Nina
Zivancevic, a prominent Serbian poet, scholar, and
translator, lived in lower Manhattan prior to the
outbreak of the war in Sarajevo in 1992. Zivancevic
introduced the work of Allan Ginsberg, Kathy Acker,
and Charles Bernstein to East European readers, and
her polyglot sensibility is highly informed by her
immersion in the downtown New York art and literary
world of the 1980s. In this, her first book of fiction
written in English, Zivancevic's distant outsider
stance as a cosmopolitan New York intellectual is
shaken and inexorably transformed with the onset
of the war. Faced with the complete blockade of information
in the West about the situation in her country, she
has no choice but to become actively involved in
its comprehension, but without promoting the cause
of a particular party or faction. Inside and
Out of Byzantium is a remarkably visceral and
powerful literary response to a state of permanent
war.
"Inside and Out of Byzantium includes
insight into the often absurd adventures of the
global citizen. From continent to continent, country
to country, from one hapless event to the next,
Zivancevic observes, collects and recollects. What
strikes her most is not the difference between
nations and cultures, but the underlying similarity
of people and places."
–Dawn-Michelle Baude, Free
Voice, Paris |