Anna akhmatova famous works

Anna Akhmatova

Anna Andreyevna Gorenko[Notes 1] (23 June&#;[O.S.

Anna akhmatova biography Though my fingers are thin, still her thimble didn't fit me. Her exploration of love and femininity occurred primarily in her early work, which. Now all's eternal confusion. Haight, Amanda.

11 June]&#; – 5 March ), better known by the pen nameAnna Akhmatova,[Notes 2] was a Russian poet. In she was on the shortlist for the Nobel Prize,[2]

Nikolay Gumilyov was his husband.

Related pages

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Sources

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  • Akhmatova, Anna, Trans.

    Kunitz, Staney and Hayward, Max () Poems of Akhmatova. Houghton Mifflin; ISBN&#;

  • Akhmatova, Anna, Trans.

    Anna Akhmatova The mass arrests of the late s included Akhmatova's son and Punin, both arrested in and both released after a few months. During the last years of Akhmatova's life, she continued to live with the Punin family in Leningrad, still translating, researching Pushkin, and writing her own poetry. Relevant section begins at timestamp 40'43". Anna Be-Korenu.

    Kunitz, Staney and Hayward, Max () Poems of Akhmatova. Houghton Mifflin; ISBN&#;

  • Akhmatova, Anna () Trans. Mayhew and McNaughton. Poem Without a Hero & Selected Poems. Oberlin College Press; ISBN&#;
  • Akhmatova, Anna () Trans.

    Anna akhmatova Polivanov reports that her friend "could not remember her shortest poems, much less a long text". The strong and clear leading female voice struck a new chord in Russian poetry. They contained brief, psychologically taut pieces, acclaimed for their classical diction, telling details, and the skilful use of colour. He banned her poems from publication in the journals Zvezda and Leningrad , accusing her of poisoning the minds of Soviet youth.

    Judith Hemschemeyer The Complete Poems of Anna Akhmatova. Ed. R. Reeder, Boston: Zephyr Press; (); ISBN&#;

  • Feinstein, Elaine. () Anna of all the Russias: A life of Anna Akhmatova. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson; ISBN&#;; Alfred A. Knopf, () ISBN&#;
  • Harrington, Alexandra () The poetry of Anna Akhmatova: living in different mirrors.

    Acmeist movement Their theoretical articles demanded a literature of greater simplicity and freshness—very much what Akhmatova was writing, though she preferred poetry to criticism or theory. She tells how Akhmatova would write out her poem for a visitor on a scrap of paper to be read in a moment, then burnt in her stove. The New York Times. Several diamond rings and one emerald were made from her brooch.

    Anthem Press; ISBN&#;

  • Martin, Eden () Collecting Anna Akhmatova, The Caxtonian, Vol. 4 April Journal of the Caxton Club; accessed 31 May
  • Monas, Sidney; Krupala, Jennifer Greene; Punin, Nikolaĭ Nikolaevich (), The Diaries of Nikolay Punin: , Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center Imprint Series, University of Texas Press; ISBN&#;
  • Polivanov, Konstantin () Anna Akhmatova and Her Circle, University of Arkansas Press; ISBN&#;
  • Reeder, Roberta.

    () Anna Akhmatova: Poet and Prophet. New York: Picador; ISBN&#;

  • Reeder, Roberta. () Anna Akhmatova: The Stalin Years Journal article by Roberta Reeder; New England Review, Vol. 18,
  • Wells, David () Anna Akhmatova: Her Poetry Berg Publishers; ISBN&#;

Notes

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References

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