Amsterdam, December 2004, Number 16
Editor: Hella Rottenberg
CONTENTS
Ukrainian and Russian books: a special relationship
News from the Book Trade
Grants
Books Recently Published
Funding
UKRAINIAN
AND RUSSIAN BOOKS: a special relationship Some time ago, the
outgoing Ukrainian President Kuchma wrote a book – or rather had it written
for him - titled “Ukraine is not Russia”. The route this book has travelled
illustrates quite well the irony in Ukraine’s relationship with Russia.
Written in Russian, printed in Russia by a Russian publisher, then translated
into Ukrainian by a Ukrainian living in Russia, “Ukraine is not Russia”
was finally put on the Ukrainian market. Both, it should be added, in
the Ukrainian and Russian language.
The Ukrainian book market is rather special. It is almost totally dominated
by Russian books. In 2003, 70 million Russian books –imported from Russia-
were put on the Ukrainian market. Ukrainian publishers produced fewer
than 13 million books –and out of those only 4.5 million in Ukrainian,
whereas almost twice as many were in Russian. According to these figures,
Ukrainian publishers thus control a mere 15 percent of the total book
market. Books in Ukrainian constitute an even smaller part of the market,
just 5.5 percent.
This is possible, due to the fact that 90 percent of the Ukrainian population
(48 million total) effortlessly reads Russian and 60 percent always speaks
Russian, at home and in public. In the Soviet period, Russian had been
both the first language as well as the colloquial language of Ukraine.
Since Ukraine gained independence 13 years ago, the Ukrainian language
has been compulsory in schools, universities and in official communications,
but education is still in Russian in the Crimea and in the southern parts
of the country.
The dominance of the Russian publishing houses has been strengthened by
government policy. While Russia has stimulated the book industry since
1995 by means of tax exemptions (no VAT, low profit taxation), the Ukrainian
policy has been unstable and caused insecurity. VAT and income tax for
book trade and printed matter were cancelled from 1997 till the end of
2003. Then they were reinstated. As of July 2004, Ukrainian publishers,
printers and booksellers are exempted again from both VAT and income tax
until December 2008.
No wonder then, that Ukraine has become a huge market – dumping ground
according to many people - for cheap Russian publications. In Russia,
book publishing is a flourishing and very profitable sector; in Ukraine
it is a poor and undeveloped market.
Russian publishers are quick to buy the rights for foreign bestsellers,
and export the Russian translations to the Ukrainian market. They often
buy simultaneously the Ukrainian rights, sometimes selling them to Ukrainian
publishing houses, but only after the Russian translation has reached
the Ukrainian market. This does not leave many buyers for the Ukrainian
publisher. For the Ukrainian consumer a small difference in price is the
decisive factor in his choice of both book and language. Due to the enormous
print runs issued by Russian publishers, and lower production costs (paper
and printing), the price usually works to the advantage of books imported
from Russia.
Ukrainian publishing houses are heavily subsidized by the government and
various foreign funds, while a minor part (some 20 to 25 percent) of Ukrainian
books is published without financial aid. Only 200 to 250 new literary
titles in Ukrainian come out per year, including translations, in limited
editions (up to 1.000 - 1.500 copies).
Besides, the Ukrainian book market is characterised by the improvised
distribution and sale (book stands and open air markets), lack of information
for publishers, booksellers, and readers alike about what has been published
and is available. All in all, there are only a few bookstores per oblast
capital, while most of the 40 cities that function as important economic,
educational and cultural centres lack bookstores.
In order to improve the situation of the Ukrainian book market, an initiative
has been taken by the International Renaissance Foundation (an offshoot
of Soros’ Open Society Institute), together with the Ukrainian Publishers
and Booksellers Association (UPBA), and two local publishers and book
distributors. CEEBP will act as the Dutch partner. The project is very
ambitious; it entails the creation of an elaborate book trade portal on
the Internet, the establishment of twenty regional book distribution and
book promotion centres across the country and a series of seminars for
publishers and booksellers, aimed at improving their professional skills.
As soon as the funding is guaranteed, the project will start and run for
the next three years. Hopefully the project can be launched already by
spring 2005.
NEWS FROM THE BOOK TRADE
The Slovak Index Association of Independent Publishers
has set up an interest-free loan programme for publishers to help them
overcome the lack of investment capital. Eligible are publishers who have
been functioning on the book market for at least two years, who have regular
monthly income from book sales that would enable them to return the loan
in down payments within four months. The loan is offered for the publication
of a specific book title (poetry, belles lettres, non-fiction, children’s
books, humanities, and philosophy) on the basis of the printer’s invoice.
Publishers can request a new loan after having paid back the previous
one. The programme is financed from the Slovak reproduction rights fund.
The Slovenian Publishers Association has adopted a gentleman’s
agreement about steady book prices with the aim of regulating the book
market, strengthen bookshops, ensure the availability of a wide book variety,
boost sales, and lower the price of books. The agreement, officially adopted
as a regulation of the Chamber of Commerce in June, has the strong support
of the Slovenian Ministry of Culture, which cooperates with the Association
in transforming the agreement into a law.
In September, CEEBP invited the president of the Slovenian Publishers
Association, Tanja Tuma, to present the book price agreement and the law
initiative at a well-attended meeting of publishers and booksellers in
Zagreb. Many of them hope Croatia will follow suit. Their colleagues in
Bosnia have already introduced a book price agreement.
GRANTS
In October 2004, the CEEBP awarded grants for nineteen books, one journal,
and two other grants. The grants for books were awarded for sixteen West
– East translations and four East – East translations. A Byelorussian
publisher received a grant for translations of journal articles, and two
grants were awarded for book trade portals.
Books
- Sorin Antohi and Vladimir Tismaneanu (eds.), Between Past and
Future: The Revolutions of 1989 and Their Aftermath, English –
Romanian translation by Livia Szasz a.o., Curtea Veche, Bucharest
- Paul Berman, Terror and Liberalism, English
– Romanian translation by Veronica Tomescu, Curtea Veche, Bucharest
- Svetlana Boym, The Future of Nostalgia, English – Serbian
translation by Srđan
Simonović, Geopoetika, Belgrade
- Joseph Brodsky, The Big Book of Interviews, translation
from English into Bulgarian by Alexandra Veleva, and from Russian into
Bulgarian by Ivan Totomanov, Fakel Express, Sofia
- Elias Canetti, Party im Blitz, German – Bulgarian translation
by Elissaveta Todorova Kusmanova, Lege Artis, Pleven
- Slavenka
Drakulić, They Would Never Hurt a Fly,
English – Hungarian translation by Gábor Csordás, Jelenkor,
Budapest
- Timothy
Garton Ash, Free World: Why a Crisis of the West Reveals the Opportunity
of Our Time, English – Czech translation by Simon Pellar, Paseka,
Prague
- Ian Kershaw, Hitler 1936-1945: Nemesis Vol. 2, English –
Czech translation by Pavel Vereš,
Argo, Prague
- Bernard Lory, L’Europe balkanique de 1945 à nos jours,
French – Bulgarian translation by Stanimir Delchev, Colibri, Sofia
- Ramon Llull, Llibre de meravelles, Catalan – Polish translation
by Barbara Sławomirska, Sagittarius, Wadowice
- Vojtech
Mastny, The Cold War and Soviet Insecurity. The Stalin Years,
English – Polish translation by Hanna Pawlikowska-Gannon, Trio, Warsaw
- Robert
Menasse, Selige Zeiten, brüchige Welt, German – Bulgarian translation
by Elissaveta Todorova Kusmanova, Lege Artis, Pleven
- William Shakespeare, King Lear, bilingual edition, English
– Czech translation, annotation and two historical studies by Martin
Hilský, Atlantis,
Brno
- Josef
Škvorecký, Tankový prapor, Czech – Polish translation by Andrzej
Jadodziński, Borderland, Sejny
- Nenad
Veličković, Konačari, Servo-Croatian – Polish translation
by Dorota Jovanka Čirlić, Czarne, Wołowiec
- Pierre
Vidal-Naquet, Les assassins de la mémoire. Un Eichmann de papier
et autres essais sur le révisionnisme, Bulgarian translation by
Galina Valtchinova, Critique & Humanism, Sofia
- Michal
Viewegh, Báječná léta pod psa, Czech – Belorussian translation
by Sergei Smotrychenko, Logvinov, Minsk
- Vladimir Voinovich, Monumental Propaganda, Russian – Bulgarian
translation by Ivan Totomanov, Fakel Express, Sofia
- Isabelle Wesselingh and Arnaud Vaulerin, Bosnie,
la mémoire à vif, French – Servo-Croatian translation
by Nada Zdravić, Buybook, Sarajevo
Other grants
- Byelorussian journal, Minsk
- Book Market Research (BMR), Cracow - software for the Polish Virtual
Publisher portal
- Transitions Online (TOL), Prague - online TOL Book Store
BOOKS RECENTLY PUBLISHED
Leo Strauss’ influential book Persecution
and the Art of Writing has been published in Croatian by
the Zagreb based publishing house Disput. The original
was published in English in 1952.
In four brilliant and insightful essays, Strauss reveals how the Jewish
philosophers Maimonides, Halevi and Spinoza found a way of communicating
their more controversial thoughts, intended for a select readership, in
their public writings without having to worry about reprisal or persecution
from various authorities or upsetting ‘the average reader’ by exposing
him to opinions which would not be publicly acceptable. Strauss calls
this “the art of writing between the lines”.
Persecution does not necessarily mean corporal punishment or social ostracism;
it could also stand for the philosopher’s moral dilemma of wishing to
live by the rules of his religion, which (in Maimonides’ case) forbid
him to write about certain religious topics (such as the secrets of the
Torah). The philosopher, then, is faced with his own (moral) persecution.
Writing between the lines makes clever use of ambiguity, hints, secret
words, motto’s, (incorrect) citations and so forth. This particular technique
is only noticed by the most careful reader and was in fact meant to reach
only him. Such writing has ‘all the advantages of private communication
without having its greatest disadvantage - that is reaches only the writer’s
acquaintances. It has all the advantages of public communication’ but
is only accessible to those who are ‘worth’ the authors attention; those
who are knowledgeable enough to pick up the hints that are set out for
him.
Strauss argues that the art of writing between the lines has been more
or less forgotten since approximately the second half of the seventeenth
century. The reason for this, according to Strauss, is that premodern
philosophers had a different attitude toward freedom of public discussion
than their modern counterparts. Modern philosophers, in general, have
the desire to enlighten as many people as possible.
The attitude of an earlier type of writers was fundamentally different
because ‘they believed the gulf separating “the wise” and “the vulgar”
was a basic fact of human nature which could not be influenced by any
progress of popular education: philosophy, or science, was essentially
a privilege of “the few”.’ In fact, they believed the ‘masses’ should
not be privy to opinions outside the popular; it was undesirable and impossible
to enlighten them with the truth. Because of this perceived difference,
they felt it was necessary to conceal their opinions from all but the
truly wise; other philosophers, or more accurately: would-be philosophers
- those who are capable of ordering their own lives in line with moral
commands and outside the ‘leading public opinion’. They were, by writing
between the lines, in fact educating the future generation of the best
and the brightest, the cream of the crop of rookie philosophers.
The publishing house Sefer has published the Czech translation
of Mihail Sebastian’s Journal 1935-1944. Born
in Braila (Romania) in 1907, Mihail Sebastian (pen name of Iosif Hechter)
was a well-known and talented Jewish playwright, novelist, poet, and journalist
living in pre-war Bucharest. His diary was edited and published in its
original language only in 1996 –long after Sebastian’s death in a traffic
accident in 1945. His brother Benu secretly shipped the journals out of
the country via the diplomatic pouch of the Israeli embassy when he emigrated
to Israel in 1961. A smart move on Benu’s part, since many manuscripts
met a less fortunate fate as they were confiscated by Securitate, the
Romanian communist secret police.
Mihail Sebastian’s Journal gives an extraordinary account both of his
day-to-day life, with his sexual liaisons, friendships and love of music
(Sebastian had a particular passion for Bach and Beethoven), and of the
gradually changing atmosphere in a Romania increasingly mesmerized by
the Nazi and fascist ideology. Initially, Sebastian describes his numerous
encounters with friends, such as Mircea Eliade and E.M. Cioran and many
other leading intellectuals, liberal aristocrats and artists. He tells
of his skirmishes at work and his ‘foolish nowhere-leading’ love affairs.
He leads the pleasant life of someone belonging to the high society of
pre-war ‘Little Paris’, as Bucharest was then known.
Gradually, however, imperceptibly at first, the reader becomes witness
to a change in the climate. The fact that Romanian authorities willingly
and happily cooperated with the Nazis, is vividly revealed in Sebastian’s
diary as he describes how this particular Romanian-flavoured anti-Semitism
both affects him on a personal level and the Jewish community in general.
Sebastian tells of his Romanian friends, who, one by one, get caught in
a fascist delirium, ‘won over’ by the fantastic lure of Nazism (although
they did not need much convincing) and how these friends shun him from
their lives because he is Jewish. Increasingly Sebastian is excluded from
his former life filled with social events. The progression of antisemitic
measures taken by successive governments is further restricts his life.
The shocking fact is that Romania needed little help from the Nazis. Antisemitism
had been a long consistent element in Romanian life, but World War II
gave it a legal status that fuelled it to unprecedented heights.
Stripped of his rights and work, Sebastian finds himself worrying about
money to pay the rent, his mother’s health, and the progression of the
war. Having nowhere to go, but sit in his little room on his lice-ridden
bed, he comments on the pogroms, the heavy taxes for Jews and the forced
labour. Once having more parties to attend than time, he now has nothing
except for his life (which he in fact owes to Romania’s opportunistic
treatment of Jews in the war-years, using them as ‘bargaining chips’ with
the Nazis).
Mihail Sebastian’s Journal 1935-44 gives a beautiful description of high
society pre-war Bucharest. Furthermore, it is a harrowing account of Romanian
antisemitic delirium seen from the inside. It is like an X-ray of an era:
with fascinating accuracy, reflecting the mind of a great observer, it
captures the horrors (and the effects) of brutal Romanian antisemitism
both on a personal level, as well as on a society as a whole.
By Bronja Prazdny
FUNDING
- European Cultural Foundation
- Open Society Institute - Croatia
- Stichting Democratie en Media (formerly Stichting Het Parool)
- Ministry of Education, Culture and Science, The Netherlands
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs, The Netherlands
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