Akhmatova and emigrantica

The paper is dedicated to several episodes of a broad and so far poorly studied subject— Anna Akhmatova’s connections with the Russian emigration. Various sources on the Russian emigration (press, documents, correspondence, personal evidence, etc.) are extremely important to recreate the perception...

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Autor principal: Roman Timenchik
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
RU
Publicado: Russian Academy of Sciences. A.M. Gorky Institute of World Literature 2020
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/6f662e53176c4adba772a0c99fe8bbf1
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Sumario:The paper is dedicated to several episodes of a broad and so far poorly studied subject— Anna Akhmatova’s connections with the Russian emigration. Various sources on the Russian emigration (press, documents, correspondence, personal evidence, etc.) are extremely important to recreate the perception of Akhmatova’s works by Russian émigré critics and readers; besides they make important contribution to the biographical studies. The first section is devoted to Akhmatova’s version of the causes for Anastasia Chebotarevskaia’s suicide in 1921. Akhamatova believed that Fedor Sologub’s wife and a writer Anastasia Chebotarevskaya committed suicide because of her unanswered love to Grigory Lozinsky, who short time before had left Russia. Lozinsky’s forgotten public response to Chebotarevskaya’s death — a short piece published in Berlin newspaper Golos Rossii (Voice of Russia) is cited in the paper. The second section is dedicated to Akhmatova’s situation during the 1922 repressive measures against intellectuals and to the reaction of the émigré press to the rumors about Akhmatova’s possible exile or expulsion from Russia.