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In August 1836, Alexander Pushkin wrote a poem now popularly known
simply as "Monument." In the decades following his death in January
1837, the poem "Monument" was transformed into a statue in central
Moscow: the Pushkin Monument. At its dedication in 1880, the
interaction between the verbal text and the visual monument
established a creative dynamic that subsequent generations of
artists and thinkers amplified through the use of allusion,
simultaneously inviting their readers and spectators into a shared
cultural history and enriching the meaning of their original
creations. The history of the Pushkin Monument reveals how allusive
practice becomes more complex over time. As the population of
literate Russians grew throughout the twentieth century, both
writers and readers negotiated increasingly complex allusions not
only to Pushkin's poem, but to its statuesque form in Moscow and
the many performances that took place around it. Because of this,
the story of Pushkin's Monument is also the story of cultural
memory and the aesthetic problems that accompany a cultural history
that grows ever longer as it moves into the future.
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