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Forum at UFV examines the classic novel Dr. Zhivago

Manuscript by Boris Pasternak was first published in 1957
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It has been 60 years since Boris Pasternak’s Dr. Zhivago won the Nobel Prize in Literature.

The College of Arts at University of the Fraser Valley (UFV) marks the event with a multidisciplinary forum on the legacy of this work on Tuesday, Nov. 13. The session runs from 11:30 a.m. to 2:20 pm in the Abbotsford campus lecture theatre (Room B101).

Admission is free and the public is welcome.

Three UFV scholars will look at the book from the perspective of their academic discipline.

Larissa Horne, who is the experiential education coordinator at UFV and also teaches several Russian history courses, will speak on the topic of Dr. Zhivago – Timeless Novel and Its Legacy.

Ron Dart of UFV political science will speak on Transcending Ideological Tribalism: Thomas Merton, Dr. Zhivago, and Boris Pasternak.

Dart serves on the national executive of the Thomas Merton Society of Canada.

Alan Cameron is an associate professor in modern languages at UFV with a strong interest in Russian literature. He will speak on The Poems of Yuri Zhivago: Changing Defeat into Victory.

Dr. Zhivago is named after its protagonist, Yuri Zhivago, a physician and poet, and takes place between the 1905 Russian Revolution and the Second World War. Initially the book was refused publication in the USSR. The manuscript was smuggled to Milan and published in 1957.