The outbreak of Covid-19 cut short Maria Stepanova’s stay in
Cambridge. Back in Russia, she spent the ensuing months in a state
of torpor – the world had withdrawn from her, time had ‘gone
numb’. When she awoke from this state, she began to read Ovid,
and the shock of the pandemic dissolved into the voices and
metaphors of an epochal experience. Her book-length poem Holy
Winter 20/21, written in a frenzy of poetic inspiration, speaks of
winter and war, of banishment and exile, of social isolation and
existential abandonment. Stepanova finds sublime imagery for the
process of falling silent, interweaving love letters and
travelogues, Chinese verse and Danish fairy tales into a polyphonic
evocation of frozen and slowly thawing time. Following her previous
book of poetry, War of the Beasts and the Animals – in part a
response to the Donbas conflict – her book’s title is even more
prophetic now, echoing a famous patriotic Soviet song from 1941,
‘a holy war is underway’. Born in 1972, Maria Stepanova – as
poet and essayist – was a highly influential figure for many
years in Moscow’s cosmopolitan literary scene until its
suppression along with civil liberties and dissent under Putin’s
latter-day reign of terror. Her first prose work In Memory of
Memory established her internationally as one of the most important
intellectual voices of contemporary Russia. Like Joseph Brodsky
before her, she has mastered modern poetry’s rich repertoire of
forms and moves effortlessly between the linguistic and traditional
spaces of Russian, European and transatlantic literature. Her
poetry, which here echoes verses by Pushkin and Lermontov,
Mandelstam and Tsvetaeva, is not hermetic. She takes in the
confusing signals from social networks and the media, opening
herself up to the voices of kindred poets like Sylvia Plath, Inger
Christensen and Anne Carson. In her prose, Stepanova searches for
the essence of the moment in the maelstrom of historical time. As
an essayist, she traces the reactions of her critical
consciousness; taken together, her politically alert commentaries
form a chronicle of the troubled present.
General
Imprint: |
Bloodaxe Books Ltd
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Release date: |
February 2024 |
First published: |
2021 |
Authors: |
Maria Stepanova
|
Translators: |
Sasha Dugdale
|
Dimensions: |
234 x 156 x 7mm (L x W x T) |
Pages: |
64 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-78037-695-0 |
Subtitles: |
Russian
|
Categories: |
Books
Promotions
|
LSN: |
1-78037-695-2 |
Barcode: |
9781780376950 |
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