Alexander Pushkin’s long narrative poem
Poltava, composed in 1828, centers on a historical figure, the Ukrainian hetman Mazepa [or ‘Mazeppa’], telling the story of his disastrous love affair with his god-daughter Maria [or ‘Mariia’] and unsuccessful aspiration to rule Ukraine independently from Russia. A highly complex work,
Poltavaweaves together diverse narrative and stylistic strands: its plot combines romance with political intrigue, its exposition dovetails third-person narrative into dramatic dialogues, its hybrid genre synthesizes neo-classical, romantic, realist, and folkloric elements. Pushkin considered
Poltavahis most mature and original work up to that date. However, the poem was strongly criticized upon publication for lack of unity, and generally underestimated…
2678 words
Citation: Rikoun, Polina. "Poltava". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 17 December 2007 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=11203, accessed 22 November 2024.]