Larissa Babij, "A Kind of Refugee" in conversation with Katja Kolcio

Thursday, April 25, 2024
5:00 PM (ET)
Wesleyan RJ Julia Bookstore
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Bookstore Event
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(860) 685 - 3939
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https://wesleyan.emscloudservice.com/calendar/EventDetails.aspx?EventDetailId=105288

Join us for an intimate author event featuring Larissa Babij, as she shares her gripping firsthand account of survival and resilience amidst the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Don't miss this poignant exploration of home, history, and the courage of ordinary people in extraordinary times.

RESERVE YOUR SPOT TODAY!

American-born Larissa Babij is at home in Kyiv when Russia launches its full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022. Her grandparents left Ukraine amidst the violence of World War II, and nearly 80 years later, she is fleeing the advancing Russian army. A Kind of Refugee chronicles the first year of all-out war in Ukraine through vivid dispatches that Babij sent to readers abroad. In cities flooded with refugees and bustling with humanitarian aid efforts, or while supporting an innovative military unit making DIY drones, Babij examines Ukrainian cultures of cooperation. Reflecting on her American upbringing, she ponders the premium that Western societies—shaped by the traumatic history of WW II—place on security. When she returns to Kyiv, sirens, Russian missile strikes, and long periods of darkness organize her days.

This moving account of taking responsibility for your home and your history concludes with several essays on theater published between 2015 and 2021. Written with a fierce love for Ukraine and its people, this book is a testament to the courage of ordinary people committed to freedom while defending their homeland.

Larissa Babij is a Ukrainian-American writer, translator, and dancer based in Kyiv, Ukraine, since 2005. She holds a BA from Barnard College, Columbia University, New York, USA, and an MA in Cultural Studies from the National University "Kyiv-Mohyla Academy" in Ukraine. She is also a practitioner of the Feldenkrais Method of somatic education. Her writing has appeared in The Evergreen Review, Arrowsmith Journal, The Odessa Review, Springerin, and other publications. She reports on living in Ukraine at war and participating in the country's civic-military defense at a Kind of Refugee.

Katja Kolcio, Ph.D. is Chair, Dance Department and Associate Professor of Dance, Environmental Studies, and Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies at Wesleyan University, CT. Specializing in somatics and movement research, Kolcio studies the role of the body in social change, resilience, and psychosocial wellness, with a regional focus on Ukraine.

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