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Oxford Handbook of Russian Poetry
Oxford Handbook of Russian Poetry
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€137.99
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forthcoming
Product details
- ISBN 9780197541616
- Dimensions: 171 x 248mm
- Publication Date: 10 Oct 2026
- Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
The Oxford Handbook of Russian Poetry brings together forty original chapters by scholars, critics, and poets from across North America, Russia, and Europe, offering a wide-ranging account of the Russian poetic tradition from the early modern period to the present. Responding to evolving critical priorities and the expanded sense of Russian poetic practice in recent decades, the Handbook aims not to settle the canon but rather to model a range of approaches to poetic history. Chapters are attentive to rupture, reinvention, and literature's changing social and institutional conditions. In particular, the volume engages with an increasingly complex understanding of Russian twentieth-century literature-one that treats, separately and together, censored, uncensored, and émigré writing, and that engages with multilingualism and rapidly shifting cultural boundaries.
Collectively, the contributions consider texts both well-known and newly recovered, metropolitan and diasporic, official and underground. They reflect diverse methodologies, from close reading and historical poetics to network theory and performance studies. The volume is organized around seven conceptual rubrics-Timelines, Maps, Networks, Forms, Intersections, Performances, and Rereadings-which take up thematic and historiographical questions at varied scales. While designed to serve both as a reference and a pedagogical resource, the Handbook also considers urgent contemporary questions raised by war, censorship, and relocation, recognizing that the historical frameworks through which Russian poetry has been studied are themselves in flux. It is intended for a broad Anglophone readership-from students and general readers to scholars of Russian literature and comparative poetics, and all quotations from Russian poetry are in the original and in English translation.
Catherine Ciepiela publishes on and translates modernist and contemporary Russian poetry. She is the author of The Same Solitude (2006), a study of Marina Tsvetaeva's epistolary romance with Boris Pasternak, and editor of two anthologies of Russian poetry in translation, The Stray Dog Cabaret (2007) and Relocations: 3 Contemporary Russian Women Poets (2013). Her translation of Polina Barskova's Living Pictures appeared in 2021. She is Howard M. and Martha P. Mitchell Professor of Russian at Amherst College and director of the Amherst Center for Russian Culture.
Luba Golburt is Associate Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of California-Berkeley. She is the author of The First Epoch: The Eighteenth Century and the Russian Cultural Imagination (2014) and many articles on Enlightenment and Romanticism, as well as on modern Russian poetry from the eighteenth century to the present. Her jointly written essay on “First Novels, First Publics” appeared in the Oxford Handbook of the Russian Novel (2025), and she has edited collections of articles on Nikolai Nekrasov and Yan Satunovsky. She is currently at work on a case study-based critical history of the nature lyric in Russia.
Stephanie Sandler has written on Pushkin, myths of Pushkin, and a number of modern Russian poets, several of whom she has also translated. She was a co-author of A History of Russian Literature (2018). She collaborated in editing and translating Olga Sedakova, In Praise of Poetry (2014) as well as a volume of essays about Sedakova's poetry and poetics (2019). In 2024 she published The Freest Speech in Russia: Poetry Unbound 1989-2022. She is Ernest E. Monrad Professor in the Slavic Department at Harvard University.
Oxford Handbook of Russian Poetry
€137.99
