Ivan Timofeevich Kokorev (Russian Иван Тимофеевич Кокорев) (September 6, 1825 - June 14, 1853) was a Russian writer.
Ivan Timofeevich Kokorev | |
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Born | Zaraysk, Russia | September 6, 1825
Died | June 14, 1853 Moscow, Russia | (aged 27)
The son of a freed serf, Kokorev's stories and essays began appearing in the 1840s, but he did not become well known until he began his association with the journal Moskvityanin in 1849. His stories "Sibirka" (1847) and "Savvushka" (1852) were successful, but he is best remembered for his essays collected under the title Moskva sorokovykh godov ('Moscow of the [eighteen] forties'); the collection Ocherki i rasskazy ('Essays and stories') came out posthumously in 1857. He was considered one of the "Moscow patriots" and inveighed against the introduction of foreign words and customs. Apollon Grigoryev wrote in his memoirs of "the clearly-talented and likable sketches of the late I. T. Kokorev."[1]
Notes
edit- ^ Grigoryev, My Literary and Moral Wanderings, p. 63.
References
edit- Brockhaus and Efron bio (in Russian)
- brief bio on Khronos page (in Russian)
- Grigoryev, Apollon, My Literary and Moral Wanderings, tr. Ralph E. Matlaw (New York: Dutton, 1962).