Grigory Gukovsky

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Grigory Alexandrovich Gukovsky (Russian: Григо́рий Алекса́ндрович Гуко́вский; 1 May 1902, Saint Petersburg – 2 April 1950, Moscow) was a Russian Formalist literary historian and scholar whose work at the Pushkin House led to the rediscovery of 18th-century Russian literature.[1]

He graduated from the Petrograd University in 1923 and held the chair in Russian literature there. Gukovsky was considered the foremost authority on 18th-century Russian literature. After spending a winter in besieged Leningrad he read lectures in Saratov University until 1948. Upon his return to Leningrad Gukovsky was arrested as a "rootless cosmopolitan". He died of a heart attack in Lefortovo Prison.[1]

Gukovsky's wife Natalia Rykova (1898-1928) was Anna Akhmatova's close friend.[2] She died in childbirth. Their daughter Natalia Dolinina (1928-1879) wrote a number of books for children. Gukovsky's disciples include Yuri Lotman.[3]

References

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  1. 1.0 1.1 http://www.eleven.co.il/article/11329
  2. http://www.herzenlib.ru/almanac/number/detail.php?NUMBER=number5&ELEMENT=gerzenka5_2_7
  3. http://magazines.russ.ru/nlo/2002/55/lotm.html