Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1103907 | Russian Literature | 2013 | 27 Pages |
Abstract
The article presents a reading of Marina Tsvetaevaʼs ‘Poema lestnitsy’ (1926) as a critique of the reifying ontology of modern society. The back staircase of the poor becomes the locus of a burning lyrical revolt by the elemental nature of things against their objectifying use. I argue that the poemʼs social and lyrical pathos was inspired by Vladimir Maiakovskiiʼs ‘Oblako v shtanakh’ (1914-1915), but that the theme may also be related to a Modernist ontological debate. The poem presents a metapoetic image of the elemental, non-reifiable poetic world and its resistance to commodification.
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