“Satan Singing” or, Revolutionary Music and Freedom’s Song in Byron, Pushkin, and Mickiewicz

Start Date & Time 13/11/2025 5:30 pm

Location Online

Speakers Jon Gross

Time: November 13th

ONLINE EVENT

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5:30—6:30pm GMT

This talk explores the improvisational music of Adam Mickiewicz in Dzaidy, or  “Forefather’s Eve”, comparing such unrehearsed songs of exile with Byron’s treatment of  poet laureates in Don Juan ( Bob Southey and “The Isles of Greece”).   Where (in which nation?) was spontaneous song possible in the early 19th century, and how did Mickiewicz, Pushkin, and Byron respond to the censorship of their publishers (John Murray, for example) and Czar Nicholas (to take another), who viewed them as Satanic poets or “Satan singing” (as Mickiewicz puts it in Dzaidy).  Archibald Macleish recognized the greatness of Adam Mickiewicz on the occasion marking the centennial of his death, lamenting the lack of respect for poetry in the United States, where it was too often met with indifference, and for freedom under the McCarthy era. How did Byron and Mickiewicz respond to censorship and what do such responses tell us about Mickiewicz’s reception  as a Polish poet  by Pushkin and others, before, during and after the Cold War?