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Severnaia Pchela

The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Severnaia Pchela

 

(The Northern Bee), a political and literary newspaper published in St. Petersburg from 1825 to 1864. It was founded by F. V. Bulgarin, who published it jointly with N. I. Grech between 1831 and 1859. It came out three times a week between 1825 and 1831 and daily thereafter.

Until the Decembrist uprising of 1825, the newspaper followed a liberal line, publishing works by K. F. Ryleev, A. S. Pushkin, and F. N. Glinka. Later it became a reactionary, unscrupulous publication and a mouthpiece for monarchists. It was aimed at moderately well-to-do readers, including noble military officers, provincial landlords, civil servants, merchants, and meshchane. Bulgarin carried on bitter polemics with Pushkin’s and A. A. Del’vig’s Literaturnaia gazeta (Literary Gazette), with Moskovskii nabliudatel’ (Moscow Observer) and Teleskop (The Telescope), and with Otechestvennye zapiski (Notes of the Fatherland), a newspaper on which V. G. Belin-skii worked. Severnaia pchela published negative criticism of the realistic school of literature of the 1840’s.

In the 1860’s, when P. S. Usov was publisher, the newspaper adopted a new position and published works by such democratic writers as V. A. Sleptsov, F. M. Reshetnikov, and M. Vovchok and articles on N. A. Nekrasov and M. E. Salty-kov-Shchedrin.

REFERENCES

S. M. ALEKSANDROV

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
In January of 1838, Faddei Bulgarin published an article titled "Readers and Writers" ("Chitateli i pisateli") in the Northern Bee (Severnaia pchela), the newspaper he edited jointly with his long-time collaborator Nikolai Grech.
"Pushkin i 'Severnaia pchela' (1825-1837)." Pushkin i ego sovremenniki 9-10 (1914): 117-90; 23-24 (1916): 127-94; 31-32 (1927): 129-46.
Stolpianskii, "Pushkin i 'Severnaia pchela' (1825-1837)," Pushkin i ego sovremenniki 9-10 (1914): 117-90, 23-24 (1916):127-94, and 31-32 (1927):129-46.
Petersbourg and Severnaia pchela, which were printed in the capital, and even in the Belgian-based Le Nord, which the Russian government subsidized.
Korablev hoped to use the Emperor Nicholas I's portrait in some of his books and that the editors of Severnaia pchela wished to publish a poem dedicated to the late monarch (376-77).
(51) Review published in Severnaia pchela (22 February 1839): 162-63.
Bulgarin, "Rassmotrenie Russkikh al'manakhov na 1828 god," Severnaia pchela, nos.
Bulgarin, '"Russische bibliothek fur Deutsche' von Karl von Knorring," Severnaia pchela, no.
In the variants Pushkin articulated his view of the independence of the poet in the context of a concrete polemic which occurred among Pushkin and the writers of Moskovskii telegraf and Severnaia pchela. Defending the right of literature to serve entirely an aesthetic purpose, Pushkin rejected demands that the poet provide an uplifting moral or political message.
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