Also known as Bella Akhatovna Akhmadulina, Izabella Akhatovna Akhmadulina
Soviet and Russian poet, short story writer, and translator (1937–2010)
Bella Akhmadulina was a celebrated Soviet and Russian poet, short story writer, and translator who lived from 1937 to 2010 and became one of the most important literary voices of her era. Her work is significant for its lyrical beauty and emotional depth, and she remains a major figure in twentieth-century Russian literature.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Top works
via Open Library + Wikidata
via MusicBrainz · CC0
贝拉·阿赫玛杜琳娜(俄語:Бе́лла (Изабе́лла) Аха́товна Ахмаду́лина,拉丁化:Bella Achatowna Achmadulina,1937年4月10日-2010年11月29日),俄苏诗人、短篇小说家、翻译家。她是俄国新浪潮文学运动的参与者,在世时曾被约瑟夫·布罗茨基称为“最优秀的在世俄语诗人”。赫鲁晓夫解冻时她曾数次出国访问,赢得国际读者的注意。虽然她的作品并不关心政治,但她还是经常批评苏联当局,并声援那些持不同政见的知识分子,包括诺贝尔奖获得者帕斯捷尔纳克、萨哈罗夫和索尔仁尼琴。
Abstract from DBpedia / Wikipedia · CC BY-SA
Bella (Izabella) Akhatovna Akhmadulina (Russian: Белла Ахатовна Ахмадулина) is a Russian poet who has been cited by Joseph Brodsky as the best living poet in the Russian language. Bella was born on the 10 April 1937 in Moscow. Akhmadulina was the only child of a Tatar father and a Russian-Italian mother. Her literary career began when she was a school-girl working as a journalist on the Moscow newspaper "Metrostroevets" and improving her poetic skills at a circle organized by a poet Yevgeny Vin
5 total works indexed
· 2012 · cited 6,734x
· 2013 · cited 2,786x
· 2006 · cited 2,785x
· 2021 · cited 2,380x
· 2019 · cited 2,317x
via Crossref · CC0
via Wikidata · CC0
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).