Alexander Meiselman

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Alexander Davidovich Meiselman
USSR
Alma materIrkutsk State University
Genreoccupational novel, travel book
SubjectUSSR, sea of Okhotsk, Kamchatka
SpouseEkaterina Dmitrievna Tenner-Meyselman
ChildrenKsenia Alexandrovna Guzeeva
RelativesDavid Itskovich Mordkhov Meiselman (father)
Aleksandra Leont'evna (Ginendel' Leibovna) Meiselman (mother)

Alexander Davidovich Meiselman (1900 – 1938) was a

Soviet writer, poet, orientalist
, and theatre historian.

Biography

Alexander David Meiselman was born on the 11(24?) September 1900 in Tayga (formerly in the Mariinsk County of the Tomsk Province). He was the youngest of the nine children in the family. His father David Meiselman, who was a coachman, managed a post coach station on the Siberian Route.

After the death of his father in 1904 he was in the charge of his elder brother and went to a grammar school in Irkutsk. After he finished school in 1918, he entered the faculty of law of the Irkutsk State University, and in 1920 he changed the faculty for the faculty of Oriental Humanities (later renamed the Department of Far East International Relations of the Faculty of Social Sciences), from which he graduated as a specialist in Japanese in 1924. He specialised in oriental theatre.

In 1925 he moved to

East European
literature at the State Technical School of Printing, frequently went to Moscow to deliver lectures on oriental theatre at the Central School of Theatre Arts and delivered lectures on oriental theatre at the Leningrad Higher Courses of Art History.

In 1929 he worked as a Japanese interpreter in

Kamchatka for the Kamchatka Joint Stock Company. The impressions of this work were reflected in the book The Lam: Essays of the Okhotsk-Kamchatka Region
(1931).

In 1930 he became a postgraduate student at the

Nikolai Iosifovich Konrad
, who saw him as the only orientalist in the country who specialised in the history and theory of the theatre of the countries of the Far East.

During his postgraduate studies Meiselman began teaching the history of the theatre at the Leningrad Theatre School, and in 1934 he started working at the chair of the theatre history at the Leningrad State Institute of Advanced Training of Art Workers and also consulted specialists in the history of the theatre at the Moscow State Institute of Theatre Art.

He was a founding member of the

Soviet Writers' Union
in 1935.

He was close friends with

graphic artist
.

On the 15 October 1937 Meiselman was arrested by NKVD on false charges and was executed on 18 January 1938.[1][2]

At the time of his arrest Alexander Meiselman was working at the Russian Academy of Arts as a professor teaching theatre history. His manuscript of the stories about Japanese children which was to be published in Detgis publishing house is supposed to have been destroyed after his arrest.

He was posthumously rehabilitated for lack of corpus delicti in 1956 and recognised as a victim of political terror in the USSR.[3] In 2017 a memorial plate was installed on the house where he had lived at the time of his arrest.

Creative work

Meiselman debuted in literature as a poet in a collective collection Otzvuki [Echoes] (1921, Irkutsk). Meiselman's earliest known poems date back to 1919. He was one of the founders of the first poetic association in South Siberia, the Irkutsk literary group called Barka Poetov [Barge of Poets] (1920-1923),[4] and later a member and a board member of the Irkutsk literary and artistic Union (1923-1926).

He was aligned with the Barka Poetov Association, which was true to the classic traditions of Russian poetry. However, his poetic interludes in his late book Lam, written more like an industrial novel, are reminiscent of the avant-garde experiments of Barka Poetov. It was around then that his interest in poetics and aesthetics of the theatre started. In December 1922 he gave a talk on Alexander Blok's lyrical theatre. After arriving in Leningrad, he appeared in press mostly as an essayist and literary observer.

References

  1. ^ "Санкт-Петербург, Калужский переулок, 9". Последний адрес (in Russian). Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  2. ^ ""Жить в таком городе — странное чувство": Петербург и память о терроре". RFI (in Russian). 14 November 2017. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  3. ^ "Мейсельман Александр Давидович (1900)" (in Russian). Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  4. ^ "Nina Obolenskaja (Chabias), Sobranie stichotvorenij, Moskva". docplayer.it (in Italian). p. 312. Retrieved 28 February 2018.

External links