Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Avdotya Yakovlevna Panaeva (Russian: Авдо́тья Я́ковлевна Пана́ева), née Bryanskaya, (August 12 [O.S. July 31] 1820 – April 11 [O.S. March 30] 1893), was a Russian novelist, short story writer, memoirist and literary salon holder.

  2. hmn.wiki › es › Avdotya_PanayevaAvdotia Panaeva

    Avdotya Yakovlevna Panaeva ( ruso: Авдо́тья Я́ковлевна Пана́ева), de soltera Bryanskaya, (12 de agosto [ OS 31 de julio] 1820 - 11 de abril [ OS 30 de marzo] 1893), fue una novelista rusa, cuentista, autora de memorias y titular de un salón literario .

  3. Avdotya Panaeva’s The Talnikov Family portrays a tumultuous upbringing in 1820s St. Petersburg with equal parts wit and rage. Modeled on the author’s own life before her marriage to a nobleman writer, this sensational novel joined nineteenth-century Russia’s intense debates about gender, sexuality, and revolution.

  4. The name of the mother of Nagrodskaya, Avdotya Panaeva, is known even to schoolchildren due to the meticulousness with which the biographies of famous writers are understood in the framework of the curriculum. For almost 20 years, Panaeva was a muse, co-author and common-law wife of Nikolai Nekrasov.

  5. fyodor-dostoevsky.com › articles › dostoevsky-sDostoevsky 's personal life

    13 de ene. de 2023 · It was there that Fyodor Dostoevsky met Avdotya Panaeva, a 22-year-old married woman. From a letter to Mikhail – “Yesterday I visited Panayev for the first time, and I think I fell in love with his wife. She is smart and pretty, and in addition amiable and straightforward to the utmost.”

  6. 5 de mar. de 2012 · Avdotya Panaeva was also no longer in his life. Perhaps she had hoped that after her husband's death in 1862,Nekrasov would marry her. Perhaps she grew tired of his sexual encounters with other women and his gambling. At any rate, she had moved out of the apartment they shared on the Liteiny Prospect.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ivan_PanaevIvan Panaev - Wikipedia

    Portrait of Avdotya Panaeva by Kirill Gorbunov. In 1847, together with Nekrasov, Panaev took over Sovremennik, making it into a popular literary magazine and a financial success. [1] . Between 1851 and 1861, under the pseudonym "The New Poet", he published his monthly surveys of journalism and of life in St Petersburg in Sovremennik.