Mazeppa-Maseppa: Migration of a Romantic motif

Authors

  • Tony Voss University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4314/tvl.v49i2.9

Keywords:

Faust, Mazeppa, Modernism, Romanticism

Abstract

Mazeppa (1640–1710), The Ukrainian leader and folk-hero, has a controversial history, and a distinct presence in literature and the graphic arts. Byron’s poem (1819) of the legendary figure’s “wild ride” released a mythical energy which absorbed certain French poets and painters of the 19th century. While the Russian tradition, at least from Pushkin’s Poltava (1828), reworked the historical Ukrainian hetman from a Tsarist and nationalist perspective, the myth of the Western Romantic Mazeppa is best realised by Delacroix, perhaps in anticipation of the displacement of the horse by Faustian technology. Mazeppa becomes a Romantic Phaethon, shifted from the transcendent to the mundane, from a vertical to a horizontal trajectory. Early in the century Mazeppa had also become a figure and theme of popular spectacle and literature, incorporated by the common imagination into politics, journalism and folklore, coming to terms with a new Faustian context. A small group of poets of the 1920s and 1930s return in different Modernist ways to the theme. The coda of this selective survey is sounded in South Africa.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

...

Downloads

Published

2012-09-01

Issue

Section

Research articles

How to Cite

Voss, T. (2012). Mazeppa-Maseppa: Migration of a Romantic motif. Tydskrif Vir Letterkunde, 49(2), 110-135. https://doi.org/10.4314/tvl.v49i2.9