Olha Petrivna Gulia (1907–1994): A Scientist in Conditions of the Ideological Dictatorship Cover Image

Ольга Петрівна Гуля (1907–1994): науковець в умовах ідеологічної диктатури
Olha Petrivna Gulia (1907–1994): A Scientist in Conditions of the Ideological Dictatorship

Author(s): Natalia Nikoriak
Subject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Studies of Literature, Philology
Published by: Чернівецький національний університет імені Юрія Федьковича
Keywords: O. Gulia; biography; ideology; Romain Rolland; a literary historiography

Summary/Abstract: Olha Petrivna Gulia, as talented teacher and competent scientist, was respected by pupils and colleagues of our University, although her biography appears a typological example of most scientific biographies of the Soviet times. Contributing to the commemoration of the 70-th anniversary of the Department of World Literature and Theory of Literature, we can mention the difficult fate of that amazing scholar women, literature expert, French literature connoisseur and researcher of Romain Rolland’s creative work: she had in quite difficult 1945, together with her husband, Professor Mykola Petrovych Gulia, established this Department. Today the life of Olha Petrivna is read as a text with fairly complex plot. Petersburg born and bred, got a brilliant education at the History of Arts Institute, where the love for science and literature was inculcated by such well-known academicians, as V. Peretz, S. Baluhatyi, L. Shcherba, Z. Zhirmunsky, she got through the siege of 1941–1942 in her hometown, the evacuation to Essentuki (East Caucasus), until in September 1945, after the liberation of Bukovyna, together with her family she moved to Chernivtsi, where she ended her life. The Department of World Literature in the Chernivtsi State University was founded after the war, in 1945. Its head was already known at the time literary critic, Professor Mykola Petrovych Gulia, whose fate is dramatic as well. Together with him at the origins of this Department was his faithful wife Olha Petrivna, who occupied the post of senior teacher. They had to educate students and young scientists, to engage them in science and teaching, in quite difficult conditions. The unfair accusations at them in grovellery “to the Occident”, “inheritance of Veselovsky” and “a break with the reality” harmed not only Mykola Petrovych, but also Olha Petrivna, who, after her husband’s death, took on not only the family care, but also the Department’s management and, ultimately, reconquered the right to work and to engage in science. It is important to emphasize that in this fight she had a fairly reliable protection, the support her supervisor, academician O. Biletskyi.

  • Issue Year: 2015
  • Issue No: 91
  • Page Range: 164-174
  • Page Count: 11
  • Language: Ukrainian