Fr. 54.60

Russian Subjects: Empire, Nation, and the Culture of the Golden Age

English · Paperback / Softback

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Although Russia's major Golden Age writers -- Pushkin, Gogol, and Lermontov -- have had numerous book-length studies devoted to them by distinguished American Slavists, no Western collection of essays has examined in comprehensive yet rigorous fashion the many literary pathways by which Russians imagined and revised their modern identity as a people. In this collection of important new essays by the field's foremost scholars, poetic works by Derzhavin, Krylov, Batiushkov, Pushkin, Girboedov, Lermontov, and, in a novel interaction, Baratynsky and Russia's first woman poet, Pavlova, are resituated within the force fields of contradictory cultural pressures, as are the once best-selling prose narratives of Narezhnyi, Karamzin, Bestuzhev-Marlinsky, Viazemsky, and Senkovsky, as well as Gogol and Pushkin.To Western readers long accustomed to associating Russian literary mastery with the realist or "psychological prose" tradition of Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Turgenev, and Chekhov, it may come as a surprise that Russia has always conferred the title of Golden Age upon the era of the "two Alexanders": that is, the historic period from 1810 to 1830, when Emperor Alexander I emerged as the conqueror of Napoleon and the savior of old Europe, to the accompaniment of an efflorescence of Russian poetry incarnated above all in the mercurial figure and richly variegated oeuvre of Alexander Pushkin. Russian Subjects extends the borders of its purview back to the reign of Catherine the Great, when the myth of an internationalist, grandly imperial Golden Age and the institutions necessary to foster it were first established; and forward to the first two decades of Nicholas I's reign, when a jostlingassortment of writers and a burgeoning public press would rush to embody the new rallying cry of nation, originality, popular voice, and the changing configurations of Russian "subjectivity".

Summary

This collection of essays resituates poetic works by Derzhavin, Krylov, Batisushkov, Pushkin, Girboedov, Lermontov, Baratynsky and Pavlova, within the force fields of contradicoty cultural pressures, as are the once best-selling prose narratives of Narezhnyi, Karamzin, Viazemsky and others.

Product details

Authors Monika Greenleaf
Assisted by Monika Greenleaf (Editor), Stephen Moeller-Sally (Editor), Stephen (both of Stanford University Moeller-Sally (Editor), Stephen Moeller-Sally (both of Stanford University USA) (Editor)
Publisher Northwestern University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 01.05.1998
 
EAN 9780810115255
ISBN 978-0-8101-1525-5
No. of pages 449
Dimensions 154 mm x 230 mm x 25 mm
Weight 621 g
Series Studies in Russian Literature
Studies in Russian Literature and Theory
Studies in Russian Literature
Studies in Russian Literature and Theory
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > Slavonic linguistics / literary studies

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