mathematics teacher and poet.[6] She grew up in Chelyabinsk.[2] She completed four years of medical school.[6]

In 1993, she moved with her family to Germany.[2][3] In Germany, she works in a nursing home for elderly.[2][3]

She is Catholic,[2][3] and a was member of the German Communist Party.[2] She left the party in 2023.[7]

She has two children.[2][6]

She was criticized by Alexander Tarasov.[8] She praised Kling's book QualityLand.

Publications

Zavatskaya is the author of five books. Her first book was published by Eksmo.[9][10][11] Her first novel is written in the genre of dystopia.[12] Her articles are republished by the Russian Communist Workers' Party of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.[13]

Year Title
2006 Ликей
2006 Нить надежды
2006 Эмигрант с Анзоры
2018 Холодная зона (Litres)
2019 Перезагрузка (Litres)
2020 Рассвет 2.0[14]

Blogs (in the Russian Language):

https://blau-kraehe.livejournal.com

https://t.me/s/blaue_kraehe

References

  1. ^ "РНБ: формат авторитетной записи".
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Д-р наук А. В. Митрофанова. Теология освобождения в современной русскоязычной фантастике // Век глобализации №2, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d "Курская областная научная библиотека им. Н. Н. Асеева". kurskonb.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  4. ^ "Info" (PDF). dspace.bsu.edu.ru. Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  5. ^ "Труд и только труд: как достигается высокое качество жизни в Германии". newizv.ru.
  6. ^ a b c d "Яна Юльевна Завацкая - Авторы Правда.Ру". 30 June 2010.
  7. ^ https://blau-kraehe.livejournal.com/1055827.html
  8. ^ "Самодеятельность". saint-juste.narod.ru.
  9. ^ https://www.km.ru/glavnoe/2006/08/30/eksklyuziv/covmestnyi-proekt-izdatelstv-lepta-eksmo-i-yauza
  10. ^ Яна Завацкая «Ликей».
  11. ^ "Яна ЗАВАЦКАЯ: ЛИКЕЙ - Православный журнал «Фома»". January 2008.
  12. ^ https://bibliotemryuk.ru/netcat_files/userfiles/2/Dushu_istselit.doc
  13. ^ https://dzen.ru/a/ZBqvJHN7sBovwew1?share_to=link
  14. ^ https://ridero.ru/books/rassvet_2_0/

Sources

  • Mitrofanova, A. V. "Religio-Political Utopia by Iana Zavatskaia". In: The Post-Soviet Politics of Utopia: Language, Fiction and Fantasy in Modern Russia. Ed.by Mikhail Suslov and Per-Arne Bodin. London: I. B. Tauris, 2020. Pp. 155—174.