• For Your Consideration: John Williams' Butcher's Crossing (and why I don't think we should compare it to Blood Meridian)
    Jun 12 2026

    Show Notes:

    This week, on For Your Consideration, Cameron dives into John Williams' 1960 novel, Butcher's Crossing, a cautionary tale about how reading Ralph Waldo Emerson can drive you into buffalo-murdering madness.

    It's not uncommon to see the novel compared to Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian, or The Evening Redness in the West, but after reading both...he's skeptical. It seems that they don't share much more than a genre.

    This episode has a two-fold purpose: 1) To cover Butcher's Crossing's adept take on the Western and 2) Why we should all be more skeptical about the act of comparing things, especially these two novels.


    Butcher's Crossing: The Husks and Shells of Exploitation by Jack Brenner: https://www.jstor.org/stable/43017669

    Pragmatist Individuals and the Nineteenth-Century American West in Wallace Stegner's Angle of Repose and John Williams's Butcher's Crossing by Gregory Alan Phipps: https://www.jstor.org/stable/27117925

    The Influence of Jacob Boehme's Aurora on Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian by Lydia R. Cooper: https://doi.org/10.1080/00144940.2025.2608966

    Aurora the Day Spring Or Dawning of the Day in the East Or Morning-Redness in the Rising of the SUN by Jacob Boehme: https://jacobboehmeonline.com/assets/docs/AURORA.18693240.pdf


    The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.


    Our links: Website | ⁠Discord⁠

    Socials: Instagram⁠ | BlueSky | Twitter⁠ | Facebook


    Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com.



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    1 hr and 23 mins
  • The Last Letter (2002) by Frederick Wiseman + What Vasily Grossman and Life & Fate mean today
    May 3 2026

    Show Notes:


    This week, Cameron dives into Frederick Wiseman’s 2002 film “The Last Letter,” a dramatization of one chapter of Vasily Grossman’s Life and Fate: the final letter Anna Semionova writes her son, Viktor Shtrum, from a Jewish ghetto.


    We’ll get into how Wiseman adapts this troubling, poignant chapter into film, why I think this chapter is the best encapsulation of Grossman’s ideas in Life and Fate, and some thoughts on why he remains so provocative today.


    Quick note: At one point in this episode I misspeak and say that the Vlasovite Russian Liberation Army was entirely Russian, which was not the case. It was primarily made of of Russian former Red Army soldiers, but did include Soviet defectors of other ethnicities more broadly.


    The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.


    Our links: Website | ⁠Discord⁠

    Socials: Instagram⁠ | BlueSky | Twitter⁠ | Facebook


    Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com.




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    1 hr and 36 mins
  • PREP WORK: The Last Letter (2002) by Frederick Wiseman
    Apr 3 2026

    Show Notes:

    This week, you and Cameron get into some PREP WORK for an upcoming episode about Frederick Wiseman’s 2002 film “The Last Letter,” which dramatizes a chapter of Vassily Grossman’s Life and Fate.


    In preparation for that episode, we’ll read that dramatized chapter — Part 1, Chapter 18, Anna Semyonova’s final letter to her son, Viktor Shtrum — along with two other letters Grossman wrote to his mother after her death.


    The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.


    Our links: Website | ⁠Discord⁠

    Socials: Instagram⁠ | BlueSky | Twitter⁠ | Facebook


    Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com.



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    51 mins
  • A School for Fools by Sasha Sokolov (w/ Dr. José Vergara)
    Mar 20 2026

    Show Notes:


    This week, Dr. José Vergara returns to the podcast to talk about Sasha Sokolov’s A School for Fools. The novel, first published in English in 1977, follows student so-and-so (and his double) as he attempts to tell events of his life. The novel doesn’t follow a linear plot — or even an easy-to-distinguish narrator — and puts you on your toes as you meander between stories.


    Dr. Vergara is an associate professor of Russian in the Bryn Mawr College’s Department of Russian. He is the author of All Future Plunges to the Past: James Joyce in Russian Literature, a co-editor of Reimagining Nabokov: Pedagogies for the 21st Century, and aa co-editor of the digital annotated edition of Sasha Sokolov’s Between Dog and Wolf.

    Link to Encyclopedia of the Dog: https://encyclopediaofthedog.com/


    The Embodied Language of Sasha Sokolov’s A School for Fools by José Vergara: https://doi.org/10.5699/slaveasteurorev2.97.3.0426

    Sasha Sokolov: ‘Here Comes Everybody’ Meets ‘Those Who Came’ by José Vergara: https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7591/j.ctv1fkgbqh.9


    The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.


    Our links: Website | ⁠Discord⁠

    Socials: Instagram⁠ | BlueSky | Twitter⁠ | Facebook


    Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com.




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    1 hr and 6 mins
  • Chevengur by Andrei Platonov, Chapters 25-43
    Mar 6 2026

    Show Notes:


    This week, Cameron takes on the back half of Andrei Platonov’s Chevengur, covering chapters 25-43. As our characters finally arrive in the town of Chevengur, we go from a picaresque romp around the newly-Soviet countryside into the dirty work of actually building Communism.


    “Danger and Deliverance: Reading Andrei Platonov” by Angela Livingstone


    Chevengur: On the Road with Bolshevik Utopia” by David Bethea in The Shape of Apocalypse in Modern Russian Fiction


    Chevengur: Buried in the Family Plot” by Elior Borenstein in Men without Women: Masculinity and Revolution in Russian Fiction, 1917-1929


    The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.


    Our links: Website | ⁠Discord⁠

    Socials: Instagram⁠ | BlueSky | Twitter⁠ | Facebook


    Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com.




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    1 hr and 45 mins
  • Zvenihora (1928) directed by Oleksandr Dovzhenko
    Feb 13 2026

    Show Notes:


    This week, Cameron returns to the beginning of Oleksandr Dovzhenko’s Ukrainian Trilogy with “Zvenihora.” The film, released in 1928, explores a thousand years of Ukrainian history — spanning from Varangian invasion to the rise of the Soviet Union. The film is a fascinating take on Soviet film, mashing together Ukrainian culture and the new, Soviet reality.


    You may have noticed this episode is two hours long….so, I decided to look into why I was finding inconsistent information on Dovzhenko’s life in the episode on “Earth.” Turns out, there’s a good reason for that. Oh, boy, do we get into that in this episode.


    Oleksandr Dovzhenko’s 1939 autobiography


    My notes on George Liber’s Alexander Dovzhenko: A Life in Soviet Film


    The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.


    Our links: Website | ⁠Discord⁠

    Socials: Instagram⁠ | BlueSky | Twitter⁠ | Facebook


    Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com.




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    1 hr and 53 mins
  • Anton Chekhov, Earliest Stories (w/ editors Rosamund Bartlett and Elena Michajlowska)
    Jan 21 2026

    Show Notes:


    This week, we see that every author starts somewhere in Anton Chekhov, Earliest Stories: Stories, Novellas, Humoresques, 1880-1882. To talk about Chekhov’s earliest published stories, Cameron sits down with Elena Michajlowska and Rosamund Bartlett. The pair not only edited the collection, but also oversaw the unusual editing process that involved 83 other translators across the world.


    They’ll talk about where Chekhov was this early in his career, the editing process and what kinds of stories we find among this juvanalia.


    Book tickets for Rosamund and Elena’s event at Pushkin House here.


    Follow the Anton Chekhov Foundation on Instagram @antonchekhovfoundation


    Read more on the foundation’s blog here.


    Check out their website antonchekhovfoundation.org


    Learn more about the Early Chekhov Translation Project here



    The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.


    Our links: Website | ⁠Discord⁠

    Socials: Instagram⁠ | BlueSky | Twitter⁠ | Facebook


    Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com.



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    1 hr and 10 mins
  • My five favorite films of the year + Sayat Nova, dir. by Sergei Parajanov
    Jan 1 2026

    Show Notes:

    This week, Cameron talks a little bit about director Sergei Parajanov’s “Sayat Nova” (also known as The Color of Pomegranates), and five other films he really liked this year.


    Want to see the video version of this episode? Check it out here: https://youtu.be/khXaVt0ilFc



    Also, sorry, the name of the theater is Dreamland Cinema. I forgot to say that in the video.


    An Analysis of the Color of Pomegranates by YouTuber Blythe


    Sinners and the Death of Black art by YouTube F. D. Signifier


    Goodnight Irene, dir. by Sterlin Harjo


    The music used in this episode was “Старое Кино / Staroye Kino,” by Перемотка / Peremotka. You can find more of their work on Bandcamp and Youtube.


    Our links: Website | ⁠Discord⁠

    Socials: Instagram⁠ | BlueSky | Twitter⁠ | Facebook


    Questions, comments, want to hear your voice on a bonus episode? Send us an email at slaviclitpod@gmail.com.



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    42 mins