Varvara Nikolaevna Naumova (1907—1941) - Soviet poetess.
Varvara Nikolaevna Naumova | |
---|---|
Date of Birth | 1907 |
Place of Birth | St. Petersburg |
Date of death | 1941 |
Place of death | Leningrad |
Citizenship | the USSR |
Occupation | poet |
Years of creativity | 1920s — 1941 |
Language of Works | Russian |
Debut | "Drawing" (1932) |
Biography
Born in St. Petersburg in 1907. She graduated from the Leningrad University, worked in the magazines "Literary Studies" and "Star". Since the 1920s he has been trying himself in poetry, and in 1932 he published his debut collection of poems “Drawing”, edited by Alexander Prokofiev [1] [2] .
Soon after this, Barbara Naumova leaves as part of a geological exploration expedition to the extreme north. He has been working at Tiksi for two years, and after returning he goes to work at the Institute of the Peoples of the North . She continues her poetic activity, writes poems Spring in Tiksi, translates the poetry of Evenki authors, is published in the collections The Sun Over the Plague, and the North Sings. New poems are published in the magazines "Leningrad", "Star", "Literary Contemporary", is preparing a second collection of authors [1] [2] .
But plans interrupt the start of World War II . Like many of Leningrad, Varvara Naumova goes to the construction of defensive fortifications around his native city. With the onset of winter, hunger comes. At the end of 1941 the poetess dies [1] [2] .
The collection of her poems "Spring in Tiksi" is published 20 years later, in 1961, thanks to the efforts of friends [1] [2] .
Poems by Varvara Naumova were repeatedly published in collections of poetry of authors who died during the Great Patriotic War. In 1965, her work was included in the collection “Soviet poets who fell during the Great Patriotic War” [2] , in 1985 - in the collection “Victory. Poems of the war years. 1941-1945 ” [3] .
Works
- "Drawing" (1932) - a collection of poems
- Spring in Tiksi (1935)
- "Spring in Tiksi" (1961) - a collection of poems
- "Ulgarrikon and Gokdalukkon" - poem, translated from Evenki
- “Sulakichansky” (1940) - a tale by Gregory Chinkov (1915–1960s), translated from Evenki [4]
- Summer (1941)
- " Summer Again " (1941)
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 By war shot lines. Varvara Naumova (Inaccessible link) . Journal Lexicon. May 2010. Number 50. Appeal date January 8, 2016. Archived March 4, 2016.
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 Soviet poets who fell in World War II / Editors V. Cardin, I. Ye. Usok. - 2nd ed. - Owls. writer [Leningrad branch], 1965. - p. 446. - 746 p.
- ↑ Victory. Poems of the war years. 1941-1945. - M .: Fiction, 1985.
- ↑ Chinkov G. Sulakichan: Evenki fairy tale / abridged translation from Evenki language (literary interpretation of the notational mark) V. Naumova. - M., L .: Children's Literature Publishing House, 1940. - 44 p. - 50 000 copies