Thursday, February 17, 2005

The People's Poet - A Writer's Footnotes

Discarded Text from my upcoming manuscript - Love Poems to Aphrodite.

Considered Russia’s greatest poet, Alexander Pushkin was also known as a novelist and dramatist. His work expresses the uniqueness of Russian national consciousness, and they are seen as the first works of modern Russian literature. Through the efforts of Pushskin, Russians heard their collective voice for the first time. His beautiful writing first established the tradition of Russian romanticism. In a day of autocracy and tyranny, he spoke out eloquently for liberty and justice and his quick wit always involved him in duels.

Aleksander Sergeevich Pushkin was born in Moscow on June 6, 1799. While at home, he learned to speak fluent French, but also learned Russian from his grandmother and heard Russian folktales from his nurse. In 1811, he entered the Imperial Lyceum at Tsarskoye Selo, where he was trained to enter the civil service. While positioned there, Pushkin began work on his first major poem. The poem, "Ruslan and Lyudmila," published in 1820, was his first work to break with literary tradition of the day. The poem is written in the accepted style of the Romantic writers, but it has an Old Russian setting and draws upon Russian folktales.
In 1817 Pushkin took a post in the foreign office in St. Petersburg. He became involved with several literary societies; one of which became a branch of a secret society called the Union of Welfare. A favorite of the Czar, he was sought for his insight and wisdom. Idolized by the masses, Pushskin always thought of himself as a black man. He wrote:

An ever idle scapegrace, hideous descendant of Negroes,
brought up in savage simplicity, I pleasure the young beauties
with the unbridled furies of my African passion.

When Pushkin first heard African music it was as if his flesh remembered some fabulous long, long ago...In his poetry, Pushkin adhered to a model that seems to be rootedly African. He became the spokesman for those who later participated in the failed Decembrist uprising of 1825. Due to these activities, he was politically exiled in 1820 to a remote southern province.
During his exile Puskin traveled extensively in the northern regions of Caucasus and the Crimea. These travels provided the material and inspiration for his "southern cycle" of Romantic narrative poems, which firmly established his reputation. In 1826, Pushkin was allowed to return to Moscow. Although his work was censored and the police put him under secret observation, it was here that he wrote his most mature works. In 1831, Puskin married a young woman by the name of Natalya Goncharova, and they settled in St. Petersburg, where he again acquired a position in government service. His desire to continue writing came into conflict with his court position and his petitions to be allowed to resign were all denied. He died in February 10, 1837 (Jan 29, according to the old calendar), in St. Petersburg from wounds suffered in a duel, which was an attempt to regain his honor due to a slight directed towards himself and his wife.

Puskin’s major works are an _expression of his interest in the common people of Russia, their folklore, and their way of life. As such he broke dramatically with the forms of the day and established an entirely new tradition. In both "Eugene Onegin" (1833) and "Boris Gordunov" (1831), Puskin writes in a realistic, objective style about typically Russian themes in Russian settings.

Higher Learning

On my vacation, technically on your spiritual walk you are NEVER really on vacation. Sometimes the lessons and insights are a breath of fresh air, relaxing and a relief. While in San Francisco I had the wonderful opportunity to finally meet a woman I admire very much. Her dedication to ancient African Herstory is phenomenal. Passionate, warm and down-to-earth, when I first encounter her books and work, it inspired me to keep going and to stay strongly focus. Her name is Lucia Birnbaum and she is one of many of the professors who teach (the first program I have ever seen) women's spirituality. The program has a strong womanist and black goddess focus. Probably the first and only program in the country, possibly the world. She teaches at a wonderful school called CIIS located in the downtown area of San Francisco. The whole school has a wonderful humanist, spirituality focus with the bookstore stocked with titles ranging from Tantra, the Dalai Llama, Healing Racism, Buddhism, Recovering the Teachings of the Body and just books I am more likely to see in a Shambhala Bookstore, or even in my own bookcase at home and not in an academic setting. The school even has a meditation room upstairs. Surreal! The world is moving fast in expanding its consciousness around these issues of race and sex and it was incredible to see it and experience it. You know in the past higher education meant just that....studying subjects and creating an environment so that people can learn to become better people and to contribute in a positive way to a diverse world. I guess CIIS has what you might call, higher education. Lucia Birnbaum and her books and great work can be found at this link.