Tatyana Alexandrovna Beck (Russian: Татья́на Алекса́ндровна Бек; April 21, 1949, Moscow — February 7, 2005, Moscow) was a Russian poet, literary critic and literary scholar.[1] She was a member of the Union of Soviet Writers (1978), and Russian PEN Center, and Secretary of the Moscow Writers' Union (1991-1995). She was the daughter of writer Alexander Bek.[2]
She died, according to the official version, from a massive heart attack, but many discussed the likelihood of suicide[4] due to bullying by colleagues Yevgeny Rein, Mikhail Sinelnikov, Igor Shklyarevsky and literary critic Sergei Chuprinin.[5]
tatyana, tatyana, alexandrovna, beck, russian, Татья, на, Алекса, ндровна, Бек, april, 1949, moscow, february, 2005, moscow, russian, poet, literary, critic, literary, scholar, member, union, soviet, writers, 1978, russian, center, secretary, moscow, writers, . Tatyana Alexandrovna Beck Russian Tatya na Aleksa ndrovna Bek April 21 1949 Moscow February 7 2005 Moscow was a Russian poet literary critic and literary scholar 1 She was a member of the Union of Soviet Writers 1978 and Russian PEN Center and Secretary of the Moscow Writers Union 1991 1995 She was the daughter of writer Alexander Bek 2 Tatyana Bek in 1997In 1993 she signed the Letter of Forty Two 3 She died according to the official version from a massive heart attack but many discussed the likelihood of suicide 4 due to bullying by colleagues Yevgeny Rein Mikhail Sinelnikov Igor Shklyarevsky and literary critic Sergei Chuprinin 5 References edit Tatyana Bek na kostre samosozhzhenya Mir glazami Tatyany Bek Tekst i faksimilnaya kopiya Pisma soroka dvuh Neozhidannaya smert poetessy Tatyany Bek obshirnyj infarkt ili samoubijstvo Viktoriya Shohina Tatyana Bek ne smogla opravitsya ot travli polit ru February 8 2005External links editTatyana Bek at Lib ru Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tatyana Bek amp oldid 1154619038, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,