Antonina Kymytval Explained

Antonina Aleksandrovna Kymytval (Russian: Антони́на Алекса́ндровна Кымытва́ль, '''Кымъытвааԓ'''|translit=Kym"ytvaal, pronounced as /qəmːʔətˈwaːɮ/) (April 22, 1938 – October 29, 2015) was a Chukchi poet and children's writer who wrote mainly in her native language and also in Russian.[1]

Biography

Born in the village of Mukhomornoye, Anadyrsky District, Kymytval was the daughter of a reindeer herder,[2] and was called "Rul-tyne" (Руль-тынэ|translit=Rul'-tyne, pronounced as /ruɮʲ.təˈnɛ/) at birth. Her parents died when she was young, as did her twin brother, after that she was renamed "Kymytval", Chukchi for "worm", in an attempt to ward off evil. She first attended boarding school before entering the Anadyr Pedagogical College in 1958, from which she graduated the following year; at this time she began to write poetry, publishing her first volume, in Chukchi, in Magadan in 1960. This same year she entered the Higher Party School of Khabarovsk, and soon thereafter she became deputy editor of the Sovetskaya Chukotka newspaper. She went to Moscow for further study in 1966 and 1967, and in 1968 published her first volume of verse for children. She continued to write plays and poems for children, developing a relationship with the Magadan Puppet Theater. Kymytval lived in Magadan for many years before her death.[3] Late in life she was incapacitated by a series of strokes; she died in Abinsk, in the home of her daughter.[4] [5]

Kymytval wrote lyric poetry, and concerned herself with descriptions of the landscape in which she lived.[6] Some of her work has been translated into Russian.[7] A member of the Writers' Union since 1962, she received the Order of the Badge of Honor and the Medal "For Labour Valour" in 1988. In 1990 she received an award for her work from the UNESCO International Children's Book Council.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Encyclopedia: Кымытваль Антонина Александровна . Kymytval, Antonina Aleksandrovna . Северная энциклопедия = Practical Dictionary of Siberia and North . Compl. by E. R. Akbalyan . 2004 . Moscow . Paulsen; European Pub. . 5-98797-001-6 . 483. (in Russian and English)
  2. Web site: Осиротела Чукотка: умерла первая чукотская поэтесса Антонина Кымытваль. press.lv. Aug 14, 2019.
  3. Web site: Кымытваль Антонина Александровна. Магадан и Колыма - Главный новостной информационный портал. Aug 14, 2019.
  4. Web site: Биография Антонина Кымытваль. www.peoples.ru. Aug 14, 2019.
  5. Web site: ЦС КМНС - Умерла Антонина Кымытваль. www.csipn.ru. Aug 14, 2019.
  6. Book: Mark Nuttall. Encyclopedia of the Arctic. 23 September 2005. Routledge. 978-1-136-78680-8. 1193–.
  7. Book: G. Diment. Y. Slezkine. Between Heaven and Hell: The Myth of Siberia in Russian Culture. 30 April 2016. Palgrave Macmillan US. 978-1-137-08914-4. 218–.