Yuri Sopov in the Siberian Newspaper Zarya (1919)

The article examines three poems by Yuri Sopov published in Siberian daily socio-political and literary newspaper Zarya from the state archive of Novosibirsk region. Yuri Sopov was an Omsk poet who lived a short life (1897–1919): he prematurely died as the result of the explosion in the courtyard of...

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Main Author: Elena Yu. Kulikova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: A.M. Gorky Institute of World Literature of the Russian Academy of Sciences 2019-12-01
Series:Studia Litterarum
Subjects:
Online Access:http://studlit.ru/images/2019-4-4/Kulikova.pdf
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spelling doaj-f2d6b03c6f0447dc927e15d281fe65e82020-11-25T02:53:57ZengA.M. Gorky Institute of World Literature of the Russian Academy of SciencesStudia Litterarum2500-42472541-85642019-12-014431633510.22455/2500-4247-2019-4-4-316-335Yuri Sopov in the Siberian Newspaper Zarya (1919) Elena Yu. Kulikova0Institute of Philology of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of SciencesThe article examines three poems by Yuri Sopov published in Siberian daily socio-political and literary newspaper Zarya from the state archive of Novosibirsk region. Yuri Sopov was an Omsk poet who lived a short life (1897–1919): he prematurely died as the result of the explosion in the courtyard of A.V. Kolchak’s house. Sopov wrote series of poems, the rhymed Tale of the Last Summer, and the unfinished poem about Arthur Rimbaud only fragments of which have remained. The article focuses on Sopov’s poems “Sunset at the River,” “Love,” and “Loneliness” from his books Evenings at the River and I Remember the Early Mass... The latter and “Sunset at the River” are published in this article for the first time since 1918–1919. The poet retreats to the world of dreams and slumber that was typical for Romantic and Symbolist poetry. The “Sunset at the River” and “Love” are shaped after Balmont’s “Moisture” and correspond to the Symbolist tradition of the so-called “boat” poetry. “Loneliness” is a text that echoes political events that took place in Russia of that time. In the poem “I remember the early mass...,” Sopov borrows from both Klyuev and Blok, combining religious motifs from the former and the motif of the “beautiful lady” from the latter; at the same time, the poem has a distinct Akmeistic subtext inspired by Akhmatova and Mandelstam.http://studlit.ru/images/2019-4-4/Kulikova.pdfyuri sopovliterary newspaper zaryasiberian poetryromanticismsymbolismakmeistic overtonesrussian modernism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elena Yu. Kulikova
spellingShingle Elena Yu. Kulikova
Yuri Sopov in the Siberian Newspaper Zarya (1919)
Studia Litterarum
yuri sopov
literary newspaper zarya
siberian poetry
romanticism
symbolism
akmeistic overtones
russian modernism
author_facet Elena Yu. Kulikova
author_sort Elena Yu. Kulikova
title Yuri Sopov in the Siberian Newspaper Zarya (1919)
title_short Yuri Sopov in the Siberian Newspaper Zarya (1919)
title_full Yuri Sopov in the Siberian Newspaper Zarya (1919)
title_fullStr Yuri Sopov in the Siberian Newspaper Zarya (1919)
title_full_unstemmed Yuri Sopov in the Siberian Newspaper Zarya (1919)
title_sort yuri sopov in the siberian newspaper zarya (1919)
publisher A.M. Gorky Institute of World Literature of the Russian Academy of Sciences
series Studia Litterarum
issn 2500-4247
2541-8564
publishDate 2019-12-01
description The article examines three poems by Yuri Sopov published in Siberian daily socio-political and literary newspaper Zarya from the state archive of Novosibirsk region. Yuri Sopov was an Omsk poet who lived a short life (1897–1919): he prematurely died as the result of the explosion in the courtyard of A.V. Kolchak’s house. Sopov wrote series of poems, the rhymed Tale of the Last Summer, and the unfinished poem about Arthur Rimbaud only fragments of which have remained. The article focuses on Sopov’s poems “Sunset at the River,” “Love,” and “Loneliness” from his books Evenings at the River and I Remember the Early Mass... The latter and “Sunset at the River” are published in this article for the first time since 1918–1919. The poet retreats to the world of dreams and slumber that was typical for Romantic and Symbolist poetry. The “Sunset at the River” and “Love” are shaped after Balmont’s “Moisture” and correspond to the Symbolist tradition of the so-called “boat” poetry. “Loneliness” is a text that echoes political events that took place in Russia of that time. In the poem “I remember the early mass...,” Sopov borrows from both Klyuev and Blok, combining religious motifs from the former and the motif of the “beautiful lady” from the latter; at the same time, the poem has a distinct Akmeistic subtext inspired by Akhmatova and Mandelstam.
topic yuri sopov
literary newspaper zarya
siberian poetry
romanticism
symbolism
akmeistic overtones
russian modernism
url http://studlit.ru/images/2019-4-4/Kulikova.pdf
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