Sergey Yesenin, or Sergey Esenin, (born Oct. 3, 1895, Konstantinovo, Ryazan province, Russia—died Dec. 27, 1925, Leningrad), Russian poet. From a peasant family, he celebrated what he called “wooden Russia” (traditional culture) over modern, industrialized society in works beginning with Radunitsa (1916), and he believed the Revolution of 1917 would lead to the peasant millennium he envisioned. Taking up the life of a rowdy and blasphemous exhibitionist, he wrote cynical, swaggering tavern verse such as that contained in Ispoved khuligana (1921; “Confessions of a Hooligan”). In 1922 he married dancer Isadora Duncan, though neither could speak the other’s language. His efforts to adjust to the revolutionary era were unsuccessful, and he hanged himself at age 30. Though frowned on by the authorities, he was very popular in Russia both during his life and afterward.
Sergey Aleksandrovich Yesenin Article
Sergey Yesenin summary
Below is the article summary. For the full article, see Sergey Aleksandrovich Yesenin.
Isadora Duncan Summary
Isadora Duncan was an American dancer whose teaching and performances helped to free ballet from its conservative restrictions and presaged the development of modern expressive dance. She was among the first to raise interpretive dance to the status of creative art. Although Duncan’s birth date is
poetry Summary
Poetry, literature that evokes a concentrated imaginative awareness of experience or a specific emotional response through language chosen and arranged for its meaning, sound, and rhythm. (Read Britannica’s biography of this author, Howard Nemerov.) Poetry is a vast subject, as old as history and