The New York Group of Poets

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The New York Group of Poets (also: The New York Group of Ukrainian Poets, or The New York Group; Ukrainian: Нью-Йоркська Група; N'iu-Iorks'ka hrupa) is a group of Ukrainian émigré modernist poets (mostly, but also included artists) that originated in New York City in the mid-1950s, imbuing the postwar Ukrainian émigré literary milieu with avant-garde spirit and fresh poetic forms. The poets eagerly experimented and embraced such fashionable at the time artistic and philosophical trends as surrealism and existentialism. While the label "New York Group" commonly refers to seven founding members, namely , Yuriy Tarnawsky, , Zhenia Vasylkivska, Emma Andijewska, Patrytsiia Kylyna (a pen name of Patricia Nell Warren), and Vira Vovk, it also includes five poets who joined the original contingent a decade or even more than a decade later: , Oleh Kowerko, , , and . These latter poets betray the same inclination toward formal experimentation as well as display continuity in thematic preferences.[1]

The New York Group's most active period spans approximately fifteen years, from the mid-1950s through the early 1970s and coincides with the publication of its annual poetry almanac Novi poezii (New Poetry).[2] In 1990 Boychuk and Rewakowicz, in cooperation with the Writers' Union of Ukraine, founded a literary magazine Svito-vyd in Kyiv, which was published until 1999.[3] The most iconic thematic innovations introduced by the New York Group comprise the utilization of Spanish and/or Latin American material[1] as well as the incorporation of a play element, urban motifs, and erotica.

The phenomenon of the New York Group provides an interesting study for exploring cultural and aesthetic ramifications of exile.[4] Having settled mostly in the United States, the poets welcomed their exilic condition and nurtured their link with their homeland via poetry written in the mother tongue. This was their way of paying tribute to the poetic tradition of their ethnic kin, while incorporating formal and thematic innovations of the Western world.[5] In fact, some critics drew parallels between the poets of the New York Group and the poets of the Beat Generation,[6] although, arguably, the New York Group displays more affinity with the European modernist tradition than with the American post-World War II literary movement.

Membership[]

The group was created by Bohdan Boychuk[7] and Yuriy Tarnawsky, with Bohdan Rubchak joining soon after.[8]

Poets[]

Artists[]

  • Bohdan Pevny
  • Slava Gerulak
  • Jurij Solovij

References[]

  1. ^ a b "Archived copy". www.utoronto.ca. Archived from the original on 28 July 2003. Retrieved 17 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ Maria G. Rewakowicz, Literature, Exile, Alterity: The New York Group of Ukrainian Poets, Boston: Academic Studies Press, 2014. ISBN 9781618114037.
  3. ^ Oleksa Semenchenko, "The New York Group in Ukraine (1990-1996): The Beginning of Communication between Two Ukrainian Literary Worlds, Canadian-American Slavic Studies 33:2-4 (1999): 245-52.
  4. ^ Maria G. Rewakowicz, "Periphery versus Centre: The New York Group's Poetics of Exile," Canadian Slavonic Papers 45 (2003): 441-57.
  5. ^ Melanie Pytlowany, "Continuity and Innovation in the Poetry of the New York Group," Journal of Ukrainian Graduate Studies 2.1 (1977): 3-21.
  6. ^ Lisa Efimov-Schneider, "Poetry of the New York Group: Ukrainian Poets in an American Setting," Canadian Slavonic Papers 23 (1981): 291-301.
  7. ^ "Boychuk, Bohdan". Encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2017-02-27.
  8. ^ Fraze-Frazenko, Oleksandr (1 January 2017). An Aquarium in the Sea. The Complete Script (First ed.). Cambridge, MA: Harvard Book Store. p. 39. ISBN 978-1-63587-462-4. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  9. ^ "The Sarmatian Review" (PDF). Ruf.rice.edu. September 2015. Retrieved 2017-02-27.
Retrieved from ""