Dmytro Ivanovich Chyzhevsky (March 3, 1894 – April 18, 1977) was a Ukrainian-born scholar of Slavic literature and the literary baroque.
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Chyzhevsky wrote on a broad range of subjects, including folklore, history, philosophy, linguistics, Slavic and comparative literature.
literature | Nobel Prize in Literature | English literature | Literature | Slavic | German literature | French literature | Slavic languages | Italian literature | Children's literature | Travel literature | children's literature | Persian literature | 1852 in literature | 1594 in literature | Spanish literature | Russian literature | Japanese literature | English Literature | Irish literature | Comparative Literature | Children's Literature Association | American literature | 1895 in literature | 1853 in literature | Polish literature | Chinese literature | Arabic literature | Slavic mythology | 2009 in literature |
He also continued an interest in Russian and other Slavic literature (mainly Serbian) which had begun during the first world war, and published further translations, notably of Pushkin's Eugene Onegin (1937).