- Viktor Vinogradov
Viktor Vladimirovich Vinogradov (Russian: Виктор Владимирович Виноградов;
12 January 1895 ,Zaraysk -4 October 1969 ,Moscow ) was aRussia nlinguist andphilologist who presided over Sovietlinguistics afterWorld War II .Vinogradov's teachers at the Petrograd Institute of History and Philology included
Lev Shcherba andAleksey Shakhmatov , but it wasCharles Bally 's ideas that influenced him most profoundly during his formative years. He made his mark as a scholar of Russian literature with a series of works examining the style and language of Russian classical writers, includingAlexander Pushkin (1935, 1941),Nikolai Gogol (1936),Mikhail Lermontov (1941), andAnna Akhmatova (a family friend, 1925).From the standpoint of linguistics, Vinogradov set out as a good-natured critic of the
Russian Formalists who was on friendly terms with many of them. After moving from Leningrad to Moscow in 1929, he was implicated in the "Slavists conspiracy" and exiled toVyatka in 1934. Two years later, he was allowed to settle somewhat closer to the capital, inMozhaysk , only to be exiled toSiberia afterHitler 's invasion of Russia in 1941. His father, an Orthodox priest, was purged in 1930.After
Stalin became alarmed with the management of Soviet linguistics byNicholas Marr and his followers, Vinogradov found himself appointed Director of the Linguistics Institute (1950). Honors were heaped on him with profusion: he was elected into theSoviet Academy of Sciences and was awarded aStalin Prize . This sudden reversal of fortune made him willing to gratify the authorities, as was demonstrated by his participation in the notoriousSinyavsky-Daniel trial . Vinogradov's rise to power cemented his followers (Sergei Ozhegov ,Natalia Shvedova ) into the dominant academic school of Soviet linguistics. TheRussian Language Institute , which he administered from 1958, still bears his name.Sources
* "This article is based on a translation of the equivalent article of the
Russian Wikipedia on6 July 2008 ".
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