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Oksana Dmytrivna Ivanenko (; March 31, 1906 – December 16, 1997) was a Ukrainian children's writer and translator. In 1974, she was the winner of the Lesia Ukrainka Literary Prize for the novels ''Рідні діти'' (Native Children), ''Тарасові шляхи'' (Taras Ways), and ''Лісові казки'' (Forest Tales). She was also the winner of the Shevchenko National Prize in 1986, for the book ''Завжди в житті'' (Always in Life). She was awarded the Order of Friendship of Peoples, three Orders of the Badge of Honor, and medals.


Biography

Oksana Dmytrivna Ivanenko was born in
Poltava Poltava (, ; uk, Полтава ) is a city located on the Vorskla River in central Ukraine. It is the capital city of the Poltava Oblast (province) and of the surrounding Poltava Raion (district) of the oblast. Poltava is administratively ...
, March 31, 1906. She was the daughter of journalist and writer Dmytro Oleksiyovych Ivanenko, and teacher Lydia Mykolayivna Ivanenko. Her brother was theoretical physicist,
Dmitri Ivanenko Dmitri Dmitrievich Ivanenko (russian: Дми́трий Дми́триевич Иване́нко; July 29, 1904 – December 30, 1994) was a Ukrainian theoretical physicist who made great contributions to the physical science of the twentieth cent ...
. She was the mother of children's writer,
Valeria Ivanenko Valeria Volodymyrivna Ivanenko ( uk, Валерія Володимирівна Іваненко) is the " Slavonic Channel International" Director General. Early life and education Born in Ust' Khakchan, Magadanskaya Oblast', Russia. In 1990 ...
. Ivanenko studied at the gymnasium, and then at the workers' school. In 1922, she entered the Poltava Institute of Public Education. Since 1925, her literary activity included the publication of a large number of books for children and youth. In 1926, she graduated from the Faculty of Social Education of the Kharkiv Institute of Public Education, and in 1931, she was an
aspirant Aspirant is a rank in the Royal Canadian Navy, Estonian Defence Forces, French military, Brazilian military, Portuguese military, Swiss military, Italian Air Force, Argentinian Armed Forces, Romanian Navy, Polish Policja and Państwowa Straż ...
at the graduate school, Ukrainian Research Institute of Pedagogy, where she headed the section of children's literature in the Kyiv branch of this institute. She was an educator at the Gorky Children's Colony under Anton Makarenko. From 1932 to 1939, she worked for the Young Bolshevik publishing house, and from 1947 to 1951, for the ''«Барвінок'' (Periwinkle) magazine. From 1939 to 1957, she lived in Kyiv at the Roliti Writers' House. Her works were published in a five-volume "Works" (vols. 1-5, 1984-1994). Ivanenko died in Kyiv on December 17, 1997. She was buried in Baikove Cemetery.


Selected works


Children's literature

* "Mother and Frog" (1930) * "Kindergarten" (1931) * "Forest Tales" (1934) * "Big Eyes" (1936) * "Bumblebee" (1937) * "Three Wishes" (1940) * "Where did the crane fly" (1947) * "Fairy Tales" (1958)


Short stories

* "Printer of Unseen Books" (1947, about Ivan Fedorovich) * "Native Children" (1951) * "Bogdan Khmelnytsky" (1954) * "The Great Noise" (1967)


Novels

* ''Taras Ways'' (1961, the first two parts were published in 1939; about Taras Shevchenko) * ''Maria'' (1973, 1977, 1986, 1988; about Mark Vovchko)


Screenplays

* ''Mountain Flower'' (1937)


Memoirs

* ''Always in Life'' (1985)


Translated works

* ''Turgenev'' by
André Maurois André Maurois (; born Émile Salomon Wilhelm Herzog; 26 July 1885 – 9 October 1967) was a French author. Biography Maurois was born on 26 July 1885 in Elbeuf and educated at the Lycée Pierre Corneille in Rouen, both in Normandy. A member of ...
- from French (1977) * ''Malachite box'' by Pavel Bazhov - from Russian (1979) * ''The Blind Musician'', ''Children of the Dungeon'' by Vladimir Korolenko - from Russian * ''Tales of Hans Christian Andersen'' - from Danish * ''Tales of the Brothers Grimm'' - from German


References


Sources

* Yankovska OV Ivanenko Oksana Dmytrivna // Encyclopedia of the History of Ukraine : in 10 volumes / editor: VA Smoliy (chairman) and others. ; Institute of History of Ukraine, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine . - К. _ : Наукова думка , 2005. - Т. 3: Е - Й. - p. 396. : il. - . * Tchaikovsky, B. Y
Ivanenko Oksana Dmitrievna
// Encyclopedia of modern Ukraine : in 30 volumes / ed. count. I. M. Dziuba tc. NAS of Ukraine , NTSh . - К. _ : Institute of Encyclopedic Research of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine , 2001–2020. — Volume 11: Зор — Как, . * Kryzhanivsky SA Ivanenko Oksana Dmytrivna // Ukrainian Literary Encyclopedia . - Vol. 2. - K., 1990. - p. 288. * Writers of Soviet Ukraine. - K., 1970. - pp. 162—163. * Shevchenko laureates: 1962-2001. K., 2001. - pp.199-200. * Oksana Ivanenko. Writings.
Life and work of OD Ivanenko
at WaybackMachine * Ivanenko, Oksana Dmitrivna on the site "History of Poltava". * https://www.perets.org.ua/Журнал_перець_1986_07/?page=4 {{DEFAULTSORT:Ivanenko, Oksana 1906 births 1997 deaths Burials at Baikove Cemetery Writers from Poltava Soviet children's writers Ukrainian children's writers Women children's writers Shevchenko National Prize