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Anna Akhmatova: Poems

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Anna Akhmatova: Poems is a collection showcasing the profound and emotive work of the iconic Russian poet, Anna Akhmatova. Her poetry delves into themes of love, suffering, and resilience, reflecting the tumultuous period of Russian history she lived through. This volume captures her powerful voice and enduring influence on literature, offering insights into her personal experiences and the broader cultural landscape of her time.
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Format: Hardback
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You might enjoy this collection if you're captivated by evocative and poignant poetry that captures the essence of love, loss, and resilience. The works offer a compelling insight into Russian cultural history and provide a deeply personal glimpse into the experiences of one of Russia's celebrated poets.

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From her appearance in a small magazine in 1906 to her death in 1965, Anna Akhmatova was a dominant presence in Russian literary life.

Collectable, beautifully presented hardback of Anna Akhmatova's greatest poems. Edited by D. M. Thomas.
His translations of Akhmatova have been described by John Bayley as 'a masterly achievement'. He has translated 19 additional poems especially for this Everyman edition.

Book Hero Magic formatted this description to make it easier to read. While it's new and still learning, it may not be perfect - your feedback is welcome! Description

Collectable, beautifully presented hardback of Anna Akhmatova's greatest poems, edited by D. M. Thomas. His translations of Akhmatova have been described by John Bayley as 'a masterly achievement'. He has translated 19 additional poems especially for this Everyman edition.

From her appearance in a small magazine in 1906 to her death in 1965, Anna Akhmatova was a dominant presence in Russian literary life. But this friend of Pasternak and Mandelstam was a poet in a country where poetry was literally a matter of life and death, as she found when Mandelstam and her own husband, Gumilyev, were executed, and her son imprisoned for many years in the Gulag.

Akhmatova's first collection, Evening, appeared in 1912. Rosary (1914) made her a household name. After the Revolution, she went in and out of favour with the authorities, who sometimes allowed her to publish, and sometimes banned her work. She is now most celebrated in the West for Poem Without A Hero and Requiem, a sequence mourning the victims of Stalin's Terror which was only published (and then outside Russia) in 1963.

Book Details

INFORMATION

ISBN: 9781841597706

Publisher: Everyman

Format: Hardback

Date Published: 04 May 2006

Country: United Kingdom

Imprint: Everyman's Library

Contributors:

  • Translated by D M Thomas

Audience: General / adult

DIMENSIONS

Spine width: 19.0mm

Width: 114.0mm

Height: 166.0mm

Weight: 229g

Pages: 256

About the Author

The poet Anna Akhmatova was born Anna Gorenko in Odessa, in the Ukraine, in 1889; she later changed her name to Akhmtova. In 1910 she married the important Russian poet and theorist Nikolai Gumilyov. Shortly afterwards Akhmatova began publishing her own poetry; together with Gumilyov, she became a central figure in the Acmeist movement. Acmeism -- which had its parallels in the writings of T. E. Hulme in England and the development of Imagism -- stressed clarity and craft as antidotes to the overly loose style and vague language of late nineteenth century poetry in Russia. The Russian Revolution was to dramatically affect their lives. Although they had recently divorced, Akhmatova was was nevertheless stunned by the execution of her friend and former partner Gumilyev in 1921 by the Bolsheviks, who claimed that he had betrayed the Revolution. In large measure to drive her into silence, their son Lev Gumilyov was imprisoned in 1938, and he remained in prison and prison camps until the death of Stalin and the thaw in the Cold War made his release possible in 1956. Meanwhile, Akhmatova had a second marraige and then a third; her third husband, Nikolai Punin, was imprisoned in 1949 and thereafter died in 1953 in a Siberian prison camp. Her writing was banned, unofficially, from 1925 to 1940, and then was banned again after World War Two was concluded. Unlike many of her literary contemporaries, though, she never considered flight into exile. Persecuted by the Stalinist government, prevented from publishing, regarded as a dangerous enemy , but at the same time so popular on the basis of her early poetry that even Stalin would not risk attacking her directly, Akhmatova's life was hard. Her greatest poem, "Requiem," recounts the suffering of the Russian people under Stalinism -- specifically, the tribulations of those women with whom Akhmatova stood in line outside the prison walls, women who like her waited patiently, but with a sense of great grief and powerlessness, for the chance to send a loaf of bread or a small message to their husbands, sons, lovers. It was not published in in Russia in its entirety until 1987, though the poem itself was begun about the time of her son's arrest. It was his arrest and imprisonment, and the later arrest of her husband Punin, that provided the occasion for the specific content of the poem, which is sequence of lyric poems about imprisonment and its affect on those whose loveed ones are arrested, sentenced, and incarcerated behing prison walls.. The poet was awarded and honorary doctorate by Oxford University in 1965. Akhmatova died in 1966 in Leningrad.

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