Mikhail Kuzmin (1872-1936), Russia's first openly gay writer, stood at the epicenter of the turbulent cultural and social life of Petersburg-Petrograd-Leningrad for over three decades. A poet of the caliber of Aleksandr Blok, Vladimir Mayakovsky, Boris Pasternak, Osip Mandelshtam, and Marina Tsvetaeva (and acknowledged as such by them and other contemporaries), Kuzmin was also a prose writer, playwright, critic, translator, and composer who was associated with every aspect of modernism's history in Russia, from Symbolism to the Leningrad avant-gardes of the 1920s.
Only now is Kuzmin...
Mikhail Kuzmin (1872-1936), Russia's first openly gay writer, stood at the epicenter of the turbulent cultural and social life of Petersburg-Petrog...
This collection of essays is dedicated to John E. Malmstad (Harvard University), a prominent American Slavist, leading specialist in Russian Silver-Age poetry, the novel, visual art, and ballet. Among the contributors to the volume are Konstantin Azadovsky (St. Petersburg), Nikolay Bogomolov (Moscow), Robert Hughes (Berkeley), Aleksandr Lavrov (St. Petersburg), Jean-Claude Marcade (Paris), Fedor Poljakov (Vienna), Olga Raevsky-Hughes (Berkeley), Stephanie Sandler (Cambridge, MA.), Roman Timenchik (Jerusalem), and Michael Wachtel (Princeton)."
This collection of essays is dedicated to John E. Malmstad (Harvard University), a prominent American Slavist, leading specialist in Russian Silver-Ag...