Yuri Ivask


Yuri Pavlovich Ivask was a Russian, Estonian poet and literary critic; in his later years an American scholar of Russian literature.

Biography

Yuri Ivask was born in Moscow, son of Pavel Ivask, a merchant of Estonian origins, and his Russian wife. In 1920 the family moved to Estonia where Ivask enrolled into the Tartu University, which he graduated in 1932. In 1943 he was mobilized into the German army but has never made it to the front due to poor health. In 1944, anticipating the advance of the Red Army, he fled to Germany and in 1946 joined there the Hamburg University to study Slavistics and philosophy. In 1949 he moved to the USA where he earned his Ph.D. in Slavic languages and literatures at the Harvard University. In 1955 Ivask received the American citizenship. In 1969-1977 he taught in the Kansas, Indiana and Washington Universities, then became the head of the Russian literature department in the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. George Ivask retired in 1977.

Career

Yuri Ivask started publishing poetry in 1929, occasionally using pseudonyms, mostly in Put, a magazine founded by Nikolai Berdyaev, who exerted a major influence upon him, as well as Georgy Fedotov. Ivask's first book Severny Bereg came out in 1938 in Warsaw. He characterized his style as 'neo-barocco', while considering himself a follower of Gavriil Derzhavin. Arguably his best-remembered work is Homo Ludens, a free-montage autobiography in verse which remained unfinished.
Ivask compiled and edited In the West, an extensive anthology of the poets of the first and the second waves of Russian emigration, published books by Georgy Fedotov and Vasily Rozanov, as well as critical essays and Konstantin Leontyev, a monograph upon the controversial Russian religious thinker. His 1983 poem "A Greeting Word from an Orthodox Man" published in the Polish magazine Kultura in Paris made a great impression on Pope Paul II who invited Ivask to Vatican to have an audience with. The archives of Yuri Ivask are preserved at the Yale University.

Select bibliography

Poetry