Montaging Pushkin
Autor Alexandra Smithen Limba Engleză Paperback – 2006
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789042020122
ISBN-10: 9042020121
Pagini: 361
Dimensiuni: 155 x 234 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Brill
Locul publicării:Netherlands
ISBN-10: 9042020121
Pagini: 361
Dimensiuni: 155 x 234 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Brill
Locul publicării:Netherlands
Cuprins
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. From Pushkin’s poetics of exile to the concept of writing as
2. Pushkin’s Petersburg as comic apocalypse
3. 20th-century Pushkinian poetic responses to modernity & urban spectatorship
4. Modernity as writing: Pushkin readers & the Pushkin Myth
5. Conclusion
Bibliography
Additional Reading
Index
Introduction
1. From Pushkin’s poetics of exile to the concept of writing as
2. Pushkin’s Petersburg as comic apocalypse
3. 20th-century Pushkinian poetic responses to modernity & urban spectatorship
4. Modernity as writing: Pushkin readers & the Pushkin Myth
5. Conclusion
Bibliography
Additional Reading
Index
Notă biografică
Dr Alexandra Smith graduated from St Petersburg’s Herzen Pedagogical University and was awarded her PhD at the University of London’s School of Slavonic and East European Studies. She has taught at the University of Essex and at the University of Bristol, and currently is Senior Lecturer in Russian at the University of Canterbury. She authored the book The Song of the Mockingbird: Pushkin in the Work of Marina Tsvetaeva (Peter Lang, 1994) and has published over 130 articles in Europe, Russia, USA and Australasia on Pushkin, Russian modernism and postmodernism, and Soviet and European literature. Her recent publications include nine essays on Russian émigré authors (in: Rubins, Maria, editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography: Twentieth-Century Russian Émigré Writers, A Bruccoli Clark Layman Book, Thomson-Gale, 2005).
Recenzii
"Smith’s thesis is both startling and original: that Pushkin, for all his Mozart-like fluidity and perfection, can be productively read as a poet of pain and violence. His reflex was to respond to the totalizing, authoritative public landscape of his era with an equally severe but specifically private, individualizing, disciplined set of demands on the Poet. The recurring attention that later generations have paid toward those aspects of Pushkin’s life and texts governed by the private right to resist or to initiate violence (his duel, his struggles with the bureaucracy, his failed pursuit of service with honour) suggest that this mythologeme is among the most productive in Pushkin’s astonishing legacy" – Caryl Emerson, A. Watson Armour III University Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures, Chair of the Slavic Department, Professor of Comparative Literature at Princeton University
"Smith’s innovative study offers a wonderful analysis of how cinematographic editing and polyphony are detected in Russian twentieth-century poetry… It views Pushkin as a ‘référence obligée’ of contemporary urban poetry" – Véronique Lossky, Professor Emeritus of Russian Literature, Université de Paris-Sorbonne IV
"Smith’s innovative study offers a wonderful analysis of how cinematographic editing and polyphony are detected in Russian twentieth-century poetry… It views Pushkin as a ‘référence obligée’ of contemporary urban poetry" – Véronique Lossky, Professor Emeritus of Russian Literature, Université de Paris-Sorbonne IV