The Last of the Vostiaks

The Last of the Vostiaks (Italian: L'ultimo dei Vostiachi; also published as The Last of the Vostyachs) is a novel by the Italian writer Diego Marani. It is a satire of bias and prejudice in academic and philological research. It raises questions about language as an identity symbol and the solitude of the last speaker of a language about to disappear.

2002 Italian edition (publ. Bompiani)

Plot

The central character is a Siberian native, who has been prisoner in a Gulag and who speaks a language that has almost disappeared, one that keeps the last vestige of a vanished sound, the lateral fricative with labiovelar appendix. A Russian student comes to understand him and wants to show him to a congress on Uralic languages in Helsinki. However, a purist Finnish professor attempts to prevent the innocent Siberian appearance there as a living proof of the philological connection between the Finnish language and the American natives. The plot includes a Lapp pimp, country cottages with saunas, vacation boats in the Baltic Sea, and sometimes the narration takes a rowdy tone with reminiscences of Wilt by Tom Sharpe.

Reception

The novel was longlisted for the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize (2013).[1]

gollark: To start, maybe just get a bunch of GPUs together on one system?
gollark: I think most homelab stuff ends up mostly running at 1% CPU most of the time.
gollark: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3514 ← best RFC
gollark: PHP is pure evil.
gollark: And GPU RAM. And onchip cache.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.