Ellendea Proffer

American translator
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican translator
PlacesUnited States of America
isLinguist Translator
Work fieldLiterature Social science
Gender
Female
Birth24 November 1944, Philadelphia
Age80 years
The details

Biography

Ellendea Proffer Teasley (born 1944) is an American author, publisher, and translator of Russian literature into English.
She received her Ph.d from Indiana University, taught at Wayne State University and University of Michigan, Dearborn. She is a well-known Bulgakov expert, translator and publisher. She is known for Mikhail Bulgakov: Life & Work (1984); translations of Bulgakov's plays and prose; numerous articles and introductions, most prominently the Notes and Afterword to the Burgin-O'Connor translation of Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita.
She married Carl R. Proffer (1938–1984), and co-founded Ardis Publishers in 1971, a specializing in Russian literature, both in English and Russian. As a publisher, she was responsible for the collected works of Bulgakov in Russian, which then triggered a Soviet edition. Proffer Teasley edited a series of well-received photo-biographies, including those devoted to Nabokov, Tsvetaeva and Bulgakov.
Ellendea Proffer was on the first judges' panel for the Booker Russian Novel Prize, and in 1989 received a Macarthur Fellowship for her work with Ardis.
Carl Proffer's papers and the Ardis archives are held at University of Michigan. Ellendea Proffer Teasley donated a collection of manuscripts, typescripts, correspondences, books, photographs, and proofs, to the University of Michigan's Library.
In 2015, she published her memoir Brodsky Among Us with one of Russia's leading publishing houses, Corpus.

Awards

  • 1989 MacArthur Fellows Program

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