Poetry for Students, Volume 29

(Dana P.) #1

Vremia; ty menia obmanesh’!), mar the volume
unnecessarily.


The Afterword concludes with an excellent
discussion of the publication history and a very
interesting section on structural and thematic
features ofPosle Rossii; some points are argu-
able, but Naydan’s discussion of time and space,
Biblical and historical themes, and Cvetaeva’s
exploration of the chronicle structure is insight-
ful and stimulating.


This monumental fruit of the translator’s
labor belongs in every library which serves
undergraduate students of Russian, and offers
a thought-provoking reference for the scholar.


Source:Pamela Chester, Review ofAfter Russia,inSlavic
and East European Journal, Vol. 38, No. 2, Summer 1994,
pp. 382–86.


Sources


Feiler, Lily,Marina Tsvetaeva: The Double Beat of
Heaven and Hell, Duke University Press, 1994, pp. 1,
118, 135, 190, 198.


Feinstein, Elaine, ‘‘Introduction,’’ inSelected Poems, 5th
ed., by Marina Tsvetaeva, translated by Elaine Feinstein,
Carcanet, 1999, p. XIV.


Heldt, Barbara, ‘‘Two Poems by Marina Tsvetayeva
from ‘Posle Rossii,’’’ inModern Language Review, Vol.
77, No. 3, July 1982, pp. 679, 686–87.


Karlinsky, Simon,Marina Tsvetaeva: The Woman, Her
World, and Her Poetry, Cambridge University Press,
1985, pp. 119–20, 129–30, 135, 192.


Razumovsky, Maria,Marina Tsvetayeva: A Critical
Biography, translated by Aleksey Gibson, Bloodaxe
Books, 1994, pp. 1, 177.


Schweitzer, Viktoria,Tsvetaeva, translated by Robert
Chandler and H. T. Willetts, Harvill, 1992, p. 246.
Tennyson, Alfred, Lord, ‘‘Locksley Hall,’’ inEnglish Vic-
torian Poetry: An Anthology, edited by Paul Negri,
Dover, 1999, pp. 16–21.
Tsvetaeva, Marina, ‘‘An Attempt at Jealousy,’’ in
Selected Poems, 5th ed., translated by Elaine Feinstein,
Carcanet, 1999, pp. 92–93.
Wordsworth, William, ‘‘The World Is Too Much with
Us,’’ inRomanticism: An Anthology, 3rd ed., edited by
Duncan Wu, Blackwell, 2006, p. 534.

Further Reading


Chamberlain, Lesley,The Philosophy Steamer: Lenin and
the Exile of the Intelligentsia, Atlantic Books, 2006.
Chamberlain provides an account of an
expulsion of 160 intellectuals from Russia
that occurred at the same time Tsvetaeva was
leaving the country.
Smith, S. A.,The Russian Revolution: A Very Short Intro-
duction, Oxford University Press, 2002.
In this volume, Smith provides a history of
Russia between 1917 and 1936.
Walker, Barbara,Maximilian Voloshin and the Russian
Literary Circle: Culture and Survival in Revolutionary
Times, Indiana University Press, 2005.
Walker discusses the literary circle surround-
ing Voloshin, which included Tsvetaeva.
Williams, Robert C.,Culture in Exile: Russian Emigre ́sin
Germany, 1881–1941, Cornell University Press, 1972.
Williams explores the situation of Russian
intellectuals outside Russia, focusing espe-
cially on ‘‘Russian Berlin’’ in the 1920s, the
time when Tsvetaeva resided there.

AnAttemptatJealousy
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