Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Nekrasov himself was true to his convictions, with many of his works highlighting the suffering of the Russian people. “The Russian people have endured enough,” he wrote in the poem ‘Railway’.

  2. Nikolay Alexeyevich Nekrasov was born in Nemyriv (now in Vinnytsia Oblast, Ukraine ), in the Bratslavsky Uyezd of Podolia Governorate. His father Alexey Sergeyevich Nekrasov (1788–1862) was a descendant from Russian landed gentry, and an officer in the Imperial Russian Army. [4] There is some uncertainty as to his mother's origins.

  3. Mar 28, 2024 · Nikolay Alekseyevich Nekrasov (born December 10 [November 28, Old Style], 1821, Nemirov, Ukraine, Russian Empire—died January 8, 1878 [December 27, 1877], St. Petersburg, Russia) was a Russian poet and journalist whose work centred on the theme of compassion for the sufferings of the peasantry. Nekrasov also sought to express the racy charm ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. her diary: "Today, Nekrasov is an idol, a god; he is above Pushkin. He is worshipped . . . If you say a word against him, you are a retrograde."5 Nekrasov's success notwithstanding, his message to his readers was profoundly ambiguous. Although scholarly accounts capture a core as pect of Nekrasov's poetry, they offer only a limited view of its ...

  5. People also ask

  6. Nekrasov himself constantly lacked the bare necessities of life and frequently suf-fered from hunger and cold. Belinski, whom Nekrasov met in 1842, had an enormous influence on the poet's creativity. Of him Nekrasov said: "Belinski elevated me from a literary vagabond to nobility." And the authoress Panaeva, a close friend of Nekrasov, quotes ...

  7. Jan 27, 2017 · The fascination with Nekrasov stemmed not so much from the veneration of his civic achievements as from the curiosity about his profligate lifestyle and glamorous ethical failures. Exemplary tensions within Nekrasov's lyric and public personae enabled his contemporaries to negotiate between the recognition of progressive values, the pursuit of ...

  8. Painfully aware of the injustice of serfdom, Nikolai Nekrasov (the "master poet of the peasant masses") was the first poet to make the "People" (narod) the focal point of his poetry — especially the downtrodden, who became the symbol of national suffering and exploitation.