Отношение Бориса Пастернака к литературной традиции и современности
Abstract
Boris Pasternak debuted at the onset of the 20th century, when Russian art witnessed radical
transformations consisting in a departure from tradition and a quest for new content and forms
of artistic expression. His family, however, disapproved of modernist aesthetics. The young poet thus found himself at an aesthetic crossroads and evaded making a decisive choice. On the one
hand, he referred to nineteenth-century poetry, and on the other hand, he took an active part in the
current literary life and maintained contacts with the Symbolists. He joined the moderate Futurist
group ‘Tsentrifuga,’ which, however, did not exert a fundamental impact upon his oeuvre. Pasternak
voiced opinions regarding various aesthetic problems and in the 1920s started to free himself from
the influence of the then dominating literary milieus. He severed contacts with Futurism (including
Mayakovsky), chose a path of his own, and rewrote a number of his early poems. At the beginning of
the 1930s he announced his ‘second birth’. This involved evoking the traditions of nineteenth-century
art and in particular, realism. Pasternak emphasized the priority of content over form and the
merit of simplicity of poetic statements, the principle to which he remained loyal to the very end of
his creative path.
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