The book revisits the final decade in the life of Osip Mandelstam
(1891-1938), a central poet of Russian Modernism. Premised on the belief
that no life can be understood without insight into its contradictions,
the book attends to the two contentious cruxes of Mandelstam's life and
art: his testifying against his closest friends to the secret police and
his composition, in exile, of an ode in praise of Stalin. Offering a
close reading of the protocols of Mandelstam's interrogations, a
critical reflection on the nature of the «Ode» and an unflinching yet
humane interpretation of the connecting events, the book pursues the
dramatic arc of Mandelstam's imaginative involvement with the politics
of the Soviet state, revealing the perennial aspects of his case in
dialogue with poets and critics in the English language, from Andrew
Marvell to William Empson. In doing so, the book contemplates
Mandelstam - a poet of «longing for world culture» - as a phenomenon of
Western literature at large.