A Journey to Arzrum explained

A Journey to Arzrum during the Campaign of 1829
Author:Alexander Pushkin
Language:Russian, with some French
Country:Russian Empire
Genre:Travel literature
Publisher:Sovremennik
Title Orig:Путешествие в Арзрум во время похода 1829 года
Orig Lang Code:ru
Translator:The first translation of 'Journey to Arzrum' into English was by Birgitta Ingemanson in 1974
Release Date:1836
Media Type:Print

A Journey to Arzrum (Russian: «Путешествие в Арзрум»; full title: A Journey to Arzrum during the Campaign of 1829, «Путешествие в Арзрум во время похода 1829 года») is a work of travel literature by Alexander Pushkin. It was originally written by Pushkin in 1829, partially published in 1830, reworked in 1835, and then fully published in Pushkin's journal Sovremennik in 1836.[1]

The work recounts the poet's travels to the Caucasus, Armenia, and Arzrum (modern Erzurum) in eastern Turkey at the time of the Russo-Turkish War (1828–29). The Tsarist authorities never allowed Pushkin to travel abroad and he had only been permitted to travel as far as Tiflis (Tbilisi), capital of Georgia and Russian Transcaucasia. His unauthorized journey across the border into Turkey infuriated Tsar Nicholas I, who "threatened to confine Pushkin to his estate once again."[2]

Pushkin's text challenged, though did not entirely reject, the Orientalist romanticism of his earlier Prisoner of the Caucasus.[3] As a result, it was not popularly received by contemporary readers who expected a romantic epic poem about the Caucasus.[4]

A Journey to Arzrum was later adapted into a film during the Soviet era. Produced by Lenfilm and released on the 100th anniversary of Pushkin's passing in 1937, it was directed by Moisei Levin and starred Dmitri Zhuravlyov as Pushkin.[5]

English translations

. Mikhail Lermontov. A Hero of Our Time. Oxford. Oxford University Press. 2013. 978-0199652686.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Greenleaf. Monika Frenkel. Pushkin's 'Journey to Arzrum': The Poet at the Border. Slavic Review. 50. 4. Winter 1991. 940–945.
  2. Book: Lermontov, Mikhail. Nicholas Pasternak Slater. A Hero of Our Time. Oxford. Oxford University Press. 2013. 192. 978-0199652686.
  3. Book: Layton, Susan. Russian Literature and Empire: Conquest of the Caucasus from Pushkin to Tolstoy. Cambridge. Cambridge University Press. 1995. 62-66. 978-0521444439.
  4. Book: Langleben, Maria. A Journey to Arzrum: The Structure and the Message. Reid. Robert. Andrew. Joe. Two Hundred Years of Pushkin, Vol. 3: Pushkin's Legacy. Amsterdam and New York. Rodopi. 2004. 89. 978-9042009585.
  5. Puteshestvie v Arzrum at the Internet Movie Database.