On Andrii Malyshko’s “Second Birth”

The cultural policy of the USSR provided for the deliberate displacement of Ukrainian (like every other national language) to the naive provincial periphery of the “great art” of the mighty Soviet Union, supposedly possible solely in the sphere of the Russian language. The renewed Soviet ideologizat...

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Main Author: Volodymyr Morenets
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy 2017-11-01
Series:Kyiv-Mohyla Humanities Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://kmhj.ukma.edu.ua/article/view/106721/101756
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spelling doaj-2ed0156a5b294c5799755cbe11d6b15c2020-11-25T04:10:45ZengNational University of Kyiv-Mohyla AcademyKyiv-Mohyla Humanities Journal2313-48952017-11-01410111110.18523/kmhj106721.2017-4.101-111On Andrii Malyshko’s “Second Birth”Volodymyr Morenets0National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, Department of LiteratureThe cultural policy of the USSR provided for the deliberate displacement of Ukrainian (like every other national language) to the naive provincial periphery of the “great art” of the mighty Soviet Union, supposedly possible solely in the sphere of the Russian language. The renewed Soviet ideologization of literature in the postwar years led to a sharp decline in the artistic level of all literary fields. But even against the background of this general artistic decline, the caricaturised burlesque and travesty-like artificiality of Andrii Malyshko’s (1912–1970) poetry of the time is impressive. Malyshko’s so-called “second birth” in his late period represents a rare in its purity instance, where we can observe an ontological conflict of language and ideology that a Ukrainian artist of the Soviet period resolves in favor of language. Malyshko created not provincial peripheral streams, but a strong artistic and philosophical alternative to the blind, technocratic, and miserable in its Russified nature, imperial reality.http://kmhj.ukma.edu.ua/article/view/106721/101756poetryideologyfolkloreukraineandrii malyshko
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Volodymyr Morenets
spellingShingle Volodymyr Morenets
On Andrii Malyshko’s “Second Birth”
Kyiv-Mohyla Humanities Journal
poetry
ideology
folklore
ukraine
andrii malyshko
author_facet Volodymyr Morenets
author_sort Volodymyr Morenets
title On Andrii Malyshko’s “Second Birth”
title_short On Andrii Malyshko’s “Second Birth”
title_full On Andrii Malyshko’s “Second Birth”
title_fullStr On Andrii Malyshko’s “Second Birth”
title_full_unstemmed On Andrii Malyshko’s “Second Birth”
title_sort on andrii malyshko’s “second birth”
publisher National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy
series Kyiv-Mohyla Humanities Journal
issn 2313-4895
publishDate 2017-11-01
description The cultural policy of the USSR provided for the deliberate displacement of Ukrainian (like every other national language) to the naive provincial periphery of the “great art” of the mighty Soviet Union, supposedly possible solely in the sphere of the Russian language. The renewed Soviet ideologization of literature in the postwar years led to a sharp decline in the artistic level of all literary fields. But even against the background of this general artistic decline, the caricaturised burlesque and travesty-like artificiality of Andrii Malyshko’s (1912–1970) poetry of the time is impressive. Malyshko’s so-called “second birth” in his late period represents a rare in its purity instance, where we can observe an ontological conflict of language and ideology that a Ukrainian artist of the Soviet period resolves in favor of language. Malyshko created not provincial peripheral streams, but a strong artistic and philosophical alternative to the blind, technocratic, and miserable in its Russified nature, imperial reality.
topic poetry
ideology
folklore
ukraine
andrii malyshko
url http://kmhj.ukma.edu.ua/article/view/106721/101756
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