Acmeist
See also: acmeist
English
Alternative forms
Pronunciation
- enPR: ăkʹ-mē-ĭst, IPA(key): /ˈæk.mi.ɪst/
- Rhymes: -ækmiɪst
Adjective
Acmeist (comparative more Acmeist, superlative most Acmeist)
- Of or pertaining to Acmeism, a transient poetic school in Russia in the early 1900s.
- 1973, Clarence Brown, Mandelstam, Cambridge University Press, published 1978, →ISBN, page 185:
- He was Acmeist in spades.
- 1995, Justin Doherty, The Acmeist Movement in Russian Poetry: Culture and the Word, Clarendon Press, page 192:
- As such, they reveal a central concern in Acmeist practice, but do not necessarily specify qualities which are uniquely Acmeist.
- 2006, Kirsten Blythe Painter, Flint on a Bright Stone: A Revolution of Precision and Restraint in American, Russian, and German Modernism, Stanford University Press, →ISBN, page 86:
- The poem is also Acmeist in the speaker’s countering of his previous emotional abandon (“a thousand sorrows”) with his present moderation—a simple declaration of love instead of exhaustion and yearning.
Translations
pertaining to Acmeism
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Noun
Acmeist (plural Acmeists)
- An Acmeist poet, a member of the Acmeist school.
- 1993 July 11, Jodi Daynard, “In Short: Nonfiction”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:
- The Russian poet Anna Akhmatova, who died in 1966 at the age of 77, belongs to the latter category. One of the leading poets of her era, she was a member of the Acmeists, a group of poets who sought—unlike the mystical Symbolists who preceded them—to write about the tangible world.
Translations
Further reading
- Acmeist poetry on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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