Nadezhda Sokhanskaia
Nadezhda Stepanovna Sokhanskaia | |
---|---|
Born | 1 March 1823 Kursk Governorate |
Died | 15 December 1884 Kharkov Governorate |
Pen name | Kokhanovskaïa |
Nationality | Russian Empire |
Genre | short stories, autobiography |
Nadezhda Stepanovna Sokhanskaia (Russian: Надежда Степановна Соханская, 1 March 1823 – 15 December 1884) was a Russian short story writer and autobiographer who wrote about the Ukraine, using the pen name Kokhanovskaya (Кохановская).[1][2]
Life
Sokhanskaia was born in Kursk Governorate in 1823. Her father was an Army captain and he died when she was a small child. She attended a boarding school from the age of eleven to seventeen where she was a prize winning student. When she returned home she found that her family were destitute. She failed to find work befitting her ambitions and it was only religion that gave her hope.[3]
Sokhanskaia was still reading and she wrote short stories that she submitted. She sent copies to the literary critic Pyotr Pletnyov who had edited the journal The Contemporary. He advised her to write about her own life. This improved her style and during the 1850s she published many stories about local life.[3] These stories were set in the area where she lived in Ukraine that included the local culture and its history.[4] She continued to write throughout her life and her Autobiography was published in 1896 after her death[3] in Kharkov Governorate in 1884.
References
- ^ Tanakova, T.I. Надежда Степановна Соханская at the Russian Writers. Biobibliographical Dictionary // "Русские писатели". Биобиблиографический словарь. Том 1. А--Л. Под редакцией П. А. Николаева. М., "Просвещение", 1990
- ^ Надежда Степановна Соханская at the Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary
- ^ a b c Marina Ledkovskai͡a-Astman; Charlotte Rosenthal; Mary Fleming Zirin (1994). Dictionary of Russian Women Writers. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 613–. ISBN 978-0-313-26265-4.
- ^ Sokhanskaia, Nadezhda (1823–1884), "Sokhanskaia, Nadezhda (1823–1884)", Dictionary of Women Worldwide: 25,000 Women Through the Ages