Margarita Iosifovna Aliger

Russian writer, and Soviet propagandist
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Quick Facts
Born:
September 24 [October 7, New Style], 1915, Odessa, Ukraine, Russian Empire
Died:
August 1992, Peredelkino, Russia (aged 76)
Notable Works:
“Zoya”

Margarita Iosifovna Aliger (born September 24 [October 7, New Style], 1915, Odessa, Ukraine, Russian Empire—died August 1992, Peredelkino, Russia) was a Russian poet, journalist, and Soviet propagandist.

Born into a poor family, Aliger was a committed communist from an early age. She studied writing in Moscow from 1934 to 1937 at what later became the Gorky Literary Institute. In the late 1930s she wrote prose sketches and verse diaries of her tour of Soviet Central Asia. “Zoya” (1942), a narrative poem about a martyred Soviet female partisan, won the State Prize of the U.S.S.R. in 1943.

After World War II Aliger traveled in South America, from which she reported in verse and prose; she was in Chile during the Salvador Allende regime of 1970–73. Much of her poetry repeated Soviet political jargon and catchphrases. Collections include God rozhdeniya (1938; “Year of Birth”), Kamni i travy (1940; “Stones and Grasses”), Leninskiye gory (1953; “The Lenin Hills”), and Neskolko shagov (1962; “A Few Paces”). Her later publications include Tropinka vo rzhi (1980; “A Path in the Rye”), a collection of essays; and Chetvert veka (1981; “A Quarter of a Century”), a book of poetry. Aliger also translated poetry by Ukrainian, Azerbaijani, and Uzbek authors.

4:043 Dickinson, Emily: A Life of Letters, This is my letter to the world/That never wrote to me; I'll tell you how the Sun Rose/A Ribbon at a time; Hope is the thing with feathers/That perches in the soul
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