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Nikolaj Gumilev and Neoclassical Modernism

The Metaphysics of Style

by Raoul Eshelman (Author)
©1993 Thesis 160 Pages
Series: Slavische Literaturen, Volume 3

Summary

Nikolaj Gumilev occupies a paradoxical place within the history of Russian modernism. Although he is well known as the founder of Acmeism and is regarded as an important poet and critic, much of his work is difficult to reconcile with prevailing concepts of modernism. The present study seeks to explain this marginal position by reinterpreting Gumilev's work within the broader context of a modernist aesthetic of order, or «neo-classical modernism.» The term refers to an aesthetic line within modernism that sought to reconcile certain features of traditional rhetoric - in particular the triadic style system - with modernist strategies of innovation. Although primarily devoted to Gumilev, the study also touches on Russian and French writers adhering to comparable aesthetic values, among them Annenskij, Kuzmin, Gautier, Leconte de Lisle, Valéry and Gide.

Details

Pages
160
Year
1993
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631459058
Language
English
Published
Frankfurt/M., Berlin, Bern, New York, Paris, Wien, 1993. 160 pp.

Biographical notes

Raoul Eshelman (Author)

The Author: Raoul Eshelman was born in Munich, Germany in 1956. After graduating from Rutgers University with a B.A. in Political Science, he continued his studies at the University of Constance, where he obtained his Ph.D. in Slavics in 1988. At present he is Assistant Professor in the Slavic Department of Hamburg University. He has also taught at Rutgers/Newark and Berkeley.

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Title: Nikolaj Gumilev and Neoclassical Modernism