
thumb|290x280px|Members of VAPLITE in 1926, seated from left to right: Pavlo Tychyna, Mykola Khvylovy, Mykola Kulish, Oleksa Slisarenko, Mike Johansen, Gordiy Kotsyuba, Petro Punch, Arkady Lyubchenko. Standing, from left to right: Mykhailo Maisky, Hryhoriy Epik, Oleksandr Kopylenko, Ivan Senchenko, Pavlo Ivanov, Yuriy Smolych, Oles Dosvitniy, Ivan Dniprovsky. The Vilna Akademia Proletarskoi Literatury ( ВАПЛІТЕ, ) was a literary union in Ukraine. It was established in Kharkiv and existed from January, 1926 to January 28, 1928.
thumb|290x280px|Members of VAPLITE in 1926, seated from left to right: Pavlo Tychyna, Mykola Khvylovy, Mykola Kulish, Oleksa Slisarenko, Mike Johansen, Gordiy Kotsyuba, Petro Punch, Arkady Lyubchenko. Standing, from left to right: Mykhailo Maisky, Hryhoriy Epik, Oleksandr Kopylenko, Ivan Senchenko, Pavlo Ivanov, Yuriy Smolych, Oles Dosvitniy, Ivan Dniprovsky. The Vilna Akademia Proletarskoi Literatury ( ВАПЛІТЕ, ) was a literary union in Ukraine. It was established in Kharkiv and existed from January, 1926 to January 28, 1928.
Accepting the official requirements of the Communist Party, in literary policy VAPLITE has taken an independent position and was standing on the grounds of creation the new Ukrainian literature by qualified artists who put in front of them the demand of improvement and mastering the best achievements of western European culture. The virtual leader of the union was Mykola Khvylovy; the president were Mykhailo Yalovy, later - Mykola Kulish; and the secretary was Arkadiy Liubchenko.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).