Yulia Valerianovna Zhadovskaya was a Russian poet and writer of fiction.
Background
Zhadovskaya was born disabled. She had no left arm and was missing several fingers on her right hand. Her mother, who had graduated from the prestigious Smolny Institute, and who died when Yulia was only 3, was very protective of Yulia because of her disability.
Education
Yulia also lived with and studied French with her aunt, the poet Anna Gotovtsova, who had written an epigram challenging Alexander Pushkin"s depiction of women.
Career
At her death Yulia"s mother asked Yulia"s grandmother to take special care of her. At the age of 19 Yulia adopted Gotovtsova"s daughter Fyodorova, who became her amanuensis and close friend until Yulia"s death. Fyodorova, in her memoir of Yulia, presents her as a strong and determined woman who overcame her disabilities to become a successful poet and writer
Several of Yulia"s poems were made into popular songs.
Fyodorova suggested that the marriage may not have been a happy one. Zhadovskaya"s best work is her love and nature lyric poetry.
Nikolay Nekrasov"s poetry influenced her work of the late 1840s and the 1850s. Zhadovskaya"s lyric poetry is part of the folksong tradition.
Among her poems made into popular songs was Cornfield, My Cornfield, My Golden Cornfield, set to music by Mikhail Glinka and A. South. Dargomyzhsky.
Her novel Aloof From the Social Whirl (1857) and her stories are devoted to the problems of love, marriage, and the emancipation of women. A raznochintsy intellectual is the subject of her story The Backward Girl (1861).