of her generation.^4 Finally, we shall look at a series of works Pavlova
wrote over a twenty-year period about the position of women in society
in order to trace the development of her views on this subject. As we shall
see, gender issues played as important a role in Pavlova’s life, poetic
practices, reception, and literary reputation as they did for Khvoshchin-
skaia and the other poets of their generation.
One factor accounting for the contrasting literary reputations of
Pavlova and Khvoshchinskaia may simply have been a difference in age.
When Pavlova, who was seventeen years older than Khvoshchinskaia,
started publishing her poetry in the early 1830 s, no one would have
urged her to write prose. By the 1840 s, however, prose had begun to sup-
plant poetry as the preeminent and more prestigious Russian genre.^5 I
believe, however, that other factors played a significant role in these two
poets’ reputations—factors constituting “literary social capital” (see in-
troduction).
Literary Social Capital
Although for reasons discussed in chapter 1 these women poets as a
group enjoyed very little literary social capital—access to education,
mentoring, social connections with literary gatekeepers and opinion
makers, the opportunity to be a literary critic or journal editor—differ-
ences did exist among them. For example, in contrast with Khvoshchin-
skaia’s impoverished, déclassé family living in the provinces, Pavlova’s
family was well-to-do, well connected, and lived in Moscow, one of the
two publishing centers.
Of course, women poets, like other women, also could capitalize on
their attractiveness to men, as did Rostopchina, but this generally did
not help them professionally. Although, as we have seen, critics sexual-
ized all women poets, they more often dismissed as a poetessaan attrac-
tive woman, for the very reason that she conformed to gender norms.
Nor did capitalizing on the “feminine” characteristic of beauty protect
women poets from ad feminamattacks. Beauty, like any source of female
power, was seen as dangerous, even demonic. As the holy Prekrasnaia
dama(beautiful lady) inevitably turns into the disreputable neznakomka
(unknown woman) in the poetry of Aleksandr Blok, so the beautiful, re-
fined poetess implies her binary opposite, the whore.^6
Women poets as well as men poets could generate social capital by
hosting salons, thus influencing literary production.^7 A salon not only
allowed these women to earn the gratitude and good will of important
138 Karolina Pavlova