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Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) / Twitter

#Pushkin #Homosexuality #RussianLiterature https://share.google/aimode/Elf5yRpSny6ae1plS Alexander Pushkin (1799–1837), the founder of modern Russian literature, was not gay, but he was “gay-friendly” and famously included light, humorous, or Orientalist references to homosexuality in his poetry and personal correspondence. He maintained friendships with homosexual peers, such as Filipp Vigel, and his work was not censored by the Soviet regime despite its homoerotic content. Homoerotic Poetry: Pushkin wrote poems that featured homoerotic themes, sometimes using Greek or Orientalist stylization, such as “From Hafez” (1829), “Imitation of the Arabic” (1835), and “To the Statue of a Svaika Play

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