诗人 人物列表
巴尔蒙特 Balmont梅烈日柯夫斯基 Dimitrij Sergeevic Mereskovskij伊戈尔·谢维里亚宁 伊戈尔谢维里亚 Ning
吉皮乌斯 Gippius蒲宁 Ivan Bunin霍达谢维奇 Khodasevich
阿赫玛托娃 Anna Akhmatova茨维塔耶娃 Marina Tsvetaeva曼德尔施塔姆 Osip Mandelstam
帕斯捷尔纳克 Boris Pasternak安德列·沃兹涅兴斯基 安德列沃兹涅 Xing Ski阿赫玛杜琳娜 Bella Akhmadulina
阿赫玛杜琳娜 Bella Akhmadulina
诗人  (1937年4月10日2010年11月29日)

诗词《黎明前的时辰是珍贵的》   《雨和花园》   《八月 aug》   

阅读阿赫玛杜琳娜 Bella Akhmadulina在诗海的作品!!!
  贝拉·阿赫玛杜琳娜(1937 - ?)
  
  毕业于莫斯科高尔基文学院,1962年她出版了第一本诗集《琴弦》,并于同年参加苏联作家协会。
  
  阿赫玛杜琳娜和叶夫图申科、沃兹涅先斯基通被称为苏共二十大、二十二大的诗人。他们三人不仅思想一致,彼此常常写诗相献。沃兹涅先斯基称她是“俄罗斯光荣”。叶夫图申科说她是有“无限魅力的女诗人”,说她“继承了像阿赫马托娃和茨维塔耶娃这样一些俄国女诗人的传统”,苏联批评家弗拉基米尔·奥格涅夫把阿赫玛杜琳娜的诗说是“尤如雷达,对于私下袭来的危险或对于新近发现的快乐,都能立刻做出反应。雷达这一词不是随便用的,它充分表达了她的诗给人的那种感觉——经常的警惕和对世界的矛盾看法”。
  
  阿赫玛杜琳娜的诗作,刚强道劲,表现细腻,却又毫不流于纤巧。她善于从普通的生活中,摄取诗意,然后晓以深邃的哲理。她想象力开阔,情理迅速交替,使人目不暇接,语言虽不华彩,却庄重深沉。对人生、自然的思考,是她的诗作中经常出现的主题,开拓较深,角度也较新颖。
  
  她的诗集有《琴弦》、《风雪》、《蜡烛》等。1977年,她被美国文学艺术研究院推选为名誉院士。
  
  贝拉·阿赫玛杜琳娜(俄语:Бе́лла (Изабе́лла) Аха́товна Ахмаду́лина,拉丁化:Bella Achatowna Achmadulina,1937年4月10日-2010年11月29日),俄苏诗人、短篇小说家、翻译家。她是俄国新浪潮文学运动的参与者,在世时曾被约瑟夫·布罗茨基称为“最优秀的在世俄语诗人”。赫鲁晓夫解冻时她曾数次出国访问,赢得罗国际读者的注意。虽然她的作品并不关心政治,但她还是经常批评苏联当局,并声援那些持不同政见的知识分子,包括诺贝尔奖获得者帕斯捷尔纳克、萨哈罗夫和索尔仁尼琴。


  Izabella Akhatovna "Bella" Akhmadulina (Russian: Бе́лла (Изабе́лла) Аха́товна Ахмаду́лина [] ( listen); 10 April 1937 – 29 November 2010) was a Soviet and Russian poet, short story writer, and translator, known for her apolitical writing stance. She was part of the Russian New Wave literary movement. She was cited by Joseph Brodsky as the best living poet in the Russian language.
  
  
  
  Despite the aforementioned apolitical stance of her writing, Akhmadulina was often critical of authorities in the Soviet Union, and spoke out in favour of others, including Nobel laureates Boris Pasternak, Andrei Sakharov, and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. She was known to international audiences via her travels abroad during the Khrushchev Thaw, during which she made appearances in sold-out stadiums. Upon her death in 2010 at the age of 73, President of Russia Dmitry Medvedev hailed her poetry as a "classic of Russian literature."
  
  
  
  The New York Times said Akhmadulina was "always recognized as one of the Soviet Union's literary treasures and a classic poet in the long line extending from Lermontov and Pushkin." Sonia I. Ketchian, writing in The Poetic Craft of Bella Akhmadulina, called her "one of the great poets of the 20th century. There's Akhmatova, Tsvetaeva, Mandelstam, and Pasternak — and she's the fifth".
  
  Early life, education and work
  
  
  
  Bella Akhmadulina was born the only child of a Tatar father and a Russian-Italian mother. Her birth occurred on 10 April 1937. They underwent evacuation to Kazan when World War II broke out.
  
  
  
  Akhmadulina's literary career began when she was a school-girl working as a journalist at the Moscow newspaper, Metrostroevets, and improving her poetic skills at a circle organized by the poet Yevgeny Vinokurov. Her first poems appeared in the magazine October after being approved by established Soviet poets. These first poems were published in 1955. Émigré critic Marc Slonim described her prospects as follows in 1964 (Soviet Russian Literature): "Her voice has such a purity of tone, such richness of timbre, such individuality of diction, that if her growth continues she will be able some day to succeed Akhmatova" as "the greatest living woman poet in Russia".
  
  
  
  After finishing school, Akhmadulina entered the Maxim Gorky Literature Institute from which she graduated in 1960. While studying at the institute, she published her poems and articles in different newspapers, both official and handwritten. She was the subject of criticism in Komsomolskaya Pravda in 1957. She was expelled in 1959 (but allowed re-entry as time progressed) as a result of her opposition to the persecution of Boris Pasternak. In 1962 the first collection of her poems, titled Struna (The String), was published and was a resounding success. In spite of being expunged, many of her collections of verses were published later: Music lessons (1970), Poems (1975), Candle (1977), Dreams of Georgia (1977), The Mystery (1983), Coastline (1991), and others. A collection called Sad (Garden) led to Akhmadulina receiving the USSR State Prize in 1989.
  
  
  
  "Many dogs and one dog", a short story written in a surreal style, was published in 1979 in Samizdat's Metropol Almanac. She assisted in the creation of Metropol. She wrote essays about Alexander Pushkin and Mikhail Lermontov.
  
  
  
  She appeared in sold-out stadiums in the 1960s, as did the poets Yevgeny Yevtushenko, Andrei Voznesensky and Robert Rozhdestvensky.
  
  
  
  Her open letter was published supporting the exiled Andrei Sakharov. In October 1993, she signed the Letter of Forty-Two.
  
  
  
  She was a journalist in a 1964 film.
  
  
  
  Bella participated in many international poetry events including Kuala Lumpur International Poetry Reading (1988).
  
  
  
  After the Soviet Union she published Casket and Key (1994), A Guiding Sound (1995) and One Day in December (1996).
  
  
  
   Translation
  
  
  
  The main themes of Akhmadulina's works are friendship, love, and relations between people. She wrote numerous essays about Russian poets and translators, some devoted to her close friend, Bulat Okudzhava. Akhmadulina avoided writing overtly political poems, but took part in political events in her youth, supporting the so-called "dissident movement". She translated into Russian poetry from France, Italy, Chechnya, Poland, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Bulgaria, Georgia, Armenia, and many others.
  
  
  
  Akhmadulina wrote in a "resolutely apolitical" style. She made use of imagery and humour in her work. She used rhymed quatrains in her early works, which discussed ordinary, yet imaginative occurrences from daily life in language that was full of both archaisms and neologisms. Religion and philosophy became her themes as she aged and she wrote in longer forms.
  
  
  
   Personal life
  
  Bella Akhmadulina and Anna Netrebko at the Russian State Prize ceremony at the Kremlin
  
  Bella's first marriage in 1954 was to Yevgeny Yevtushenko, another famous poet of the era; her second husband since 1960 was Yuri Nagibin, major novelist and screenwriter. By her 1971 marriage to film director Eldar Kuliev she has a daughter, Elizaveta Kulieva, who is also a poetess. In 1974, she married her last husband, the famous artist and stage designer Boris Messerer. They had homes in Peredelkino and Moscow.
  
  
  
   Death
  
  
  
  Akhmadulina died at her home in Peredelkino near Moscow on 29 November 2010. She was 73 years old. Her death was announced about one hour later. Akhmadulina's husband said her death was from a heart condition, describing it as a " cardiovascular crisis". Dmitry Medvedev and Vladimir Putin both paid tribute, with Medvedev writing on his blog that the death was an "irreparable loss". Medevdev also wrote that Akhmadulina's poetry was a "classic of Russian literature".
  
  
  
   Filmography
  
  
  
   Cameo
  
   I Am Twenty (1961), directed by Marlen Khutsiev
  
  
  
   Actor
  
   There lives such a guy (1964), directed by Vasily Shukshin (Russian: Живёт такой парень)
  
   Sport, sport, sport (1970), directed by Elem Klimov
  
  
  
   Screenwriter
  
   Clean Ponds (1965), based on the works of Yuri Nagibin
  
   Stuardess (1968)
  
  
  
   Bibliography
  
   Struna (The String), Moscow, 1962
  
   Oznob (Fever), Frankfurt, 1968
  
   Uroki Muzyki, (Music Lessons), 1969
  
   Stikhi (Verses), 1975
  
   Svecha (The Candle), 1977
  
   Sny o Gruzii (Dreams of Georgia), 1978–79
  
   Metell (Snow-Storm), 1977
  
   Taina (The Secret), 1983
  
   Sad (The Garden), 1987
  
   Stikhotvorenie (A Poem), 1988
  
   Izbrannoye (Selected Verse), 1988
  
   Stikhi (Verses), 1988
  
   Poberezhye (The Coast), 1991
  
   Larets i Kliutch ('Casket and Key), 1994
  
   Gryada Kamnei ('The Ridge of Stone), 1995
  
   Samye Moi Stikhi (My Own Verses), 1995
  
   Zvuk Ukazuyushchiy (A Guiding Sound), 1995
  
   Odnazhdy v Dekabre (One Day in December), 1996
  
  
  
   Award
  
  
  
  In 1977, Bella Akhmadulina became an Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters (see AAAL website).
  
   USSR State Prize Laureate (1989)
  
   State Prize of the Russian Federation (2004)
  
   Order of Friendship of Peoples (1984)
  
   Order of Merit for the Fatherland, 2nd class (August 11, 2007) - for outstanding contribution to the development of national literature and many years of creative activity; 3rd class (April 7, 1997) - for services to the State and outstanding contribution to the development of national literature
  
   Laureate of the Foundation "Banner" (1993)
  
   Winner of the "Nosside" (Italy, 1994)
  
   Laureate of "Triumph" (1994)
  
   Pushkin Prize winner (1994)
  
   Laureate of the President of the Russian Federation in the field of Literature and Art (1998)
  
   Winner of "Brianza" (Italy, 1998)
  
   Winner of the journal "Friendship of Peoples" (2000)
  
   Prize winner Bulat Okudzhava (2003)
  
   Honorary Member of Russian Academy of Arts
    

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