Evdokia Kozhevnikova
Evdokia Kozhevnikova-Gugushvili was a Soviet ethnographer who did extensive fieldwork in the province of Svaneti in the Republic of Georgia. During the course of her fieldwork, she acquired considerable fluency in Svan, and produced some 1200 handwritten pages in the language between 1927 and 1936. She never completed her dissertation, and her unpublished work remained almost entirely unknown to the academic world until her records were rediscovered in the 2010s. Since then, researchers at the Georgian National Museum as well as some foreign anthropologists have begun to catalog, translate, and analyse several hundred pages from Kozhevnikova's archives. In 2023, the Georgian National Museum published a compilation of papers about Kozhevnikova and her work, entitled ''Dina Kozhevnikova: Ethnographical Records.''
Early life and education
Kozhevnikova was born on 28 December 1905 in Blagoveshchensk, in what was then the Amur Oblast of the Russian Empire. Her parents were Innokentij Jakovlevich Kozhevnikov, who served the Russian Imperial government as a Manchurian language specialist and envoy, and his wife Elena Leonova Kozhevnikova. She was the youngest of four children. After Evdokia's father died in 1908 at the age of 45, her mother moved the family to Saint Petersburg, where Evdokia was enrolled in the Pavlovskij Institute for Girls of the Nobility.In 1923, Evdokia graduated from St. Leningrad #33 Labor School, where she also worked as a tutor. In 1924, at the age of 19, Evdokia began studies in ethnography at the Geographical Institute of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, subsequently incorporated into Leningrad State University as the. Among her teachers were the ethnologist Vladimir Bogoraz, the historian and philologist Evgeny Kagarov, and the linguist Nikolai Marr, who was at that time one of the most influential figures in Soviet academia.
Fieldwork
In 1926, Kozhevnikova briefly visited the northern Georgian province of Racha. At the behest of Marr, who was a leading specialist on the languages of the Caucasus, Kozhevnikova undertook three summer field trips to the province of Svaneti in the Republic of Georgia from 1927 to 1929. The first trip, undertaken with classmate Zoia Polozhenskaia, lasted for two months. It was a difficult endeavour overall: their funding was limited, overland travel was rough, and the students lacked fluency in the unwritten Svan language and had to rely on translation provided by the small number of locals who could speak Russian.Her funding remained limited and she supplemented her income with various side jobs. In 1928, Kozhevnikova wrote to the Scientific Council of Leningrad University stressing the importance of ethnological research on Svan culture and traditions, and requesting funding for additional fieldwork. By this time, she had acquired some amount of Svan, and had made friends with the villagers, who nicknamed her "Dina". She adopted the name, signing much of her writing from this time as Dina Kozhevnikova. Her trip that year ended early after she came down with a severe typhus infection and had to be carried on a stretcher over a distance of to receive medical treatment.
Kozhevnikova graduated in 1930, and a few months later began what was to be her longest expedition in Svaneti, spending 15 months in the communes of Ipari, Latali, Mulakhi and Becho, from September 1930 to December 1931. During her fieldwork, she acquired considerable fluency in Svan, and produced some 1200 handwritten pages in the language between 1927 and 1936.
In 1933, under Marr's tutelage, Dina Kozhevnikova continued her studies at Leningrad State University for a time. From 1932 to 1934, she was employed as a field researcher in Svaneti by the Institute of Language and Material Culture at the Russian Academy of Sciences. In 1933, Kozhevnikova married the Georgian jurist Ivane Gugushvili, and moved to Tbilisi, Georgia, where her children Vladimer and Elene were born. Despite sporadic attempts to resume her doctoral studies, Kozhevnikova never finished her dissertation, and failed to obtain permanent employment at the Georgian National Museum. In addition to her ethnographic work, Kozhevnikova wrote poetry, which also went unpublished.