State of the Earth Institute: Ecopoetry from Ukraine featuring Galina Rymbu and Yanis Sinaiko

June 5, 2023
Ukrainian flag in painted style

STATE OF THE EARTH INSTITUTE

Ecopoetry from Ukraine

 

Monday, June 12, 2023

12:00 - 1:30 p.m. Eastern via Zoom

Register for the Zoom webinar here

 

Please join us for a bilingual reading by poets Galina Rymbu and Yanis Sinaiko on Monday, June 12 from 12:00-1:30pm Eastern Time (US). The poets, who will be speaking from their home in Lviv, also will participate in a brief panel discussion and Q&A session after they read. Kevin M. F. Platt will be reading his translations of their work and, with Catherine Ciepiela, Ainsley Morse, Stephanie Sandler, he will participate in the panel discussion.


This event is hosted by Amherst College and co-sponsored by the University of Pennsylvania, the Davis Center at Harvard University, the Harriman Institute at Columbia University, and Stanford University.

Please register for the Zoom webinar here.

Galina Rymbu was born in 1990 in the city of Omsk (Siberia, Russia) and lives in Lviv, Ukraine. She edited F-Pis’mo, an online magazine for feminist literature and theory, as well as Gryoza, a website for contemporary poetry. She is the co-founder of the Arkady Dragomoshchenko Prize for emerging Russian-language poets. She has published three books of poems in Russian: Moving Space of the Revolution (Peredvizhnoe prostranstvo perevorota, 2014), Time of the Earth (Vremia zemli, 2018), and Life in Space (Zhizn’ v prostranstve, 2018).  Her essays on cinema, literature, and sexuality have appeared in SéanceColtaYour Art, and other journals. English translations of her work have appeared in numerous journals, and a translation of Life in Space by Joan Brooks and others was published by Ugly Duckling Presse in 2020. Her poetry has been translated into thirteen languages and stand-alone collections of her work have been published in Latvian, Dutch, Swedish, English, and Romanian.

 

 

Yanis Sinaiko is a poet, translator, editor, and literary critic. He was born in 1990 in L'viv (Ukraine). In 2013 he graduated from the Department of Philosophy of Ivan Franko L'viv National University. MA at Political Philosophy and Political Science. He published two collections of poems Angel-Konstruktor (Angel Constructor) (Kyiv, Locia, 2017), Iz glubiny porazheniia vida (From the depths of the species’ defeat) (Kharkiv, kntxt, 2019). His poems and other works have been translated into English, Italian, German, Polish, Ukrainian, Hebrew, etc. and have been published in literary journals including Ukrainian Literature in TranslationSHO (WHAT), Vozdukh (Air), SnobHelikopter, etc. In 2016 he co-founded the online platform for poetry in translation Umbrella on the literary portal Litcentr. He also worked as an editor of the micro media for contemporary poetry GRYOZA (DREAM). Sinaiko’s poems were nominated for the Arkady Dragomoshchenko International Price for young Russophone poets (2015, 2017). In 2017-2018, he acted as a performer, author, and co-director for the cross-media event (a collaboration of poetry, music, and digital spaces) Angel-Constructor (Angel Constructor) based on Sinaiko’s book by the same name.  He has curated and participated in various literary events and festivals, including the Festival of Contemporary Ukrainian Poetry organized by the Danylo Husar Struk Programme in Ukrainian Literature of the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, the L’viv Book Forum, the Kyiv Book Arsenal, Kyiv Poetry Week, etc. He was a guest author and participant at the discussion “Radical Politics and Radical Poetics in Russia and Ukraine today” at the University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia, 2018), and a guest author for the project “Poets in Need” on behalf of University of Pennsylvania and PEN America (2022). He has translated selected poems, prose, and other fiction and non-fiction works by authors including Charles Reznikoff, Michael Palmer, Jaan Kaplinsky, Galina Rymbu, Philip Pullman, Michael Spitzer, Edwin Morgan, Anna McDonald, etc. into Ukrainian and Russian.