Vera Inber

Vera Inber

Vera Mikhaylovna Inber, born Spenzer, _ru. Вера Инбер (July 10, 1890, OdessaNovember 11, 1972, Moscow) was a Russian-Soviet poet and writer.

Her father owned a scientific publishing house "Matematika" ("Mathematics"). Vera briefly attended a History and Philology department in Odessa. Her first poems were published in 1910 in local newspapers. In 1910-1914 she lived in Paris and Switzerland; then she moved to Moscow. In 1920s worked as a journalist, writing prose, articles, and essays, and traveling across the country and abroad.

During World War II she lived in besieged Leningrad where her husband worked as the director at a medical institute. Much of her poetry and prose during those times is dedicated to the life and resistance of Soviet citizens. In 1946 she received an esteemed governmental award ("Gosudarstvennaya premiya SSSR") for her siege-time poem "Pulkovskij meridian" ("Pulkov Meridian"). She was also awarded several medals.

She translated into Russian such Ukrainian poets, as Taras Shevchenko, and other foreign poets, such as Paul Eluard and Sándor Petőfi.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Véra Inber — Véra Mikhaïlovna Inber, poétesse russe, est née à Odessa en 1890. Elle fait ses premiers recueils de vers en 1912. Elle est alors âgée de 22 ans. Biographie Dans les années 1920, elle déménage à Moscou et écrit pour de nombreux journaux ou revues …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Vera Inber — Wera Michailowna Inber (russisch Вера Михайловна Инбер; * 10. Juli 1890 in Odessa; † 11. November 1972 in Leningrad) war eine russisch sowjetische Schriftstellerin. Von 1910–1914 lebte sie in Paris. In den 1920er Jahren schloss sie sich den… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • INBER, VERA MIKHAILOVNA — (1890–1972), Soviet Russian poet. She was born and educated in Odessa and spent the years 1910–14 abroad. Her writings date back to 1911, when she joined the Acmeists, an anti symbolist group of modernist lyric poets, which also numbered in its… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Wera Michailowna Inber — Vera Inber Wera Michailowna Inber, russisch Вера Михайловна Инбер, geborene Shpenzer, auch Vera Inber genannt (* 10. Juli 1890 in Odessa; † 11. November 1972 in Moskau), war eine russische Schriftstellerin, die im Westen …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Vera (Vorname) — Kyrillisch (Russisch) вера Transl.: Vera Transkr.: Wera Vera ist ein weiblicher Vorname …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Alexander Frumkin — Alexander Naumovich Frumkin (Александр Наумович Фрумкин) (October 24, 1895 ndash; May 27, 1976), Russian/Soviet electrochemist, member of the Russian Academy of Sciences since 1932, founder of the Russian Journal of Electrochemistry… …   Wikipedia

  • Literatura de Rusia — Un documento de corteza de abedul. Con el término literatura rusa se alude no solo a la literatura de Rusia, sino también a la literatura escrita en ruso por miembros de otras naciones que se independizaron de la extinta Unión de Repúblicas… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Gente de Odesa — Anexo:Gente de Odesa Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Nacieron en Odesa Anna Ajmátova Gran poetisa rusa, promotora del acmeísmo Isaak Bábel Periodista, escritor y dramaturgo soviético ju …   Wikipedia Español

  • Инбер, Вера Михайловна — Инбер Вера Михайловна Имя при рождении: Вера Моисеевна Шпенцер Дата рождения …   Википедия

  • List of Russian language poets — Poets who wrote much of their poetry in the Russian language.A* Irakli Abashidze (born 1909) * Gennady Aigi (1934–2006) * Bella Akhmadulina (born 1937) * Anna Akhmatova (1889–1966) * Ivan Akhmetiev (born 1950) * Gennady Alexeyev (1932–1987) *… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”