All the World on a Page

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A01=Andrew Kahn
A01=Mark Lipovetsky
Aesthetic
Akhmadulina
Akhmatova
Author_Andrew Kahn
Author_Mark Lipovetsky
Avant
Blok
Brodsky
Category=DCQ
Category=DSC
Chaos
Chekhov
Consciousness
Elena shvarts
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eq_biography-true-stories
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eq_non-fiction
eq_poetry
Existence
Existential
Fairy tale
Fanailova
Final lines
Final stanza
Garde
Grotesque
Gumilev
Guro
Horseshoe finder
Imagination
Irony
Keats
Kharms
Khlebnikov
Khodasevich
Kholin
Losev
Mandelstam
Mayakovsky
Metaphor
Modernist
Motif
Nabokov
Oleinikov
Pasternak
Philosophical
Poem
Poet
Poetic
Poetic persona
Poetry prose
Prigov
Prose
Pushkin
Pushkinian
Rhyme
Rhythm
Romantic
Rubbish heap
Rubinshtein
Russian literature
Russian poetry
Russian poets
Russian revolution
Ry nikonova
Sedakova
Shvarts
Soviet
Stalin
Stanza
Stepanova
Terror
Tsvetaeva
Vagina
Verse
Vvedensky
Vysotsky
Zabolotsky

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691207162
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Apr 2025
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The rich and ongoing development of Russian lyric poetry, explored through close readings of thirty-four poems by poets ranging from Alexander Blok to Maria Stepanova

The Russian cultural tradition treats poetry as the supreme artistic form, with Alexander Pushkin as its national hero. Modern Russian lyric poets, often on the right side of history but the wrong side of their country’s politics, have engaged intensely with subjectivity, aesthetic movements, ideology (usually subversive), and literature itself. All the World on a Page gathers thirty-four poems, written between 1907 and 2022, presenting each poem in the original Russian and an English translation, accompanied by an essay that places the poem in its cultural, historical, and biographical contexts. The poems, both canonical and lesser-known works, extend across a range of moods and scenes: Velimir Khlebnikov’s Futurist revolutionary prophecy, Anna Akhmatova’s lyric cycle about poetic inspiration, Vladimir Nabokov’s Symbolist erotic dreamworld, Joseph Brodsky’s pastiche of a Chekhovian play set on a country estate, Maria Stepanova’s pandemic allegory of political repression, Galina Rymbu’s energetic manifesto “My Vagina.”

An introduction explores the abiding inspiration of modernism on the Russian lyric tradition. Kahn and Lipovetsky's separate chapter essays, informed by extensive knowledge of the existing scholarship and critical styles of interpretation, consider how the interplay of originality and tradition and form and voice work to engage the reader. The poems themselves, many of them in newly commissioned translations, operate outside state-mandated poetic styles to address the reader directly, “tête-à-tête,” as Brodsky said in his 1987 Nobel lecture. With each chapter devoted to a different poem, All the World on a Page allows readers to experience the richness of Russian poetry through poems and poets rather than through movements.

Andrew Kahn is professor of Russian literature at the University of Oxford and tutorial fellow in St. Edmund Hall, Oxford. His books include Pushkin’s Lyric Intelligence and Mandelstam’s World. Mark Lipovetsky is professor of Slavic languages at Columbia University. A winner of the Andrei Bely Prize for his contribution to literary studies, he has published books on Russian postmodernism, New Drama, Dmitry Prigov, and post-Soviet literature. Kahn and Lipovetsky are coauthors (with Irina Reyfman and Stephanie Sandler) of A History of Russian Literature.

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