Avril Pyman (aka Dr Avril Sokolov, FBA; born 4 May 1930) is a British scholar and translator of Russian literature.[1] Avril was a Reader in Russian at Durham University[2] and was the first female scholar of the University to be elected as a Fellow of the British Academy.[3]

In addition to translating poetry and children's literature, she has written a study of Russian symbolism, as well as biographies of Alexander Blok and Pavel Florensky.[4]

She was married to the late Russian artist Kirill Sokolov. They have daughter Irina (Irene).

Selected works

Selected translations include:[5][6]

  • Sarybelli, Osman and Ibrahimov, Mirza (editors). Azerbaijanian poetry : an anthology : classic, modern, traditional. Moscow : Progress Publishers. [662] p. Translated by Tom Botting, Gladys Evans, Olga Moisseyenko, Arthur Shkarovsky, Irina Zheleznova, Louis Zellikoff, Dorian Rottenberg, Eugene Felgenhauer, and Avril Pyman.
  • Ognev, Vladimir and Rottenberg, Dorian (editors). Fifty Soviet poets. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1st ed., 1969. 533 p. Translated by Dorian Rottenberg, Olga Shartse, Avril Pyman, Eugene Felgenhauer, Peter Tempest, Irina Zheleznova, Lois Zellikoff, Tom Botting, Gladys Evans, Jack Lindsay, and Archie Johnstone.
  • Lazarev, L. (editor). Let the living remember : Soviet war poetry. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1st ed., 1975. [400] p. Series title: Progress Soviet authors library. Translated by Alex Miller, Olga Shartse, Tom Botting, Walter May, Margaret Wettlin, Peter Tempest, Avril Pyman, Dorian Rottenberg, Gladys Evans, Irina Zheleznova, Louis Zellikoff, and Alex Miller.
  • Samarin, Roman and Nikolyukin, Alexander (editors). Shakespeare in the Soviet Union : a collection of articles. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1st ed., 1966. [275] + illustrations p. Translated by Avril Pyman.
  • The Golden Fleece : tales from the Caucasus. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1st ed., 1971. [263] p. Translated by Avril Pyman, which is translated to:
  1. Persian by Gholagha Daneshian, 1989 [7] and also by Ardeshir Nikpour, 2000 [8]
  2. Azeri Turkish by Mohammad Hariri Akbari, 2005[9]
  3. Sorani Kurdish by Mhamad Hamasaleh Tofigh, 2000[10]
  • Molok, Yuri (editor). Vladimir Favorsky. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1st ed., 1967. 322 p. Translated by Avril Pyman.
  • Barto, Agnia. Mashenka. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1976. 14 p. Translated by Avril Pyman.
  • Barto, Agnia. Merry Rhymes. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 2nd ed., 1980. [80] p. Translated by Dorian Rottenberg, Avril Pyman, Eugene Felgenhauer, Irina Zheleznova, and Lois Zelikoff.
  • Gorky, Maxim. Selected stories. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1978. [517] p. Series title: Collected works in ten volumes : volume I. Translated by Margaret Wettlin, Avril Pyman, Bernard Isaacs, and Robert Daglish.
  • Kubilinskas, Kostas. The frog queen. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1st ed., 1974. [83] p. Translated by Avril Pyman.
  • Pushkin, Alexander. Selected works in two volumes : volume one : poetry. Moscow : Progress Publishers. 1974. 208 p. Series title: Progress Russian classics series. Translated by Olga Shartze, Irina Zheleznova, and Avril Pyman.

References

  1. Biography in Debretts
  2. "Dr Avril Pyman FBA".
  3. https://www.thebritishacademy.ac.uk/documents/2641/19-Memoirs-12-Moss.pdf
  4. LRB review of Blok biography
  5. Pyman's books on Worldcat.org
  6. Pyman's books on http://www.netvibes.com/zubovsky_boulevard
  7. Daneshian, G. (1989) Afânehâhye Mashregh Zamin (Tales of the east lands). Tehran: Eshare Publication. ISBN 978-964-5772-39-8. (in Persian)
  8. Nikpour, A. (2000) Afânehâhye Âzarbayjâni Armani Gorji (Azeri, Armenian, and Georgian tales). Tehran: Shokoufe Publication. ISBN 9789643001919. (in Persian)
  9. Hariri Akbari, M. (2000) Ghâfghâz Nâghllâri (Caucasian tales). Tabriz: Akhtar Publication. ISBN 9789645176332. (in Azerbaijani)
  10. Tofigh, M. H. (2000) Khoriyi Zerinn (The Golden Fleece). Sulaymaniyah: Sardam Publication. (in Sorani Kurdish)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.