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  1. Sophia Yakovlevna Parnok (Russian: София Яковлевна Парнок, Yiddish: סאָפיאַ פארנוכ; 30 July 1885 O.S./11 August 1885 (N.S.) – 26 August 1933) was a Russian poet, journalist and translator.

    • Poet
    • 20th-century
  2. 3 de abr. de 2017 · Sophia Parnok (translation by Diana Burgin) A woman known throughout Russia as one of their first openly lesbian poets, Sophia Parnok was a Jewish poet born in Russia in 1885. Though her work is not widespread, it remains impactful throughout the Russian queer community as well as the global queer community.

  3. 27 de jan. de 2017 · Sophia Parnok and the Writing of a Lesbian Poet's Life | Slavic Review | Cambridge Core. Home. > Journals. > Slavic Review. > Volume 51 Issue 2. > Sophia Parnok and the Writing of a Lesbian Poet's Life. English. Français. Sophia Parnok and the Writing of a Lesbian Poet's Life. Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2017.

  4. Sophia Parnok was a Russian-Jewish poet born in 1885 and was considered the only openly lesbian voice of the Silver Age of Russian Poetry. During her lifetime, she published five volumes of poetry, a substantial body of literary criticism, and authored the libretti of several operas.

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    • Sophia Parnok2
    • Sophia Parnok3
    • Sophia Parnok4
  5. Sophia Parnok is a Russian poet and the only openly lesbian voice in Russian poetry. From the standpoint of her traditional Russian poetic family, Parnok was an outsider and a “fair stranger.”¹ From her own perspective, however, she was an insider, the possessor of esoteric, elemental knowledge.

  6. Sophia Parnok 217 creation of a specifically lesbian poetic persona, a specific politics of the personal and the process of writing that poet's life story, from poem to poem and collection to collection. The telling of her life from birth to death unifies the entire opus, makes a whole of disparate parts.9

  7. Sophia Yakovlevna Parnok was a Russian poet, journalist and translator. From the age of six, she wrote poetry in a style quite distinct from the predominant poets of her times, revealing instead her own sense of Russianness, Jewish identity and lesbianism. Besides her literary work, she worked as a journalist under the pen name of Andrei Polianin.