마야코프스키와 김수영의 정치시: 비교연구를 위한 시론(試論)Political Poetry of Vladimir Mayakovsky and Kim Soo-Young
- Other Titles
- Political Poetry of Vladimir Mayakovsky and Kim Soo-Young
- Authors
- 이명현
- Issue Date
- 2017
- Publisher
- 한국러시아문학회
- Keywords
- 마야코프스키; 김수영; 강철의 시; 온몸의 시; 정치시; 선전선동시; 아방가르드; 레프; Vladimir Mayakovsky; Kim Soo-Young; Poetry of steel; poetry of whole body; political poetry; agitprop; avant-garde; LEF
- Citation
- 러시아어문학연구논집, no.59, pp.75 - 95
- Indexed
- KCI
- Journal Title
- 러시아어문학연구논집
- Number
- 59
- Start Page
- 75
- End Page
- 95
- URI
- https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/132417
- ISSN
- 1229-1188
- Abstract
- Vladimir Mayakovsky and Kim Soo-Young are comparable with each other in that they are representing poetic avant-garde in Russia and Korea, respectively, and they both opened a new prospect in the field of modern political and participatory poetry. Mayakovsky defined his poetry as poetry of steel in his poems published posthumously. “Poetry of steel” is an expression condensing Mayakovsky’s avant-garde perspective that sees poetry in the same line with politics. In his prose released posthumously which discusses the relations of poetry and politics, Kim Soo-Young made clear that poetry is “pushing whole body forward with whole body.” Based on this statement, his poetry and poetics are called as “poetry of whole body.” For Mayakovsky and Kim Soo-Young, poetic avant-garde and political avant-garde are not conflicting with each other, rather they are organically unified and mutually defining. For Mayakovsky and Kim Soo-Young, poetry is rebellious by nature, and political aspect is fundamental to their poems. It is well known that Mayakovsky emphasized innovativeness as a fundamental principle of writing poems. He constantly stressed that new substance comes out of new form, showing that he keenly understood hidden value system and actual power of language-material-form. Kim Soo-Young can be deemed as a descendant of futurist Vladimir Mayakovsky since Kim also consistently pursued innovation of poetry and recognized the power of language(“poetry as power”).
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Collections - College of Liberal Arts > Department of Russian Language and Literature > 1. Journal Articles
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