Acmeism(from the Greek akme the highest degree of something, flourishing, maturity, peak, tip) one of the modernist trends in Russian poetry of the 1910s, formed as a reaction to extremes.

Overcoming the predilection of the symbolists for the "superreal", the ambiguity and fluidity of images, the complicated metaphor, the acmeists strove for the sensual plastic-material clarity of the image and accuracy, the chasing of the poetic word. Their "earthly" poetry is prone to intimacy, aestheticism and poeticization of the feelings of primitive man. Acmeism was characterized by extreme apoliticality, complete indifference to the topical problems of our time.

The Acmeists, who replaced the Symbolists, did not have a detailed philosophical and aesthetic program. But if in the poetry of symbolism the determining factor was the transience, the momentaryness of being, a kind of mystery covered with a halo of mysticism, then a realistic view of things was put as the cornerstone in the poetry of acmeism. The hazy unsteadiness and fuzziness of symbols were replaced by precise verbal images. The word, according to the acmeists, should have acquired its original meaning.

The highest point in the hierarchy of values ​​for them was culture, identical to universal human memory. Therefore, acmeists often turn to mythological subjects and images. If the Symbolists in their work focused on music, then the Acmeists on the spatial arts: architecture, sculpture, painting. The attraction to the three-dimensional world was expressed in the acmeists' passion for objectivity: a colorful, sometimes exotic detail could be used for a purely pictorial purpose. That is, the “overcoming” of symbolism took place not so much in the sphere of general ideas, but in the field of poetic style. In this sense, acmeism was just as conceptual as symbolism, and in this respect they are undoubtedly in a succession.

A distinctive feature of the acmeist circle of poets was their "organizational cohesion". In essence, the acmeists were not so much an organized movement with a common theoretical platform, but a group of talented and very different poets who were united by personal friendship. The Symbolists had nothing of the kind: Bryusov's attempts to reunite his brethren were in vain. The same was observed among the futurists despite the abundance of collective manifestos that they issued. Acmeists, or as they were also called "Hyperboreans" (after the name of the printed mouthpiece of acmeism, the journal and publishing house "Hyperborey"), immediately acted as a single group. They gave their union the significant name of the “Workshop of Poets”. And the beginning of a new trend (which later became almost an "obligatory condition" for the emergence of new poetic groups in Russia) was laid by a scandal.

In the autumn of 1911, in the poetic salon of Vyacheslav Ivanov, the famous "Tower", where the poetic society gathered and poetry was read and discussed, a "revolt" broke out. Several talented young poets defiantly left the next meeting of the "Academy of Verse", outraged by the derogatory criticism of the "masters" of Symbolism. Nadezhda Mandelstam describes this case in the following way: “Gumilyov's 'Prodigal Son' was read at the 'Academy of Verse', where Vyacheslav Ivanov reigned, surrounded by respectful students. He subjected the "Prodigal Son" to a real debacle. The speech was so rude and harsh that Gumilyov's friends left the Academy and organized the Poets' Workshop in opposition to it.

And a year later, in the autumn of 1912, the six main members of the "Tsekh" decided not only formally, but also ideologically to separate from the Symbolists. They organized a new community, calling themselves "Acmeists", that is, the top. At the same time, the "Workshop of Poets" as an organizational structure was preserved acmeists remained in it as an internal poetic association.

The main ideas of acmeism were outlined in the program articles by N. Gumilyov “The Heritage of Symbolism and Acmeism” and S. Gorodetsky “Some Trends in Modern Russian Poetry”, published in the journal Apollo (1913, No. 1), published under the editorship of S. Makovsky. The first of them said: “Symbolism is being replaced by a new direction, no matter how it is called, whether acmeism (from the word akme the highest degree of something, a flowering time) or adamism (a courageously firm and clear view of life), in any case, requiring a greater balance of power and a more precise knowledge of the relationship between subject and object than was the case in symbolism. However, in order for this trend to assert itself in its entirety and be a worthy successor to the previous one, it must accept its legacy and answer all the questions it posed. The glory of the ancestors obliges, and symbolism was a worthy father.

S. Gorodetsky believed that “symbolism, having filled the world with correspondences”, turned it into a phantom, important only insofar as it shines through other worlds, and belittled its high intrinsic value. Among the Acmeists, the rose again became good in itself, with its petals, smell and color, and not with its conceivable similarities with mystical love or anything else.

In 1913, Mandelstam's article "Morning of Acmeism" was also written, which was published only six years later. The delay in publication was not accidental: Mandelstam's acmeist views differed significantly from the declarations of Gumilyov and Gorodetsky and did not make it to the pages of Apollo.

However, as T. Scriabina notes, “for the first time, the idea of ​​a new direction was expressed on the pages of Apollo” much earlier: in 1910, M. Kuzmin appeared in the journal with an article On beautiful clarity, which anticipated the appearance of declarations of acmeism. By the time the article was written, Kuzmin was already a mature person, he had experience of cooperation in symbolist periodicals. Otherworldly and foggy revelations of the symbolists, incomprehensible and dark in art Kuzmin opposed beautiful clarity, clarism (from the Greek. clarus clarity). The artist, according to Kuzmin, must bring clarity to the world, not obscure, but clarify the meaning of things, seek harmony with those around him. The philosophical and religious searches of the Symbolists did not fascinate Kuzmin: the artist's business is to focus on the aesthetic side of creativity, artistic skill. Dark in the last depth of the symbol gives way to clear structures and admiration of pretty little things. Kuzmin's ideas could not help but influence the acmeists: "beautiful clarity" turned out to be in demand by the majority of participants in the "Workshop of Poets".

Another "harbinger" of acmeism can be considered John. Annensky, who, formally being a symbolist, actually paid tribute to him only in the early period of his work. Later, Annensky took a different path: the ideas of late symbolism had practically no effect on his poetry. On the other hand, the simplicity and clarity of his poems were well received by the acmeists.

Three years after the publication of Kuzmin's article in Apollo, the manifestos of Gumilyov and Gorodetsky appeared from that moment it is customary to count the existence of acmeism as a well-formed literary movement.

Acmeism has six of the most active participants in the current: N. Gumilyov, A. Akhmatova, O. Mandelstam, S. Gorodetsky, M. Zenkevich, V. Narbut. G. Ivanov claimed the role of the "seventh acmeist", but this point of view was protested by A. Akhmatova, who stated that "there were six acmeists, and there never was a seventh." O. Mandelstam was in solidarity with her, who, however, considered that six were too many: “There are only six Acmeists, and among them there was one extra” Mandelstam explained that Gorodetsky was “attracted” by Gumilyov, not daring to oppose the then powerful Symbolists with some “ yellow-mouthed." “Gorodetsky was [by that time] a well-known poet.” At various times, G. Adamovich, N. Bruni, Nas. Gippius, Vl. Gippius, G. Ivanov, N. Klyuev, M. Kuzmin, E. Kuzmina-Karavaeva, M. Lozinsky, V. Khlebnikov and others. concrete questions: "Workshop" was a school for mastering poetic skills, a professional association.

Acmeism as a literary trend united exceptionally gifted poets Gumilyov, Akhmatova, Mandelstam, the formation of creative individuals of which took place in the atmosphere of the “Poets' Workshop”. The history of acmeism can be viewed as a kind of dialogue between these three prominent representatives of it. At the same time, the Adamism of Gorodetsky, Zenkevich and Narbut, who made up the naturalistic wing of the current, differed significantly from the “pure” acmeism of the above-mentioned poets. The difference between the Adamists and the triad Gumilyov Akhmatova Mandelstam has been repeatedly noted in criticism.

As a literary trend, acmeism did not last long - about two years. In February 1914, it split. The "shop of poets" was closed. Acmeists managed to publish ten issues of their journal "Hyperborea" (editor M. Lozinsky), as well as several almanacs.

“Symbolism was fading away” Gumilyov was not mistaken in this, but he failed to form a current as powerful as Russian symbolism. Acmeism failed to gain a foothold in the role of the leading poetic trend. The reason for its rapid extinction is called, among other things, "the ideological unsuitability of the direction to the conditions of a drastically changed reality." V. Bryusov noted that "acmeists are characterized by a gap between practice and theory", and "their practice was purely symbolist." It was in this that he saw the crisis of acmeism. However, Bryusov's statements about acmeism were always harsh; at first he declared that “acmeism is an invention, a whim, a metropolitan whim” and predicted: “most likely, in a year or two there will be no acmeism left. His very name will disappear,” and in 1922, in one of his articles, he generally denies him the right to be called a direction, a school, believing that there is nothing serious and original in acmeism and that it is “outside the mainstream of literature.”

However, attempts to resume the activities of the association were subsequently made more than once. The second "Workshop of poets, founded in the summer of 1916, was headed by G. Ivanov together with G. Adamovich. But he didn't last long either. In 1920, the third "Workshop of Poets" appeared, which was Gumilyov's last attempt to organizationally preserve the acmeist line. Under his wing, poets united who consider themselves to be members of the school of acmeism: S. Neldihen, N. Otsup, N. Chukovsky, I. Odoevtseva, N. Berberova, Vs. Rozhdestvensky, N. Oleinikov, L. Lipavsky, K. Vatinov, V. Pozner and others. The third "Workshop of Poets" existed in Petrograd for about three years (in parallel with the "Sounding Shell" studio) until tragic death N. Gumilyov.

creative destinies poets, one way or another connected with acmeism, developed in different ways: N. Klyuev subsequently declared his non-participation in the activities of the community; G. Ivanov and G. Adamovich continued and developed many principles of acmeism in exile; Acmeism did not have any noticeable influence on V. Khlebnikov. AT Soviet time the poetic manner of the acmeists (mainly N. Gumilyov) was imitated by N. Tikhonov, E. Bagritsky, I. Selvinsky, M. Svetlov.

In comparison with other poetic trends of the Russian Silver Age, acmeism in many ways is seen as a marginal phenomenon. It has no analogues in other European literatures (which cannot be said, for example, about symbolism and futurism); the more surprising are the words of Blok, Gumilyov's literary opponent, who declared that acmeism was just an "imported foreign thing." After all, it was acmeism that turned out to be extremely fruitful for Russian literature. Akhmatova and Mandelstam managed to leave behind "eternal words." Gumilyov appears in his poems as one of the brightest personalities of the cruel time of revolutions and world wars. And today, almost a century later, interest in acmeism has survived mainly because it is associated with the work of these outstanding poets who had significant influence on the fate of Russian poetry of the XX century.

Basic principles of acmeism:

the liberation of poetry from symbolist appeals to the ideal, the return of clarity to it;

rejection of mystical nebula, acceptance of the earthly world in its diversity, visible concreteness, sonority, colorfulness;

the desire to give the word a specific, precise meaning;

objectivity and clarity of images, sharpness of details;

appeal to a person, to the "authenticity" of his feelings;

poetization of the world of primordial emotions, primitive biological nature;

roll call with the past literary epochs, the broadest aesthetic associations, "longing for world culture."

Acmeist poets

A. G. Z. I. K. L. M. N. Sh.

Acmeism in literature is a trend that arose at the very beginning of the 20th century and became widespread among all the poets who created their masterpieces during this period of time. Mostly, he hooked on Russian literature, and also became a kind of reciprocal move towards symbolism. This direction is characterized by clarity, utmost clarity and earthiness, but at the same time there is no place for everyday problems.

A small description of the style

Acmeism in literature has always been distinguished by sensuality, a penchant for analysis human feelings and experiences. The poets who wrote their works in this style were quite specific, did not use metaphors and hyperbole. According to modern writers, such characteristics appeared as if in opposition to the pre-existing symbolism, which, in turn, was famous for the ambiguity of images, total absence specificity and accuracy. At the same time, the acmeists attached importance only to the highest human needs, that is, they described the spiritual world. They were alien to political or social themes, aggressiveness and the like. That is why their poems are so easily perceived, because they write about complex things very simply.

What was acmeism based on

As such, there was no philosophy that would define acmeism in Russian literature at that time. Such a point of support was formed only in the process of the existence and prosperity of the style, when the first verses of its representatives began to appear, on the basis of which it was possible to determine the whole essence of what was written. Thus, acmeism in literature has distinguished itself with a realistic view not only of the general picture of life, but also of rather “unearthly” problems that are associated with feelings and emotional experiences. The key role in any work, according to the authors, should have been played by the word. It was with its help that all the thoughts and events that were described should have been expressed with the utmost accuracy.

The inspiration that the poets of this era drew

Most often, symbolism, which was the forerunner of acmeism, is compared with music. It is just as mysterious, ambiguous, and can be interpreted in all sorts of ways. It was thanks to such artistic techniques that this style became a concept in the art of that time. In turn, acmeism as a trend in literature has become a very significant opposite to its predecessor. Poets representing this trend themselves compare their work more with architecture or sculpture than with music. Their poems are incredibly beautiful, but at the same time accurate, coherent and extremely understandable for any audience. Each word conveys directly the meaning that was originally put into it, without any exaggeration or comparison. That is why acmeist verses are so easy to learn by heart for all schoolchildren, and so easy to understand their essence.

Representatives of acmeism in Russian literature

A distinctive feature of all representatives of this was not just solidarity, but even friendship. They worked in the same team, and at the very beginning of their creative path they loudly declared themselves, having founded the so-called "Poets' Workshop" in Leningrad. They didn't have a specific literary platform, standards by which poetry had to be written, or other production details. It can be said that each of the poets knew what his work should be, and knew how to present each word so that it was extremely understandable to others. And among such geniuses of clarity, famous names can be distinguished: Anna Akhmatova, her husband Nikolai Gumilyov, Osip Mandelstam, Vladimir Narbut, Mikhail Kuzmin and others. The poems of each of the authors differ from each other in their structure, character, and mood. However, each work will be understandable, and a person will not have unnecessary questions after reading it.

The glory of the acmeists during their existence

When acmeism appeared in literature, people read the first reports about it in the journal Hyperborea, which was published under the editorship of poets we know. By the way, in this regard, Acmeists were often also called Hyperboreans, who fought for the novelty and beauty of Russian art. This was followed by a series of articles written by almost every member of the "Workshop of Poets", which revealed the essence of this meaning of existence and much more. But, despite the zeal for work and even the friendship of all the poets who became the founders of a new trend in art, acmeism in Russian literature began to fade away. By 1922, the "Workshop of Poets" had already ceased to exist, attempts to renew it were futile. As the then literary critics believed, the reason for the failure was that the theory of the acmeists did not coincide with practical intentions, and they still failed to completely break away from symbolism.

ACMEISM(from the Greek akme - the highest degree, peak, flowering, flowering time) - a literary movement that opposes symbolism and arose at the beginning of the 20th century in Russia.

The formation of acmeism is closely connected with the activities of the "Workshop of poets" , the central figure of which was the organizer of acmeism N. Gumilyov. Contemporaries gave the term other interpretations: Vl. Pyast saw its origins in the pseudonym A. Akhmatova, in Latin it sounds like “akmatus”, some pointed to its connection with the Greek “acme” - “ point." The term acmeism was proposed in 1912 by N. Gumilyov and S. Gorodetsky: in their opinion, symbolism in crisis is being replaced by a direction that generalizes the experience of predecessors and leads the poet to new heights of creative achievements. The name for the literary movement, according to A. Bely, was chosen in the heat of controversy and was not entirely justified: Vyach. own poets. The gifted and ambitious organizer of acmeism dreamed of creating a "direction of directions" - a literary movement that reflects the appearance of all contemporary Russian poetry.

S. Gorodetsky and N. Gumilyov also used the term "Adamism": the first poet, in their view, was Adam, giving names to objects and creatures and thereby participating in the creation of the world. In Gumilyov's definition, Adamism is "a courageously firm and clear view of the world."

As a literary trend, acmeism did not last long - about two years (1913-1914), but one cannot ignore its ancestral ties with the "Poets' Workshop", as well as the decisive influence on the fate of Russian poetry of the twentieth century. Acmeism consisted of six of the most active participants in the movement: N. Gumilyov, A. Akhmatova, O. Mandelstam, S. Gorodetsky, M. Zenkevich, V. Narbut. G. Ivanov claimed the role of the "seventh acmeist", but A. Akhmatova protested this point of view: "There were six acmeists, and there never was a seventh." At different times, G. Adamovich, N. Bruni, Vas. V. Gippius, Vl. V. Gippius, G. Ivanov, N. Klyuev, M. Kuzmin, E. Kuzmina-Karavaeva, M. Lozinsky, S. Radlov, V. Khlebnikov. At the meetings of the "Workshop", in contrast to the meetings of the Symbolists , specific issues were resolved: “Workshop » was a school for mastering poetic skills, a professional association. The creative fates of poets who sympathized with acmeism developed in different ways: N. Klyuev subsequently declared his non-participation in the activities of the community, G. Adamovich and G. Ivanov continued and developed many principles of acmeism in emigration, acmeism did not have any effect on V. Khlebnikov noticeable influence.

The platform of the acmeists was the Apollo magazine, edited by S. Makovsky, in which the declarations of Gumilyov and Gorodetsky were published. The program of acmeism in "Apollo" included two main provisions: firstly, concreteness, materiality, this-worldliness, and secondly, the improvement of poetic skill. The rationale for the new literary trend was given in the articles of N. Gumilyov The legacy of symbolism and acmeism(1913), S. Gorodetsky (1913), O. Mandelstam Morning of acmeism(1913, not published in Apollo).

However, for the first time the idea of ​​a new direction was expressed on the pages of "Apollo" much earlier: in 1910 M. Kuzmin appeared in the magazine with an article About beautiful clarity, which anticipated the appearance of declarations of acmeism. By the time the article was written, Kuzmin was already a mature person, he had experience of cooperation in symbolist periodicals. Otherworldly and vague revelations of the Symbolists, "incomprehensible and dark in art" Kuzmin opposed "beautiful clarity", "clarism" (from the Greek clarus - clarity). The artist, according to Kuzmin, must bring clarity to the world, not obscure, but clarify the meaning of things, seek harmony with those around him. The philosophical and religious searches of the Symbolists did not fascinate Kuzmin: the artist's job is to focus on the aesthetic side of creativity, artistic skill. "Dark in the last depth of the symbol" gives way to clear structures and admiring the "charming little things." Kuzmin's ideas could not help but influence the acmeists: "beautiful clarity" turned out to be in demand by the majority of participants in the "Workshop of Poets".

Three years after the publication of Kuzmin's article in Apollo, the manifestos of Gumilyov and Gorodetsky appeared - from that moment it is customary to count the existence of acmeism as a literary movement that has taken shape. In the article "The Heritage of Symbolism and Acmeism" N. Gumilyov drew a line under the "indisputable values ​​and reputations" of the Symbolists. “Symbolism has completed its circle of development and is now falling,” N. Gumilyov stated. The poets who succeed the Symbolists must declare themselves worthy successors of their predecessors, accept their legacy and answer the questions they pose. “Russian symbolism directed its main forces into the realm of the unknown. Alternately, he fraternized with mysticism, then with theosophy, then with the occult,” Gumilev wrote. He called attempts in this direction "unchaste". One of the main tasks of acmeism is to correct the tilt towards the otherworldly, characteristic of symbolism, to establish a “living balance” between the metaphysical and the earthly. The acmeists did not renounce metaphysics: “always remember the unknowable, but do not offend your thoughts about it with more or less probable guesses” - such is the principle of acmeism. Acmeists did not renounce the highest reality, recognized by the Symbolists as the only true one, but preferred to remain silent about it: the unsaid must remain unsaid. Acmeism was a kind of movement towards "true symbolism", based on attachment to everyday life, respect for simple human existence. Gumilyov suggested that the main difference between acmeism is the recognition of the “intrinsic value of each phenomenon” - it is necessary to make the phenomena of the material world more tangible, even rough, freeing them from the power of foggy visions. Here Gumilyov named the names of the artists most dear to acmeism, its "cornerstones": Shakespeare, Rabelais, Villon, T. Gauthier. Shakespeare showed inner world man, Rabelais - his body and physiology, Villon told us about "a life that does not doubt itself a lot." T. Gauthier found "worthy clothes of impeccable forms." The combination of these four moments in art is the ideal of creativity. Having absorbed the experience of their predecessors, acmeist poets begin new era"aesthetic puritanism, great demands on the poet as a creator of thought and on the word as a material of art." Equally rejecting the utilitarian approach to art and the idea of ​​"art for the sake of art", the founder of acmeism proclaimed an attitude to poetic creativity as a "higher craft".

S. Gorodetsky in the article Some currents in modern Russian poetry(1913) also noted the catastrophe of symbolism: the attraction of symbolism to the “fluidity of the word”, its ambiguity leads the artist from the “calling, colorful world” into the foggy spheres of fruitless wanderings. “Art is balance,” Gorodetsky argued, “there is strength.” “The struggle for our planet Earth” is the work of the poet, the search for “moments that can be eternal” is at the heart of the poetic craft. The world of acmeists is "good in itself", outside of its mystical "correspondences". “Among the Acmeists, the rose again became good in itself, with its petals, smell and color, and not with its conceivable similarities with mystical love or anything else ...”.

In 1913, Mandelstam's article was also written Morning of acmeism published only six years later. The delay in publication was not accidental: Mandelstam's acmeistic calculations differed significantly from the declarations of Gumilyov and Gorodetsky and did not make it to the pages of Apollo. The central metaphor of Mandelstam's article is architecture, architecture. Poetic creativity Mandelstam likens construction: "We do not fly, we climb only those towers that we ourselves can build." A collection of the same stellar for acmeism and rich in the declaration of 1913, Mandelstam called Stone. A stone is “the word as such”, waiting for its sculptor for centuries. Mandelstam likens the work of the poet to the work of a carver, an architect who hypnotizes space.

The term “word as such” was proposed by the futurists and rethought by Mandelstam: for the futurists, the word is a pure sound, free from meaning, Mandelstam, on the contrary, emphasizes its “heaviness”, loaded with meaning. If the Futurists sought to return to the foundations of nature through the sound of the word, then Mandelstam saw in the comprehension of its meanings the way to the foundations of culture. The article also contained a controversy with the Symbolists: not the musicality of speech, but “conscious meaning”, Logos was exalted by Mandelstam. “... Love the existence of a thing more than the thing itself and your being more than yourself - this is the highest commandment of acmeism,” wrote Mandelstam.

The publication of articles by Gorodetsky and Gumilyov in Apollo was accompanied by a representative selection of poetic materials, which by no means always corresponded to the theoretical provisions of acmeism, revealing their precocity, vagueness, and weak argumentation. Acmeism as a trend did not have a sufficient theory: “the intrinsic value of the phenomenon”, “the struggle for this world” were hardly sufficient arguments for declaring a new literary direction. “Symbolism was fading away” - Gumilyov was not mistaken in this, but he failed to form a current as powerful as Russian symbolism.

Questions of religion and philosophy, which acmeism shied away from in theory (A. Blok blamed the acmeists for their absence), received a tense sound in the work of N. Gumilyov, A. Akhmatova, O. Mandelstam. The acmeistic period of these poets did not last long, after which their poetry went far into the realm of the spirit, intuitive revelations, and mystery. This largely allowed researchers, in particular the literary critic B. Eikhenbaum, to consider acmeism as a new stage in the development of symbolist poetics, denying him independence. However, the titanic questions of the spirit, which were in the center of attention of symbolism, were not specially pointed out by the acmeists. Acmeism returned to literature "a man of normal growth", spoke to the reader in compliance with the usual intonation, devoid of exaltation and superhuman tension. The main accomplishment of acmeism as a literary trend is the change in scale, the humanization of the literature of the turn of the century that deviated towards the gigantomania. The outstanding scientist S. Averintsev wittily called acmeism "a challenge to the spirit of the times as the spirit of utopia." The proportionality of a person to the world, subtle psychology, colloquial intonation, the search for a full-fledged word were proposed by the acmeists in response to the transcendent nature of the symbolists. The stylistic wanderings of the symbolists and futurists were replaced by exactingness to a single word, “chains of difficult forms”, religious and philosophical searches were replaced by a balance of metaphysics and the “local”. The acmeists preferred the poet’s difficult service to the world to the idea of ​​“art for the sake of art” (the human and creative path of A. Akhmatova became the highest expression of such service).

Poorly substantiated as a literary trend, acmeism united exceptionally gifted poets - N. Gumilyov, A. Akhmatova, O. Mandelstam, the formation of creative individuals of which took place in the atmosphere of the "Poet's Workshop", disputes about "beautiful clarity". The history of acmeism can be viewed as a kind of dialogue between its three prominent representatives. Subsequently, acmeistic poetics was complexly and ambiguously refracted in their work.

In the poetry of N. Gumilyov, acmeism is realized in a craving for the discovery of new worlds, exotic images and plots. The path of the poet in Gumilyov's lyrics is the path of a warrior, a conquistador, a discoverer. The muse that inspires the poet is the Muse of Far Wanderings. Renewal of poetic imagery, respect for the "phenomenon as such" was carried out in Gumilev's work through travels to unknown, but quite real lands. Travels in N. Gumilyov's poems carried the impressions of the poet's specific expeditions to Africa and, at the same time, echoed symbolic wanderings in "other worlds". Gumilyov contrasted the transcendental worlds of the Symbolists with the continents he had first discovered for Russian poetry.

A. Akhmatova's acmeism had a different character, devoid of attraction to exotic plots and colorful imagery. The originality of the creative manner of Akhmatova as a poet of the acmeist direction is the imprint of spiritualized objectivity. Through the amazing accuracy of the material world, Akhmatova displays a whole spiritual structure. “In this couplet - the whole woman,” spoke of Akhmatova The song of the last meeting M. Tsvetaeva. In delicately drawn details, Akhmatova, as Mandelstam remarked, gave "all the enormous complexity and psychological richness of the Russian novel of the 19th century." The poetry of A. Akhmatova was greatly influenced by the work of In. Annensky, whom Akhmatova considered "a harbinger, an omen, of what happened to us later." The material density of the world, the psychological symbolism, the associativity of Annensky's poetry were largely inherited by Akhmatova.

The local world of O. Mandelstam was marked by a sense of mortal fragility before faceless eternity. Mandelstam's acmeism is "the complicity of beings in a conspiracy against emptiness and non-existence." The overcoming of emptiness and non-existence takes place in culture, in the eternal creations of art: the arrow of the Gothic bell tower reproaches the sky with the fact that it is empty. Among the acmeists, Mandelstam was distinguished by an unusually sharply developed sense of historicism. The thing is inscribed in his poetry in a cultural context, in a world warmed by “secret teleological warmth”: a person was surrounded not by impersonal objects, but by “utensils”, all the mentioned objects acquired biblical overtones. At the same time, Mandelstam was disgusted by the abuse of sacred vocabulary, the "inflation of sacred words" among the Symbolists.

From the acmeism of Gumilyov, Akhmatova and Mandelstam, the adamism of S. Gorodetsky, M. Zenkevich, V. Narbut, who constituted the naturalistic wing of the movement, differed significantly. The dissimilarity of the Adamists with the Gumilyov-Akhmatova-Mandelstam triad has been repeatedly noted in criticism. In 1913, Narbut offered Zenkevich to found an independent group or go "from Gumilyov" to the Cubo-Futurists. The Adamic worldview was most fully expressed in the work of S. Gorodetsky. Roman Gorodetsky Adam described the life of a hero and a heroine - "two smart animals" - in an earthly paradise. Gorodetsky tried to restore in poetry the pagan, semi-animal worldview of our ancestors: many of his poems took the form of incantations, lamentations, contained bursts of emotional imagery extracted from the distant past of the scene of everyday life. The naive adamism of Gorodetsky, his attempts to return man to the shaggy embrace of nature, could not but evoke irony in the modernists, who were sophisticated and well studied the soul of a contemporary. Block in the preface to the poem Retribution noted that the slogan of Gorodetsky and the Adamists "was a man, but some other man, completely without humanity, some kind of primordial Adam."

Another Adamist, M. Zenkevich, according to the apt definition of Vyach. Ivanov, "was captivated by Matter and was horrified by it." Dialogues between man and nature in Zenkevich's work were replaced by gloomy pictures of the present, a premonition of the impossibility of restoring the lost harmony, balance in the relationship between man and the elements.

Book by V. Narbut Hallelujah contained variations on the theme of poems by S. Gorodetsky, included in the collection Willow. In contrast to Gorodetsky, Narbut gravitated not to the "leaf life", but to the image of the unsightly, sometimes naturalistically ugly sides of reality.

Acmeism united dissimilar creative individualities, manifested itself in various ways in the “spiritual objectivity” of A. Akhmatova, the “distant wanderings” of M. Gumilyov, the poetry of O. Mandelstam’s reminiscences, pagan dialogues with nature by S. Gorodetsky, M. Zenkevich, V. Narbut. The role of acmeism is in an effort to maintain a balance between symbolism, on the one hand, and realism, on the other. In the work of acmeists, there are numerous points of contact with symbolists and realists (especially with the Russian psychological novel of the 19th century), but in general, representatives of acmeism found themselves in the “middle of contrast”, not slipping into metaphysics, but not “mooring to the ground”.

Acmeism strongly influenced the development of Russian poetry in exile, on the "Parisian note": G. Ivanov, G. Adamovich, N. Otsup, I. Odoevtseva emigrated to France from Gumilyov's students. The best poets of the Russian emigration G. Ivanov and G. Adamovich developed acmeistic principles: restraint, muffled intonation, expressive asceticism, subtle irony. AT Soviet Russia the manner of acmeists (mainly N. Gumilyov) was imitated by Nik. Tikhonov, I. Selvinsky, M. Svetlov, E. Bagritsky. Acmeism also had a significant impact on the author's song.

Tatiana Scriabina

The name of the literary modernist trend in Russian poetry of the early twentieth century, akmeizim, comes from the Greek word "akme", translated into Russian meaning the heyday, peak or pinnacle of something (according to other versions, the term comes from the Greek roots of Akhmatova's pseudonym "akmatus").

This literary school was created in opposition to symbolism, as a response to its extremes and excesses. Acmeists advocated the return of clarity and materiality to the poetic word and the refusal to let in the mysterious fog of mysticism when describing reality (as was customary in symbolism). The adherents of acmeism advocated the accuracy of the word, the objectivity of themes and images, the acceptance of the surrounding world in all its diversity, colorfulness, sonority and tangible concreteness.

The founders of acmeism are such Russian poets of the Silver Age of Russian poetry as Nikolai Gumilyov, Anna Akhmatova and Sergei Gorodetsky, later they were joined by O. Mandelstam, V. Narbut, M. Zenkevich.

In 1912, they founded their own school of professional skill, the Workshop of Poets, in 1913, articles by Gumilyov “The Heritage of Symbolism and Acmeism” and S. Gorodetsky “Some Trends in Modern Russian Poetry” appear in the Apollon magazine, in which the term “ acmeism”, describes its main features. In these articles, which are a kind of program for the acmeist movement, its main humanistic plan was proclaimed - the revival of a new thirst for life in people, the return of a sense of its colorfulness and brightness. The first works of acmeist poets were published in the third issue of the Apollo magazine (1913) after the release of manifesto articles. During 1913-1919. the acmeists' own magazine "Hyperboreans" was published (therefore they were also often called "Hyperboreans").

Unlike symbolism, which, according to many literary researchers, has undeniable similarities with the art of music (like music, it is also mysterious, polysemantic, can have a large number of interpretations), acmeism is more close to such three-dimensional spatial trends in art as architecture, sculpture or painting.

Poems-poets of acmeists are distinguished not only by their amazing beauty, but also by their accuracy, consistency, extremely simple meaning, understandable to any reader. The words used in the works of acmeists are designed to convey exactly the meaning that was originally laid down in them, there are no various exaggerations or comparisons, metaphors and hyperbole are practically not used. Acmeist poets were alien to aggressiveness, political and social topics they weren't interested great importance given to higher human values, the spiritual world of man comes to the fore. Their poems are very easy to understand, listen to and remember, because complex things in their talented description become simple and understandable for each of us.

Representatives of this literary movement were united not only by a single passion for the new school of poetry, in life they were also friends and like-minded people, their organization was distinguished by great cohesion and unity of views, although they lacked a certain literary platform and standards on which they could rely when writing their works. Poems of each of them, differing in structure, character, mood and other creative features were extremely specific, accessible to the understanding of readers, as required by the school of acmeism, and did not cause additional questions after reading them.

Despite the friendship and solidarity between the acmeist poets, the limited scope of this literary movement for such brilliant poets as Gumilyov, Akhmatova or Mandelstam soon became tight. After Gumilyov's quarrel with Gorodetsky in February 1914, the Poets' Workshop school of professional skills, after two years of its existence, 10 issues of the Hyperborea magazine and several poetry collections, broke up. Although the poets of this organization did not cease to attribute themselves to this literary movement and were published in literary magazines and newspapers, in which the publishers called them acmeists. Young poets Georgy Ivanov, Georgy Adamovich, Nikolai Otsup, Irina Odoevtseva called themselves successors of Gumilyov's ideas.

A unique feature of such a literary movement as acmeism is that it was born and developed exclusively on the territory of Russia, having a huge impact on further development Russian poetry of the early twentieth century. Literary researchers call the invaluable merit of the acmeist poets the invention of a special, subtle way of conveying the spiritual world of lyrical characters that can be betrayed with the help of a single movement, gesture, a way of listing any things or important little things that cause many associations to appear in the imagination of readers. This ingeniously simple kind of "materialization" of the feelings and experiences of the main lyrical hero has enormous power of influence and becomes understandable and accessible to every reader.

Acmeism- a literary modernist trend (from the Greek "akme" - a point, a peak, the highest degree of something).

Features of acmeism.

  • Sensory perception of reality, the image of the world in all its beauty, diversity, sonority. " Among the Acmeists, the rose again became good in itself, with its petals, smell and color, and not with its conceivable similarities with mystical love or anything else ”(S. Gorodetsky).
  • The task of literature is to show the "beautiful clarity" of life, or clarism(from lat. clarus - clear).
  • Return to the image of the material world - "nature", content specificity, « the intrinsic value of each phenomenon "; Acmeists believed that this world should not be abandoned, it was necessary to look for some values ​​​​in it and capture them in their works, and do this with the help of accurate and understandable images, not vague symbols.
  • The image of a person, the whole multifaceted range of his feelings and emotions, the poeticization of the natural principle. Acmeists called their course also adamism, linking with the biblical Adam the idea of ​​a clear and direct view of the world.
  • Purpose of art- Ennoblement of the human soul.
  • The specific content of the word, and not symbolic, the clarity of the image, sharpness of details. Gumilyov urged to seek not " unsteady words", and the words" with more sustainable content.
  • Poetry is the same craft that can be taught to anyone.
  • Perfection of poetic skill.
  • Generalization of the best experience of poets of previous generations.

From the history of acmeism in Russia.

  • The current was formed as a response to the extremes of symbolism (the image of the ideal side of the world, mysticism, etc.)
  • Representatives of acmeism: S. Gorodetsky, N. Gumilyov (the author of the term), O. Mandelstam, V. Narbut, A. Akhmatova, M. Zenkevich and some others.
  • Acmeism began to stand out as an independent trend in Russia in 1910.
  • The direction was headed by Nikolay Gumilyov and Sergey Gorodetsky.
  • The group was called "Workshop of poets", originated in 1911.
  • December 9, 1912 - the program of acmeists was first proclaimed in St. Petersburg, in the cabaret "Stray Dog".
  • Articles of acmeists, which reflect the principles of the direction: N. Gumilyov "The legacy of symbolism and acmeism", 1913 .; S. Gorodetsky "Some currents in modern Russian poetry", 1913; O. Mandelstam "Morning of Acmeism", published in 1919)
  • Literary body of acmeists - magazine "Apollo"(began to be published in 1909).
  • Collection of acmeists "Hyperborea", published in 1913-1919.
  • The direction did not last long, already in 1914 the "Workshop of Poets" broke up. However, the features of the poetry of acmeism were manifested in the poems of A. Akhmatova. A. Blok, M. Tsvetaeva, S. Yesenin, B. Pasternak and other poets.

Acmeism and Symbolism.

General:

  • "thirst for culture"
  • national traditions in creativity,
  • Europeanism.

Differences:

  • different WAYS to achieve these goals.

The material was prepared by: Melnikova Vera Alexandrovna.


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