The Twentieth-century Russian Novel: An IntroductionBerg, 1996 - 179 pagina's Eight of Russia's most popular and significant novels are presented in this important new guide for students. Works include: - "We" by Evgenii Zamiatin - "Red Cavalry" by Isaak Babel - "Envy" by Iurii Olesha - "How the Steel Was Tempered" by Nikolai Ostrovskii - "The Master and Margarita" by Mikhail Bulgakov - "Doctor Zhivago" by Boris Pasternak - "Cancer Ward" by Alexander Solzhenitsyn - "Pushkin House" by Andrei Bitov In each chapter, David Gillespie examines one novel in detail and explores the career of the author and the critical reception of the work. Throughout, considerable reference is made to recently published scholarship and archival materials to provide students and scholars of Russian and Comparative Literature with a guide to these important Russian authors and their place in the world of literature. The book also includes an extensive bibliography of secondary literature and contains textual references in both the original Russian and in English translation. |
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... cultural and political environment are necessary . By the early 1930s the experiments and considerable variety in the literary and cultural fields of the 1920s had come to an end . RAPP ( the Russian Association of Proletarian Writers ) ...
... cultural developments following it . The novel is thus concerned with the truth about Soviet history , but Solzhenitsyn is careful to provide a detailed cultural and social background : the dictates and effects of socialist realism in ...
... cultural traditions . The past , then , lives on through literature and the word . Such thoughts on the continuity of the literary process bring us back to the opening lines of this essay , perhaps a fitting way to complete this study ...
Inhoudsopgave
Preface | 1 |
Evgenii Zamiatin 18841937 We Mb | 7 |
Isaak Babel 18941940 Red Cavalry Koнармия | 24 |
Copyright | |
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