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Modernist Archaist
2008. Selected Poems
by Osip Mandelstam with
essay and translations by
Kevin M. F. Platt.
160 pages.
Softcover.
ISBN 978-0979975202 |
Osip Mandelstam (18911938), one of the most significant poets of twentieth-century Russian literature, also embodied more fully than any other its profound paradoxes. He was a Jew born in Poland who became a leading Russian poet; a committed modernist who was faithful to the great examples and strict forms of the past literary tradition; a rebel with decidedly revolutionary aspirations who, yearning for a new and different future, rejected the faith and social values of his well-to-do merchant parents, but who died in the same year as his own father. Most strikingly, Mandelstam, who preserved socialist and left-leaning political sympathies into his maturity, was driven from public life in postrevolutionary society, arrested as an enemy of the people, and hounded to death in the Soviet prison camps. Yet while Mandelstam’s poetry bore witness to the impossible convulsions of twentieth-century Russian culture and politics, it was by no means limited or defined by these historical contexts. In an early statement of his creative credo, Mandelstam wrote: “For an artist, a worldview is a tool or a means, like a hammer in the hands of a mason, and the only reality is the work of art itself.”
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Modernist Archaist

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