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The article discusses the practices of the Russian Futuristsʼ life-creation with regard to its political-ideological implications. At the centre of attention of the article is the figure of Aleksei Kruchenykh, whose life-creation practices are described in the memoirs of a number of his contemporaries.
The article discusses Kruchenykhʼs poem ‘Zhenshchina v peshchere’, written during the Civil War, when Kruchenykh lived in the Caucasus. The name of the woman in the poem, Aysha (Ayesha) can be considered zaumʼ, but also intertextually refers to the heroine of Sir Henry Rider Haggardʼs novel She (1887), which in the beginning of the twentieth century was several times translated into Russian. Apart...
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