词条 | Dmitry Kuzmin |
释义 |
Dmitry Vladimirovich Kuzmin ({{lang-ru|Дми́трий Влади́мирович Кузьми́н}}, born December 12, 1968), is a Russian poet, critic, and publisher. BiographyKuzmin was born in Moscow, son of the architect Vladimir Legoshin and the literary critic Edwarda Kuzmina; among his grandparents were the critic Boris Kuzmin and the prominent literary translator Nora Gal. In 1985-87 he was enrolled in philology at Moscow State University, but was expelled from it. He graduated with a bachelor's degree in philology from Moscow State Pedagogical University in 1993. In 2005, he got a PhD for his thesis on one-line poems. In 2014, he is visiting professor in Princeton University.[1] Since then he lives in Latvia claiming himself a protester against Vladimir Putin's regime in Russia.[2] ActivitiesHe started his literary career in 1988 by organizing a group of poets who now are known as the "Vavilon" circle of poets/writers (this is the Russian word for Babylon). He and his friends started publishing an independent book series called The Library of Young Literature. In 1993 he founded the ARGO-RISK (Russian: АРГО-РИСК), an independent poetry press.[3] In 1996 he published the first issue of the gay almanac called RISK. In 1997, he created a resource site at Vavilon.ru, where he made available texts by, as he claims, about 180 Russian writers. Kuzmin declared that the main purpose of the site was to resist the huge wave of “commercial literature”, which began flooding the Russian market for the first time since the 1920s. In 2007, he founded LitKarta, a reference site that provides information on a number of members of the Russian literary community. Kuzmin organised quite a number of poetry readings and festivals, "non-commercial", as he referred to them. He claims that he has published about 300 books by other writers. He won a few awards for promotion of the works by young writers, including the Andrei Bely Prize (2002).[4] Later, he became a Committee member for this award[5]). Since 2006 he has been editing the literary magazine called Vozdukh, "the newest undertaking of the effervescent young poet, critic and publisher" as Canadian slavist Allan Reid put it.[6] In 2007, the assembly of the editors of leading Russian literary magazines voted against including Vozdukh in Zhurnalny Zal, an Internet library of Russian literary magazines,[7] this decision was claimed controversial and unfair by some Russian authors.[8] Kuzmin is also a member of the Advisory Board for St. Petersburg Review. Kuzmin actively promotes gay culture and fights homophobia.[9] Kuzmin's poems (including explicitly gay ones[10]) and essays appeared in some Russian literary magazines. In 2008 he published a collection of his poems and translations. Some of his poems were translated into English (A Public Space,[11] Habitus,[12] Aufgabe,[13] Fulcrum,[14] Big Bridge,[15] Zymbol[16] e. a.), French (Europe[17]), Serbian (Treći Trg[18]), Estonian (Vikerkaar[19]). As Russian scholar Ilya Kukulin points out, "The subject of his poems is the nonconformist who has a critical attitude toward himself and the society he is part of, yet his perception of the world is impressionistic rather than discursive".[20] Another scholar, Vitaly Chernetsky, traces the origins of Kuzmin's manner to Frank O'Hara's poetics.[21] Selected bibliographyAs editor
As co-editor
As publisher
English translations of his poemsSome of his poems have been translated into English and have appeared in the following publications:
References1. ^Speaking politically through poetry: Dmitry Kuzmin interviewed by graduate students of Princeton University, February 6, 2014. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304212902/http://www.princeton.edu/res/news/archive/?id=12148 |}} 2. ^Russia’s dissident poets society, "Politico", December 25, 2015. 3. ^Dmitriy Kuzmin. How we built the tower - "The Vavilon project", Modern Poetry in Translation, No. 20, 2002. 4. ^Dmitriy Kuzmin's bio, CEC ArtsLink 5. ^David Stromberg. Written history, The St. Petersburg Times, Issue #1142 (8), February 3, 2006. 6. ^Allan Reid. Vozdukh, New Russian Poetry Journal, Canadian Slavonic Papers/Revue canadienne des slavistes Vol. XLVIII, Nos 3-4, September–December 2006. Pp.423-425. 7. ^Sergey Kostyrko. Refleksii 8. ^Zh[urnalny] Z[al] protiv Vozdukha. Zachem? 9. ^Karen Phillips. PEN World Voices: A Windy Indy Book Fair at the Literary Mews 10. ^M. Nemtsev. The emergence of a sexual minorities movement in Post-Soviet Russia {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110608075909/http://www.nsu.ru/classics/reset/participants/Nemtsev%20Dissertation.pdf |date=June 8, 2011}}, Central European University, Department of Gender Studies 11. ^A Public Space. Issue 2, Table of Contents {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721212559/http://www.apublicspace.org/back_issues/issue_2/toc/ |date=July 21, 2011 }} 12. ^Habitus: A Diaspora Journal. Issue 5 (Moscow) {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100126023317/http://habitusmag.com/issues/moscow/ |date=January 26, 2010 }} 13. ^Aufgabe No. 8, table of contents 14. ^Fulcrum No. 7 {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120426051423/http://fulcrumpoetry.org/issues/7/ |date=April 26, 2012 }}, table of contents 15. ^Big Bridge No. 17, Twenty-first Century Russian Poetry 16. ^Zymbol Vol. 2 No. 2, The poems Putin doesn’t want you to read 17. ^Europe. Les formalistes russes (n°911, mars 2005) {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120530143951/http://www.europe-revue.net/pages/recherche-par-titres/parutions-2005/formalistes-russes-r.pdf |date=May 30, 2012 }} 18. ^Treći Trg. Issue no.15 /2007 19. ^Vikerkaar. Issue no.1-2 /2010 {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131005025313/http://www.vikerkaar.ee/index1.php?page=Arhiiv&a_act=content&a_number=240 |date=October 5, 2013 }} 20. ^Ilya Kukulin. Documentalist Strategies in Contemporary Russian Poetry, The Russian Review, No. 69 (October 2010). P.595. 21. ^Vitaly Chernetsky. Mapping Postcommunist Cultures: Russia and Ukraine in the Context of Globalization. McGill-Queen's University Press, 2007. P.170. 22. ^Poezija 25 sodobnih ruskih pesnic in pesnikov, 25. avgust 2010, Ljubljana - MMC RTV SLO/STA 23. ^El armario de acero: literatura gay y lésbica en la Rusia de Putin, El Huffington Post, 29.04.2014. External links
11 : Russian male poets|Gay writers|LGBT rights activists from Russia|LGBT writers from Russia|1968 births|Living people|LGBT poets|Russian expatriates in Latvia|Soviet literary historians|Soviet male writers|20th-century Russian male writers |
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