Some historical background |
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1 | (5) |
A lone human voice |
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6 | (18) |
The author interviews herself on missing history and why Chernobyl calls our view of the world into question |
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24 | (11) |
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35 | (59) |
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Monologue on why people remember |
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35 | (2) |
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Monologue on how we can talk with both the living and the dead |
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37 | (7) |
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Monologue on a whole life written on a door |
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44 | (2) |
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Monologue of a village on how they call the souls from heaven to weep and eat with them |
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46 | (14) |
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Monologue on how happy a chicken would be to find a worm. And what is bubbling in the pot is also not forever |
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60 | (4) |
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Monologue on a song without words |
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64 | (1) |
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Three monologues on ancient fear, and on why one man stayed silent while the women spoke |
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65 | (8) |
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Monologue on how man is crafty only in evil, but simple and open in his words of love |
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73 | (21) |
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76 | (18) |
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94 | (97) |
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Monologue on the old prophecies |
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94 | (3) |
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97 | (2) |
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Monologue of a witness who had toothache when he saw Christ fall and cry out |
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99 | (6) |
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Three monologues on the `walking ashes' and the `talking dust' |
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105 | (8) |
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Monologue on how we can't live without Tolstoy and Chekhov |
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113 | (5) |
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Monologue on what St Francis preached to the birds |
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118 | (9) |
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Monologue without a title: a scream |
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127 | (1) |
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Monologue in two voices: male and female |
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128 | (8) |
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Monologue on how some completely unknown thing can worm its way into you |
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136 | (7) |
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Monologue on Cartesian philosophy and on eating a radioactive sandwich with someone so as not to be ashamed |
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143 | (14) |
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Monologue on our having long ago come down from the trees but not yet having come up with a way of making them grow into wheels |
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157 | (6) |
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Monologue by a capped well |
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163 | (8) |
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Monologue about longing for a role and a narrative |
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171 | (20) |
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180 | (11) |
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191 | (90) |
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Monologue on something we did not know: death can look so pretty |
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191 | (3) |
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Monologue on how easy it is to return to dust |
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194 | (6) |
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Monologue on the symbols and secrets of a great country |
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200 | (3) |
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Monologue on the fact that terrible things in life happen unspectacularly and naturally |
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203 | (6) |
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Monologue on the observation that a Russian always wants to believe in something |
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209 | (4) |
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Monologue about how defenceless a small life is in a time of greatness |
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213 | (4) |
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Monologue on physics, with which we were all once in love |
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217 | (5) |
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Monologue on something more remote than Kolyma, Auschwitz and the Holocaust |
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222 | (4) |
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Monologue on freedom and the wish to die an ordinary death |
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226 | (5) |
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Monologue on a freak who is going to be loved anyway |
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231 | (2) |
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Monologue on the need to add something to everyday life in order to understand it |
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233 | (5) |
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Monologue on a mute soldier |
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238 | (5) |
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Monologue on the eternal, accursed questions: `What is to be done?' and `Who is to blame?' |
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243 | (5) |
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Monologue of a defender of Soviet power |
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248 | (2) |
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Monologue on how two angels took little Olenka |
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250 | (5) |
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Monologue on the unaccountable power of one person over another |
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255 | (9) |
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Monologue on sacrificial victims and priests |
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264 | (17) |
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272 | (9) |
A lone human voice |
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281 | (12) |
In place of an epilogue |
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293 | |