Dyr bul shchyl explained

Author:Aleksei Kruchenykh
Original Title:Дыр бул щыл
Original Title Lang:ru
Written:1912
First:1913
Illustrator:Mikhail Larionov
Country:Russia
Language:Russian language
Series:Three poems

Dyr bul shchyl (Russian: Дыр бул щыл, pronounced as /ru/) is the earliest and most famous zaum/transrational poem by Aleksei Kruchenykh,[1] written using the Zaum language, which, according to the author, is "more Russian national, than in all of Pushkin's poetry".[2]

The poem was written in December 1912. This date the author then called "the time of occurrence of the phenomenon of Zaum language (i.e. the language that has no utility value), in which are written the whole independent works, and not just parts thereof (as the chorus, sound decoration, etc.)".[3] Initiator of the creation of the work of the "unknown words" was David Burliuk.[4] "Dyr bul shchyl" was published in January 1913 in a series of "three poems" in Kruchenykh's book "Pomada"[5] (English: [[Pomade]]). According to Kruchenykh, this poem was to become much more known than him.[6] Prefacing the poems, he also stated that "its words do not have/a definite meaning".[7]

The poem, in Majorie Perloff's English transliteration, runs:

Dyr bul shchyl
ubesh shchur
skum
vy so bu
r l èz

Notes and References

  1. Book: Harte. Tim. Fast Forward: The Aesthetics and Ideology of Speed in Russian Avant-Garde Culture, 1910–1930. 2009. University of Wisconsin Press. 9780299233235. 80.
  2. Book: Kruchenykh. Aleksei. Khlebnikov. Velimir. Слово как таковое. 1913. Moscow. 9.
  3. Book: Kruchenykh. Aleksei. Фонетика театра: Книга 123. 1923. Moscow. 38.
  4. Book: Kharjiev. Nikolay. Харджиев Н. И. Статьи об авангарде. 1997. Moscow. 301.
  5. Book: История русской литературы XX века. Первая половина. Книга 1: Общие вопросы. 2014. Флинта. Moscow. 9785457594845. 133. 2nd.
  6. Book: Автобиография дичайшего, Крученых Алексей // Наш выход: К истории русского футуризма. 1996. Moscow. 17.
  7. Book: Perloff, Marjorie. The Futurist Moment: Avant Garde, Avant Guerre, and the Language of Rupture. University of Chicago Press. 2003. 123.