"With footsteps marking roundabout paths": Jewish poetry on Crimea

Published within two years of each other in the early 1920s, the Hebrew poet Shaul Tshernikhovski's sonnet sequence "Crimea" and the Yiddish poet Perets Markish's sonnet sequence "Chatyr-Dag" are important studies in the image and significance of wandering in contempora...

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Main Author: Finkin, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Routledge 2008
Subjects:
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author Finkin, J
author_facet Finkin, J
author_sort Finkin, J
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description Published within two years of each other in the early 1920s, the Hebrew poet Shaul Tshernikhovski's sonnet sequence "Crimea" and the Yiddish poet Perets Markish's sonnet sequence "Chatyr-Dag" are important studies in the image and significance of wandering in contemporary Jewish literature. Crimea holds a powerful interest for these two poets as a locus of discussion about land and territory, about the connection (or lack thereof) of Jews to a landscape that is in a sense "beyond the Pale", both familiar and exotic, and a place of personal escape or refuges in these poets' own biographies. Moreover, their conscious engagement with the great Eastern European literary landmarks of Crimea - Alexander Pushkin's "The Fountain of Bakhchisaray" and Adam Mickiewicz's "Crimean Sonnets" - makes these important texts for understanding Jewish cultural movement in the early twentieth century.
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spelling oxford-uuid:350bd2bf-e213-4f6c-a66a-99968a1481102022-03-26T13:29:48Z"With footsteps marking roundabout paths": Jewish poetry on CrimeaJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:350bd2bf-e213-4f6c-a66a-99968a148110Literature (non-English)EnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetRoutledge2008Finkin, JPublished within two years of each other in the early 1920s, the Hebrew poet Shaul Tshernikhovski's sonnet sequence "Crimea" and the Yiddish poet Perets Markish's sonnet sequence "Chatyr-Dag" are important studies in the image and significance of wandering in contemporary Jewish literature. Crimea holds a powerful interest for these two poets as a locus of discussion about land and territory, about the connection (or lack thereof) of Jews to a landscape that is in a sense "beyond the Pale", both familiar and exotic, and a place of personal escape or refuges in these poets' own biographies. Moreover, their conscious engagement with the great Eastern European literary landmarks of Crimea - Alexander Pushkin's "The Fountain of Bakhchisaray" and Adam Mickiewicz's "Crimean Sonnets" - makes these important texts for understanding Jewish cultural movement in the early twentieth century.
spellingShingle Literature (non-English)
Finkin, J
"With footsteps marking roundabout paths": Jewish poetry on Crimea
title "With footsteps marking roundabout paths": Jewish poetry on Crimea
title_full "With footsteps marking roundabout paths": Jewish poetry on Crimea
title_fullStr "With footsteps marking roundabout paths": Jewish poetry on Crimea
title_full_unstemmed "With footsteps marking roundabout paths": Jewish poetry on Crimea
title_short "With footsteps marking roundabout paths": Jewish poetry on Crimea
title_sort with footsteps marking roundabout paths jewish poetry on crimea
topic Literature (non-English)
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