• Source: Haidamaky (poem)
    • Haidamaki (Ukrainian: Гайдамаки), also transliterated Hajdamaky, Haydamaki, or as Haydamaks is an epic poem by Taras Shevchenko about the Koliivshchyna uprising led by Maksym Zalizniak and Ivan Gonta.

      The poem was written in about 1839–1841 and first published in full as a separate book in Saint Petersburg in 1841. It is dedicated to his friend, artist, Vasyl Ivanovych Hryhorovych. It is included in later editions of the classic collection of poetry, Kobzar.


      Structure


      The poem consists of an introduction, 11 main chapters, an "Epilogue," a prose preface, and "Precepts." The introduction and the "Epilogue" are the compositional framing of the poem. In the introduction, the poet declares his ideological intention to glorify the Haidamaks. Here he asserts the idea of the nationality of literature and the right of Ukrainian literature to exist and develop.


      Plot


      The story has two intertwined storylines: the development and course of the uprising called Koliivshchyna and the story of Yarema's personal life.


      Reception


      From Taras ShevchenkoThe poem was met with sharp criticism by the literary critic Vissarion Belinsky; in the magazine Otechestvennye Zapiski he criticized Shevchenko's "inclination to romantic pompous ingenuity".


      Cultural references


      The band Haidamaky, takes their name from the poem, and released an album entitled Kobzar.


      See also



      Kobzar
      Taras Shevchenko
      Izbornyk
      Koliivshchyna (film)
      List of Ukrainian-language poets
      List of Ukrainian-language writers
      Ukrainian literature


      References




      External links


      Translation by John Weir

    Kata Kunci Pencarian: