Montaging Pushkin : Pushkin and visions of modernity in Russian Twentieth-Century poetry
著者
書誌事項
Montaging Pushkin : Pushkin and visions of modernity in Russian Twentieth-Century poetry
(Studies in Slavic literature and poetics, v. 46)
Rodopi, 2006
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注記
Bibliography: p. [333]-349
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Montaging Pushkin offers for the first time a coherent view of Pushkin's legacy to Russian twentieth-century poetry, giving many new insights. Pushkin is shown to be a Russian forerunner of Baudelaire. Furthermore it is argued that the rise of the Russian and European novel largely changed the ways Russian poets have looked at themselves and at poetic language; that novelisation of poetry is detectable in the major works of poetry that engaged in a creative dialogue with Pushkin, and that polyphonic lyric has been achieved. Alexandra Smith locates significant examples of Pushkin's cinematographic cognition of reality, suggesting that such dynamic descriptions of Petersburg helped create a highly original animated image of the city as comic apocalypse, which followers of Pushkin appropriated very successfully even as far as the late twentieth century. Montaging Pushkin will be of interest to all students of Russian poetry, as well as specialists in literary theory, European studies and the history of ideas.
目次
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
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