Abstract
This article explores the life and poetic production of Yuri Vella (1948-2013), Forest Nenets poet, reindeer herder, and activist. Emerging from a community deeply affected by Soviet assimilation and the ecological devastation caused by oil exploitation in Western Siberia, Vella’s writings constitute both a literary expression and political act of resistance. Drawing on Scott Bryson’s definition of ecopoetry and through close readings of selected works, the paper identifies three defining attributes in Vella’s texts: devotion to the land and its creatures, humility in human-nonhuman relations, and skepticism toward hyperrationality and technological excess. Vella’s ecopoetry is thus multidimensional: lyrical in its devotion to the taiga, testimonial in its documentation of environmental destruction by the oil industry LUKoil, and militant in its call for ethical responsibility. By personifying landscapes and reindeer, evoking ancestral knowledge, and contrasting the millennial rhythms of nature with the “temporary” values of modernity, his work transforms poetry into a space of ethical reflection and cultural survival. Ultimately, Vella’s voice transcends the boundaries of the Forest Nenets community, offering a universal warning about ecological catastrophe and affirming the necessity of safeguarding both indigenous cultures and the natural world they protect.
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Stragapede, E. (2025). A Voice from the Taiga: Yuri Vella and the ecopoetics of resistance. Poljarnyj Vestnik, 28, 29–46. https://doi.org/10.7557/6.8316
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