Mnemozina

Mnemozina (Russian: Мнемозина, IPA: [mnʲɪmɐˈzʲinə]) was a quarterly literary almanac, published in Moscow from 1824 to 1825. The full title in the Russian language is Мнемозина, собрание сочинений в стихах и прозе (Mnemozina, collected works in verse and prose) and was a reference to Mnemosyne, a persona in Greek mythology embodying memory. The main editors were Wilhelm Küchelbecker, and Vladimir Odoevsky.[1][2]

Mnemozina
Mnemozina cover, 1824.
EditorVladimir Odoevsky
Wilhelm Küchelbecker
FrequencyQuarterly
Year founded1824
Final issue1825
Based inMoscow
LanguageRussian

History

Mnemozina came about as a production of the Lovers of Wisdom society, a literary and philosophical circle created by Odoevsky and Dmitry Venevitinov in the early 1820s. Besides Odoevsky, Venevitinov and Küchelbecker, the Society counted Aleksey Khomyakov, Mikhail Pogodin and others as members.

Alexander Pushkin, who was attracted to Mnemozina through his friends Küchelbecker and Venevitinov, was an admirer of the magazine's publications. Pushkin contributed his poem The Demon to Mnemozina.[3]

Mnemozina was devoted to the consideration and debate of the ideas of the French Encyclopédistes of the eighteenth century, and to the spread of German idealism.[4]

The direct successor to Mnemozina was The Russian Messenger.[4]

gollark: I mean, consider enzymes. They can do things which regular non-biochemist chemists could only dream of, and often do multiple functions at once and interact with each other in bizarre ways.
gollark: Much of the foolish human body is like this, because it's hyperoptimized in some ways by a design process which doesn't care if our brains can actually make sense of it.
gollark: No good spec sheet/documentation either.
gollark: And there's nowhere to source parts, and no way to swap, say, fried retinas out.
gollark: And then you basically can't replace the lenses.

References

  1. С. Б. Федотова, «Мнемозина, собрание сочинений в стихах и прозе»
  2. Neil Cornwell, The Life, Times, and Milieu of V.F. Odoyevsky, 1804-1869 (Ohio University Press, 1986)
  3. Pushkin on Literature, Tatiana Wolff, John Bayley, Northwestern University Press, 1998.
  4. Modern Russian History, Kornilov, Alfred A. Knopf, NY, 1917.
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