“Parad Idiotov” by Gehrikh Sapgir in the Context of Twentieth-Century Poetry Cover Image

"Парад идиотов" Генриха Сапгира в контексте поэзии XX века
“Parad Idiotov” by Gehrikh Sapgir in the Context of Twentieth-Century Poetry

Author(s): Svetlana Artyomova
Subject(s): Literary Texts, Poetry, Russian Literature
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego
Keywords: twentieth-century poetry; motif; continuity; transformation; dialogue; Soviet poetry; Genrikh Sapgir

Summary/Abstract: This paper analyses and interprets possible sources of the subtext in Genrikh Sapgir’s poem “Parad idiotov” [‘A Parade of idiots’], namely motifs of the road and marching onward, as reflected in the revolutionary parades of the early twentieth century and in the Soviet poetry for children and for the general reader. In the poetry of Aleksandr Galich and Iosif Brodsky the revolutionary fervour of the parade is presented ironically. In it, the distinctions between military and civil parades, between the jubilee parade and a workers’ demonstration are elided: movement to the music itself becomes a characteristic motif of the poetry of the 1960s, so that the motif of the parade becomes not just a literary signifier, but also a feature of everyday life, suggesting on the one hand joy and celebration, and on the other the greatness of the country and the glorification of the Soviet man who strides along “the correct path”. In parallel with the semantics of a holiday, the motif of the procession acquires an additional meaning (also inspired by the era) of a forced movement, the march of prisoners towards their place of imprisonment. Sometimes the parade motif takes on both meanings: the joyous march and the listless marching of puppets become woven into a single whole. It is noteworthy that in children’s poetry, the parade motif is indistinguishable from its counterpart in “adult” poetry. The lyrical subject of Sapgir’s poem, who walks towards the parade of idiots, merges with it: movement is proclaimed to be the goal of life, and death for a dream with a blissful smile – the romantic idea of an idiot. It is probably no coincidence that Sapgir’s text contains no direct quotes from previous “parade” texts nor clear markers of a genetic connections with them: the poet is quoting not texts, but the epoch.

  • Issue Year: 2021
  • Issue No: 14
  • Page Range: 191-202
  • Page Count: 12
  • Language: Russian