Marina Tsvetaeva (1892–1941)
Auteur de Selected Poems
A propos de l'auteur
Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva, 1892-1941 Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva was born on October 8, 1892 in Moscow. Her first collection appeared in 1910, and she ranks among the major twentieth-century Russian poets. Her numerous lyrics and long poems are distinguished by great vigor and passion and an afficher plus astonishing technical mastery. Her language and rhythms are highly innovative. In subject, her poetry varies greatly, often diary-like but also intensely concerned with the fate of her generation, of Russia, and of Europe. Tsvetaeva did not shy away from controversial topics, often opposing received dogma, be it Soviet or Russian emigre. She frequently subsumed herself in other characters, merging dramatic and lyrical elements. Particularly striking are her long poems Poem of the Mountain, Poem of the End, and Ratcatcher and her later collections Craft (1923) and After Russia (1928). After emigrating from the Soviet Union, Tsvetaeva also seriously turned to prose. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins
Crédit image: Marina Tsvetaïeva en 1925
Œuvres de Marina Tsvetaeva
Correspondance, 1922-1936. Marina Tsvetaeva, Boris Pasternak (2004) — Auteur; Auteur — 13 exemplaires
Ik loop over de sterren schetsen, dagboekfragmenten en brieven over de Russische Revolutie (2000) 11 exemplaires
Стихотворения и поэмы 5 exemplaires
Стихотворения и поэмы (сборник) 4 exemplaires
Confesiones/ Confessions: Vivir En El Fuego/ Living in the Fire (Spanish Edition) (2009) 3 exemplaires
Poésie lyrique (1912-1941) : Tome 1, Poèmes de Russie (1912-1920), suivi de La porte arrachée par… (2015) 3 exemplaires
Избранное 3 exemplaires
Избранные произведения 3 exemplaires
Театр : Сборник пьес 2 exemplaires
Marina Tsvetaeva: Polnoe Sobranie Poezii, Prozy, Dramaturgii v Odnom Tome[Complete collection of poems, prose and… (2008) 2 exemplaires
Marina Tsvetaeva : De Vie à Vie précédé de Ici-Haut & Poèmes de Maximilian Volochine (1991) 2 exemplaires
Lettres du grenier de Wilno: lettres de Marina Tsvetaeva à Natalia Hajdukiewicz (2004) 2 exemplaires
Cartas de Wilno (1934-1935) 1 exemplaire
Las flagelantes 1 exemplaire
Natalia Goncharova retrato de una pintora rusa, 1 exemplaire
La historia de Sóniechka 1 exemplaire
El poeta y el tiempo 1 exemplaire
Meu Irmão Feminino e «Noites Florentinas» 1 exemplaire
Začarovaný kruh : [výbor z veršů] 1 exemplaire
Gedichte 1 exemplaire
Vogelbeerbaum : ausgew. Gedichte 1 exemplaire
Vogelbeerbaum. Ausgewählte Gedichte. 1 exemplaire
Gedichte. Prosa. Russish und Deutsch. 1 exemplaire
Briefe an Vera Bunina: Russ. /Dt. 1 exemplaire
Mutter und die Musik. Autobiographische Prosa. 1 exemplaire
Hodina duše 1 exemplaire
O DIabo 1 exemplaire
INDÍCIOS TERRESTRES 1 exemplaire
Indícios Terrestres 1 exemplaire
Lichý střevíc 1 exemplaire
Sprookjespoëmen 1920-1922 1 exemplaire
كبرياء جريح - قصائد مختارة 1 exemplaire
Selected Poems 1 exemplaire
Tsvetaeva, Marina Archive 1 exemplaire
Марина Цветаева Стихотворения поэмы 1 exemplaire
Мне имя - Марина 1 exemplaire
Проза 1 exemplaire
Поэзия. Проза. Письма. 2 тома 1 exemplaire
Стихотворения и поэмы 1 exemplaire
Театр 1 exemplaire
Neizdannoe : stikhi, teatr, proza 1 exemplaire
Captive Spirit: Selected Prose 1 exemplaire
Sochinenija 1 exemplaire
Twenty-four Poems 1 exemplaire
Poésie lyrique (1912-1941) : Coffret 2 tomes : Poèmes de Russie (1912-1920) ; Poèmes de… (2015) 1 exemplaire
Mon frère féminin : lettre à l'Amazone 1 exemplaire
Sochineniia v dvukh tomakh. Tom pervyi: Stixotvoreniia, poemy, dramatricheskie proizvedeniia 1 exemplaire
Le poète et la critique 1 exemplaire
Le poète et le temps 1 exemplaire
Uchenik 1 exemplaire
О любви 1 exemplaire
Oktobar u vagonu 1 exemplaire
Stikhotvorenii͡a = Стихотворения 1 exemplaire
Poemas esenciales 1 exemplaire
Ono što je bilo 1 exemplaire
Konec Kazanovy (La fine di Casanova); 1 exemplaire
La tosaerba 1 exemplaire
Irdische Zeichen 1 exemplaire
Oeuvres associées
World Poetry: An Anthology of Verse from Antiquity to Our Time (1998) — Contributeur — 447 exemplaires
Women in Praise of the Sacred: 43 Centuries of Spiritual Poetry by Women (1994) — Contributeur — 338 exemplaires
The Bitter air of exile : Russian writers in the West, 1922-1972 (1977) — Contributeur — 8 exemplaires
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Nom canonique
- Tsvetaeva, Marina
- Nom légal
- Tsvetaeva, Marina Ivanovna
- Autres noms
- Cvetaeva, Marina Ivanovna (Forme internationale translit.-ISO russe)
Цветаева, Марина Ивановна (Forme internationale translit.-ISO russe)
Efron, Marina Ivanovna (Nom d'alliance) - Date de naissance
- 1892-10-08
- Date de décès
- 1941-08-31
- Sexe
- female
- Nationalité
- Russie
- Pays (pour la carte)
- Russie
- Lieu de naissance
- Moscou, Russie
- Lieu du décès
- Lelabuga, Tatarie, Russie (
- Cause du décès
- Suicide (Pendaison)
- Lieux de résidence
- Lelabuga, Tatarie, Russie (1939|1941)
Paris, Île-de-France, France (1925|1939)
Berlin, Allemagne (1922|1925)
Prague, Tchécoslovaquie (1922)
Moscou, Russie (18 92 | 19 02 puis 19 17| 19 22)
Kortebel, Crimée (1911|1917) (tout afficher 9)
Paris, France (1909)
Lausanne, Suisse (1904)
Nervi, Italie (1902|1904) - Études
- Lycée Brioukhonenko, Moscou
Université de la Sorbonne, Paris, France (1909)
Pensionnat privé, Lausanne, Suisse - Professions
- Traductrice (Russe, Français)
Poète
Scénariste - Relations
- Efron, Sergei (Epoux)
Efron, Ariadna (Fille)
Mandelstam, Osip (Amant) - Courte biographie
- Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva was born in Moscow, Russia, a daughter of Ivan Vladimirovich Tsvetaev, a professor of Fine Art at the University of Moscow, and his second wife Maria Alexandrovna, a concert pianist. Anastasia Tsvetaevna was her younger sister. The family traveled abroad and Marina attended schools in Switzerland and Germany, and studied history and literature at the Sorbonne. In 1910, she self-published her first collection of poems. In 1912, she married Sergei Efron, also a poet and a Russian military officer, with whom she would have three children. Her second collection of verses, Magic Lantern, also appeared in 1912. Between 1917 and 1922, she wrote a cycle of six plays in prose and verse. In 1919, in the aftermath of the Russian Revolution, in an attempt to save her two daughters from starvation, Marina placed them in a state orphanage, but Irina died there of malnutrition. Marina and her daughter Ariadna then left Russia in 1922 to join Efron in Berlin. They lived in Paris and Prague and had a son, Gregori. The family returned to Moscow in 1939. Efron and Ariadna were arrested on charges of espionage in 1941. He was executed, and Ariadna was sent to a forced labor camp. Marina Tsvetaeva committed suicide that year at age 48. Much of her work was re-published posthumously in the Soviet Union after 1961, and brought her international recognition as a major poet.
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Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 268
- Aussi par
- 13
- Membres
- 1,960
- Popularité
- #13,119
- Évaluation
- 4.0
- Critiques
- 21
- ISBN
- 348
- Langues
- 20
- Favoris
- 20