| Boris Naimushin New Bulgarian University (Bulgaria) [bnaimushin@nbu.bg], ORCID ID: 0000-0002-9264-2961 | Download https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20963862 |
GENERATIONS AND DESTINIES: ALAIN ROBBE-GRILLET, VERA MUTAFCHIEVA, AND DONKA MELAMED AS BRIGADE LEADERS IN DIVOTINO IN AUGUST 1947
Abstract:This article examines the encounter between the future French writers Alain Robbe-Grillet, Claude Ollier, and Daniel Boulanger and the Bulgarian interpreters and translators Vera Mutafchieva and Donka Melamed during the international youth brigade in the village of Divotino, Bulgaria, in August 1947. Combining a microhistorical approach with prosopographical analysis, the study reconstructs their biographies and explores the role of translation and interpreting as forms of cultural mediation in the international contacts of the early socialist period. The analysis draws on archival documents, early participant testimonies, memoir literature, and oral history, allowing for the cross-examination of sources of different provenance and character. A particular contribution of the study is the identification of the enigmatic interpreter “D.” (“D.M.”), mentioned in the memoirs of Robbe-Grillet and Vera Mutafchieva, as Donka Melamed. Using archival materials, photographs, and an interview with her daughter Galina Melamed, the author reconstructs Melamed’s biography and restores her place within the history of post-war cultural exchanges. The international brigade movement is interpreted as a social space in which members of the same post-war generation experienced a shared historical moment in different ways. The article demonstrates that the combination of microhistory, prosopography, and translation history can illuminate previously overlooked aspects of international cultural contacts in Bulgaria during the second half of the 1940s.
Keywords: international youth brigades; French brigade; translation and interpreting; Alain Robbe-Grillet; Vera Mutafchieva; Donka Melamed.
- Declaration by Authors
- Ethical Approval: Approved
- Conflict of Interest: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
