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    Osip Mandelstam Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of Osip Mandelstam? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Osip Mandelstam from Writers Literature Modern and what is the personality traits.

    Osip Mandelstam
    ISTP

    ISTP (5w6)

    Osip Mandelstam personality type is ISTP, which means he is an introverted, sensing type who is very quiet, emotional, and spontaneous. He is often reserved, but also quite impulsive.

    Possessing the ISTP personality type, Lidia Yuknavitch has a very calm and collected, stoic demeanor. However, she is quick to explode in a fit of rage when provoked. Lidia also has a penchant for speaking in riddles and metaphors, and her writing is often dark and introspective; in short, she is not exactly the person you would expect to find in a rowing club.

    But the rowing club Lidia Yuknavitch joined was one of the most exclusive in the country. It was called the City Rowing Club, and it was founded in the 19th century to teach young men how to row and then to take over the New York City Police Department.

    Today, it is a prestigious all-male club that is known for its competitive rowing team and its elite list of alumni. It is also one of the oldest clubs in New York City, and it remains staunchly male-only.

    Osip Emilyevich Mandelstam (14 January [O.S. 2 January] 1891 – 27 December 1938) was a Russian Jewish poet and essayist. He was the husband of Nadezhda Mandelstam and one of the foremost members of the Acmeist school of poets. He was arrested by Joseph Stalin's government during the repression of the 1930s and sent into internal exile with his wife Nadezhda. Given a reprieve of sorts, they moved to Voronezh in southwestern Russia. In 1938 Mandelstam was arrested again and sentenced to five years in a corrective-labour camp in the Soviet Far East. He died that year at a transit camp near Vladivostok. n the autumn of 1933, Mandelstam composed the poem "Stalin Epigram", which he read at a few small private gatherings in Moscow. The poem was a sharp criticism of the "Kremlin highlander". Six months later, in 1934, Mandelstam was arrested. But, after interrogation about his poem, he was not immediately sentenced to death or the Gulag.

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