Boris Chichibabin
Boris Alekseyevich Chichibabin | |
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File:Poet Boris Zizibabin podpisuvaet svoiu knigu musukuvedu Grigoriu Hansburgu.jpg
Chichibabin autographs his book for Grigory Hansburg in the National Union of Composers of Ukraine, 4 March 1992
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Native name | Борис Алексеевич Чичибабин |
Born | Boris Alekseyevich Polushin January 9, 1923 Kremenchuk |
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Kharkiv |
Occupation | poet |
Citizenship | Soviet Union (1923–1991) → Ukraine (1991–1994) |
Alma mater | University of Kharkiv |
Notable awards | USSR State Prize, Order of Merit (Ukraine) |
Boris Alekseyevich Chichibabin (Russian: Бори́с Алексе́евич Чичиба́бин, Ukrainian: Бори́с Олексі́йович Чичиба́бін; 9 January 1923, Kremenchuk – 15 December 1994, Kharkiv; born Polushin, Russian: Полу́шин) was a Soviet poet and a laureat of the USSR State Prize (1990), who is typically regarded as one of the Sixtiers.
He lived in Kharkiv, and in the course of three decades became one of the most famous and best-loved members of the artistic intelligentsia of the city, i.e., from the 1950s to 1980s. From the end of the 1950s, his poetry was widely distributed throughout the Soviet Union as samizdat. Official recognition came only at the end of his life in the time of perestroika.
Life and work
Boris Chichibabin was the son of an army officer, was educated in Chuguev in Kharkov oblast. His pseudonym was taken in honour of his uncle once removed on his mother's side, the academic Aleksei Chichibabin, an eminent chemist and one of the first Soviet 'nonreturnees'. In 1940, Boris began his studies at the Kharkov Institute, but on the outbreak of war was called up to the Caucasus Front.
In 1945 he entered the philological department of the Kharkov State University, but by June 1946 had been arrested and sentenced to five in the camps for "anti-Soviet agitation". The cause of his arrest was his poetry itself.
In prison Chichibabin wrote «Красные помидоры» (Red tomatoes), in the gulag «Махорку» (To cheap tobacco), and two spectacular pieces «тюремной лирики» (Lyrics from the Gaol). This poetry, put to music by the actor and singer Leonid Pugachev, is widely known throughout Russia.
By the 1950s, by the time of his release from the camps, the principal themes of Chichibabin's writing were already marked out. Above all these are the lyrics of the citizenry. "The new Radischev is angry and sad" reminds us of the "state boors" in his poem of 1959, «Клянусь на знамени весёлом» "I bow to the banner of jollity" («Не умер Сталин», or "Stalin did not die").
Chichibabin died in 1994.
Bibliography
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External links
- Биография, стихи, воспоминания (In Russian)
- А.Н.Губайдуллина Две родины в лирике Б.Чичибабина (In Russian)
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- Pages with broken file links
- Articles containing Russian-language text
- Articles containing Ukrainian-language text
- Use dmy dates from February 2011
- 1923 births
- 1994 deaths
- People from Kremenchuk
- Soviet poets
- Russian-language poets
- Russian male poets
- Ukrainian poets
- Ukrainian poets in Russian
- Recipients of the USSR State Prize
- Recipients of the Order of Merit (Ukraine), 3rd class
- Pseudonymous writers
- Soviet prisoners and detainees
- Soviet dissidents
- Gulag detainees
- University of Kharkiv alumni