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A dispute about poems and beyond

https://doi.org/10.31425/0042-8795-2024-3-122-133

Abstract

The article is written in response to I. Plekhanova’s study published in the same issue of Voprosy Literatury, which calls A. Dolgareva’s poetry an undoubtedly leading phenomenon of contemporary poetry. E. Pogorelaya also acknowledges key defining characteristics of Dolgareva’s output: preference for lively colloquial language, references to personal experience and the reader’s civic stance, reliance on plots and archetypical images and motifs, as well as a leaning towards the Soviet literary tradition and Soviet past as the last era of stability and relative normalcy. Polemizing with Plekhanova and other admirers of Dolgareva’s poetry, the author points out that the backbone of her poetics is drawn from 2010s’ Internet poetry, e. g., A. Kudryasheva’s works. The author argues that Dolgareva’s free and unrestricted, if not haphazard, treatment of the language is rooted in that background and that her works share a lot of similarities with those by authors from the Internet. Therefore, Pogorelaya suggests a more critical and reflective approach to Dolgareva’s oeuvre, stressing that it is primarily written with a specific reference group in mind and mirrors the group’s emotional charge.

About the Author

E. A. Pogorelaya
Russian State University for the Humanities
Russian Federation

Elena A. Pogorelaya, Candidate of Philology

6 Miusskaya Sq., Moscow, 125047



References

1. Alikevich, A. (2023). On fortune-telling with wax, the destiny of Anna Dolgareva, the communist utopia and the fate of the Motherland. Voprosy Literatury. Light Cavalry, [online] 5. Available at: https://voplit.ru/column-post/o-gadanii-na-voske-prednaznachenii-anny-dolgarevoj-kommunisticheskojutopii-i-sudbah-rodiny/ [Accessed 10 Mar. 2024]. (In Russ.)

2. Dolgareva, A. and Efremova, D. (2022). ‘Being a patriot in contemporary art is like being a punk.’ Izvestiya, [online] 5 Aug. Available at: https://iz.ru/1373389/daria-efremova/byt-patriotom-v-sovremennom-iskusstve-etopolnyi-pank [Accessed 10 Mar. 2024]. (In Russ.)

3. Plekhanova, I. (2024). The mystical simplicity of Anna Dolgareva’s poetry. Voprosy Literatury, 3, pp. 105-121. (In Russ.)

4. Shakaryan, K. (2024). On realism in poetry, superficiality of speech and a new type of ‘literary messianism.’ Voprosy Literatury. Light Cavalry, [online] 1. Available at: https://voplit.ru/column-post/o-realizme-v-poeziipoverhnostnosti-stihotvornoj-rechi-i-literaturnom-messianizme-novogo-tipa/ [Accessed 10 Mar. 2024]. (In Russ.)

5. Shtapich, M. (2024). Anna Dolgareva’s Christian and Soviet poetry. Sibirskie Ogni, [online] 2. Available at: https://www.sibogni.ru/content/hristianskayai-sovetskaya-poeziya-anny-dolgarevoy [Accessed 10 Mar. 2024]. (In Russ.)

6. ‘They called her Nadezhda…’ A discussion of A. Dolgareva’s poem in the comments to A. Zhuchkova’s VKontakte post. (2022). [VKontakte] 15 Oct. Available at: https://vk.com/kritikann?w=wall37919763_3689 [Accessed 20 Mar. 2024]. (In Russ.)


Review

For citations:


Pogorelaya E.A. A dispute about poems and beyond. Voprosy literatury. 2024;(3):122-133. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.31425/0042-8795-2024-3-122-133

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ISSN 0042-8795 (Print)