Tsvetayeva, Marina Ivanovna

Tsvetayeva, Marina Ivanovna

▪ Russian poet
married name Marina Ivanovna Efron
born Sept. 26 [Oct. 8, New Style], 1892, Moscow, Russia
died Aug. 31, 1941, Yelabuga

      Russian poet whose verse is distinctive for its staccato rhythms, originality, and directness and who, though little known outside Russia, is considered one of the finest 20th-century poets in the Russian language.

      Tsvetayeva spent her youth predominantly in Moscow, where her father was a professor at the university and director of a museum and her mother was a talented pianist. The family traveled abroad extensively, and at the age of 16 she began studies at the Sorbonne. Her first collection of poetry, Vecherny albom (“Evening Album”), appeared in 1910. Many of her best and most typical poetical qualities are displayed in the long verse fairy tale Tsar-devitsa (1922; “Tsar-Maiden”).

      Tsvetayeva met the Russian Revolution with hostility (her husband, Sergei Efron, was an officer in the White counterrevolutionary army), and many of her verses written at this time glorify the anti-Bolshevik resistance. Among these is the remarkable cycle Lebediny stan (“The Swans' Camp,” composed 1917–21, but not published until 1957 in Munich), a moving lyrical chronicle of the Civil War viewed through the eyes and emotions of the wife of a White officer.

      Tsvetayeva left the Soviet Union in 1922, going to Berlin and Prague, and finally, in 1925, settling in Paris. There she published several volumes of poetry, including Stikhi k Bloku (1922; “Verses to Blok”) and Posle Rossii (1928; “After Russia”), the last book of her poetry to be published during her lifetime. She also composed two poetical tragedies on classical themes, Ariadne (1924) and Phaedra (1927), several essays on the creative process, and works of literary criticism, including the monograph Moy Pushkin (1937; “My Pushkin”). Her last cycle of poems, Stikhi k Chekhii (1938–39; “Verses to the Czech Land”), was an impassioned reaction to Nazi Germany's occupation of Czechoslovakia.

      In the 1930s Tsvetayeva's poetry increasingly reflected alienation from her émigré existence and a deepening nostalgia for Russia, as in the poems “Toska po rodine” (1935; “Homesick for the Motherland”) and “Rodina” (1936; “Motherland”). At the end of the '30s her husband—who had begun to cooperate with the communists—returned to the Soviet Union, taking their daughter with him (both of them were later to become victims of Joseph Stalin's terror). In 1939 Tsvetayeva followed them, settling in Moscow, where she worked on poetic translations. The evacuation of Moscow during World War II sent her to a remote town where she had no friends or support. She committed suicide in 1941.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Tsvetayeva, Marina (Ivanovna) — born Oct. 8, 1892, Moscow, Russia died Aug. 31, 1941, Yelabuga Russian poet. After spending most of her youth in Moscow, she began studies at the Sorbonne in Paris at age 16. She published her first poetry collection in 1910. Her verses on the… …   Universalium

  • Marina Ivanovna Cvetajeva — Marina Iwanowna Zwetajewa Marina Iwanowna Zwetajewa (russisch Марина Ивановна Цветаева, wiss. Transliteration Marina Ivanovna Cvetaeva; * 26. Septemberjul./ 8. Oktober 1892greg. in …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva — Marina Iwanowna Zwetajewa Marina Iwanowna Zwetajewa (russisch Марина Ивановна Цветаева, wiss. Transliteration Marina Ivanovna Cvetaeva; * 26. Septemberjul./ 8. Oktober 1892greg. in …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Marina Tsvetaeva — Tsvetaeva in 1925 Born Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva 8 October 1892(1892 10 08) Moscow, Russian Empire Died 31 August 1941 …   Wikipedia

  • Marina Tsvetáyeva — Nombre completo Marina Ivánovna Tsvetáyeva Nacimiento 26 de septiembre de 1892 …   Wikipedia Español

  • Marina Tsvetaeva — Marina Iwanowna Zwetajewa Marina Iwanowna Zwetajewa (russisch Марина Ивановна Цветаева, wiss. Transliteration Marina Ivanovna Cvetaeva; * 26. Septemberjul./ 8. Oktober 1892greg. in …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Marina Zwetajewa — Marina Iwanowna Zwetajewa Marina Iwanowna Zwetajewa (russisch Марина Ивановна Цветаева, wiss. Transliteration Marina Ivanovna Cvetaeva; * 26. Septemberjul./ 8. Oktober 1892greg. in …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Tsvetayeva — [sfə tä′yə və] Marina (Ivanovna) [mə rē′nə] 1892 1941; Russ. poet, essayist, & critic * * * …   Universalium

  • Tsvetayeva — [sfə tä′yə və] Marina (Ivanovna) [mə rē′nə] 1892 1941; Russ. poet, essayist, & critic …   English World dictionary

  • Russia — /rush euh/, n. 1. Also called Russian Empire. Russian, Rossiya. a former empire in E Europe and N and W Asia: overthrown by the Russian Revolution 1917. Cap.: St. Petersburg (1703 1917). 2. See Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. 3. See Russian… …   Universalium

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”