A dialogue about the future in the poetry of Alexander Pushkin and Adam Mickiewicz
Автор: Artemyev M.A.
Журнал: Проблемы исторической поэтики @poetica-pro
Статья в выпуске: 1 т.23, 2025 года.
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Alexander Pushkin's poem "He lived among us..." (1834), dedicated to Adam Mickiewicz, contains a retelling of the Polish poet's speeches about humanity striving for unity. The article offers an answer to the question of how adequate their transmission is and whether there are appropriate formulations in Mickiewicz's own poems. Pushkin's paraphrase of Mickiewicz's statements allows us to draw conclusions about the peculiarities of the work of the Russian and Polish poets, the similarities and differences between their artistic worlds. The poetic dialogue between Mickiewicz and Pushkin about the future of nations began before writing this poem. The Russian poet is more traditional in his work, not inclined to ideological utopias. However, when he turns to the image of Mickiewicz, he uses his characteristic train of thought. What in Mickiewicz are words without additional shades of meaning, in Pushkin acquires a universal conciliar meaning.
Pushkin, mickiewicz, russian-polish literary relations, utopia, futurology, romanticism, paraphrase
Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/147247808
IDR: 147247808 | DOI: 10.15393/j9.art.2025.14802