Speaking to Moscow Talk radio on occasion of the 75th anniversary of Brodsky's birth on Sunday, Yevgeny Gerasimov, the chairman of the Duma's Commission for Culture and Mass Communications expressed his support for the idea to rename a street after Joseph Brodsky.
"I am confident that this is possible, and we will naturally support this idea," Gerasimov noted, adding that the Commission on Monumental Art and the Commission on Culture are likely to support the initiative.
Brodsky, born in Leningrad in 1940, settled in the United States after being expelled as a dissident from the Soviet Union in 1972. The poet won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1987. He died of a heart attack in New York City in 1996 at the age of 55. Brodsky wrote in Russian and in English with the assistance of poet-translators, and is known most prominently for his poetry collections 'A Part of Speech', 'To Urania' and his essay collection 'Less Than One'.