

Professor of Russian, English, and Jewish Studies
Director, East European Studies Minor
Lyons Hall 210
Telephone: 617-552-3911
Email: maxim.shrayer@bc.edu
Jews of Russia and USSR; Shoah in the USSR; émigré and translingual literature; Vladimir Nabokov; Ivan Bunin; Soviet poetry; refuseniks
Russian, Jewish, and Anglo-American literature; Shoah literature; comparative literature; literary translation; creative writing.
Maxim D. Shrayer, bilingual author, scholar and translator, is a professor of Russian, English, and Jewish Studies at Boston College, where he has been teaching since 1996 and co-founded the Jewish Studies Program. Born 1967 to a Jewish writer’s family, Shrayer grew up in Moscow, spent almost nine years as a refusenik, and emigrated to the United States in 1987. He has authored and edited over thirty books of scholarship, biography, nonfiction, fiction, poetry and translation in English and Russian, among them “The World of Nabokov’s Stories,” “Genrikh Sapgir: An Avant-Garde Classic” (with David Shrayer-Petrov; in Russian), “Leaving Russia: A Jewish Story,” “Yom Kippur in Amsterdam: Stories,” "Kinship: Poems" and “Parallel Letters/Parallel’noe pis’mo.” Shrayer’s works have been translated into thirteen languages. His “Anthology of Jewish-Russian Literature” won a 2007 National Jewish Book Award, and in 2012 he received a Guggenheim Fellowship. At Boston College Shrayer teaches courses on Russian, Anglo-American and comparative literature, Jewish literature and culture, Shoah (Holocaust), and literary translation.