Stories of Sevastopol, the Cossacks, Hadji Murat PDF Book
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Virginia Woolf's Portraits of Russian Writers
Virginia Woolf’s Portraits of Russian Writers Virginia Woolf’s Portraits of Russian Writers: Creating the Literary Other By Darya Protopopova Virginia Woolf’s Portraits of Russian Writers: Creating the Literary Other By Darya Protopopova This book first published 2019 Cambridge Scholars Publishing Lady Stephenson Library, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 2PA, UK British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Copyright © 2019 by Darya Protopopova All rights for this book reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. ISBN (10): 1-5275-2753-0 ISBN (13): 978-1-5275-2753-9 TABLE OF CONTENTS Note on the Text ........................................................................................ vi Preface ...................................................................................................... vii Introduction ................................................................................................ 1 Russia and the British Search for the Cultural ‘Other’ Chapter One .............................................................................................. 32 Woolf’s Real and Fictional Russians Chapter Two ............................................................................................. 58 Woolf and Dostoevsky: Verbalising the Soul Chapter Three ........................................................................................ -
Animals Liberation Philosophy and Policy Journal Volume 5, Issue 2
AAnniimmaallss LLiibbeerraattiioonn PPhhiilloossoopphhyy aanndd PPoolliiccyy JJoouurrnnaall VVoolluummee 55,, IIssssuuee 22 -- 22000077 Animal Liberation Philosophy and Policy Journal Volume 5, Issue 2 2007 Edited By: Steven Best, Chief Editor ____________________________________________________________ TABLE OF CONTENTS Lev Tolstoy and the Freedom to Choose One’s Own Path Andrea Rossing McDowell Pg. 2-28 Jewish Ethics and Nonhuman Animals Lisa Kemmerer Pg. 29-47 Deliberative Democracy, Direct Action, and Animal Advocacy Stephen D’Arcy Pg. 48-63 Should Anti-Vivisectionists Boycott Animal-Tested Medicines? Katherine Perlo Pg. 64-78 A Note on Pedagogy: Humane Education Making a Difference Piers Bierne and Meena Alagappan Pg. 79-94 BOOK REVIEWS _________________ Fast Food Nation: The Dark Side of the All-American Meal, by Eric Schlosser (2005) Reviewed by Lisa Kemmerer Pg. 95-101 Eternal Treblinka: Our Treatment of Animals and the Holocaust, by Charles Patterson (2002) Reviewed by Steven Best Pg. 102-118 The Longest Struggle: Animal Advocacy from Pythagoras to PETA, by Norm Phelps (2007) Reviewed by Steven Best Pg. 119-130 Journal for Critical Animal Studies, Volume V, Issue 2, 2007 Lev Tolstoy and the Freedom to Choose One’s Own Path Andrea Rossing McDowell, PhD It is difficult to be sat on all day, every day, by some other creature, without forming an opinion about them. On the other hand, it is perfectly possible to sit all day every day, on top of another creature and not have the slightest thought about them whatsoever. -- Douglas Adams, Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency (1988) Committed to the idea that the lives of humans and animals are inextricably linked, Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy (1828–1910) promoted—through literature, essays, and letters—the animal world as another venue in which to practice concern and kindness, consequently leading to more peaceful, consonant human relations. -
Unpalatable Pleasures: Tolstoy, Food, and Sex
University of New Hampshire University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository Languages, Literatures, and Cultures Scholarship Languages, Literatures, and Cultures 1993 Unpalatable Pleasures: Tolstoy, Food, and Sex Ronald D. LeBlanc University of New Hampshire - Main Campus, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholars.unh.edu/lang_facpub Recommended Citation Rancour-Laferriere, Daniel. Tolstoy’s Pierre Bezukhov: A Psychoanalytic Study. London: Bristol Classical Press, 1993. Critiques: Brett Cooke, Ronald LeBlanc, Duffield White, James Rice. Reply: Daniel Rancour- Laferriere. Volume VII, 1994, pp. 70-93. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Languages, Literatures, and Cultures at University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Languages, Literatures, and Cultures Scholarship by an authorized administrator of University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. NEW ~·'T'::'1r"'T,n.1na rp.llHlrIP~ a strict diet. There needs to'be a book about food. L.N. Tolstoy times it seems to me as if the Russian is a sort of lost soul. You want to do and yet you can do nothing. You keep thinking that you start a new life as of tomorrow, that you will start a new diet as of tomorrow, but of the sort happens: by the evening of that 'very same you have gorged yourself so much that you can only blink your eyes and you cannot even move your tongue. N.V. Gogol Russian literature is mentioned, one is likely to think almost instantly of that robust prose writer whose culinary, gastronomic and alimentary obsessions--in his verbal art as well as his own personal life- often reached truly gargantuan proportions. -
Sample Pages
About This Volume Brett Cooke We continue to be surprised by how the extremely rewarding world WKDW/HR7ROVWR\FUHDWHGLVDG\QDPLFVWLOOJURZLQJRQH:KHQWKH Russian writer sat down in 1863 to begin what became War and PeaceKHXWLOL]HGSRUWUDLWVRIfamily members, as well as images RIKLPVHOILQZKDWDW¿UVWFRQVWLWXWHGDOLJKWO\¿FWLRQDOL]HGfamily chronicle; he evidently used the exercise to consider how he and the SUHVHQWVWDWHRIKLVFRXQWU\FDPHWREH7KLVLQYROYHGDUHWKLQNLQJRI KRZKLVSDUHQWV¶JHQHUDWLRQZLWKVWRRGWKH)UHQFKLQYDVLRQRI slightly more than a half century prior, both militarily and culturally. Of course, one thinks about many things in the course of six highly FUHDWLYH \HDUV DQG KLV WH[W UHÀHFWV PDQ\ RI WKHVH LQWHUHVWV +LV words are over determined in that a single scene or even image typically serves several themes as he simultaneously pondered the Napoleonic Era, the present day in Russia, his family, and himself, DVZHOODVPXFKHOVH6HOIGHYHORSPHQWEHLQJWKH¿UVWRUGHUIRUDQ\ VHULRXVDUWLVWZHVHHDQWLFLSDWLRQVRIWKHSURWHDQFKDOOHQJHV7ROVWR\ posed to the contemporary world decades after War and Peace in terms of religion, political systems, and, especially, moral behavior. In other words, he grew in stature. As the initial reception of the QRYHO VKRZV 7ROVWR\ UHVSRQGHG WR WKH FRQVWHUQDWLRQ RI LWV ¿UVW readers by increasing the dynamism of its form and considerably DXJPHQWLQJLWVLQWHOOHFWXDODPELWLRQV,QKLVKDQGV¿FWLRQEHFDPH emboldened to question the structure of our universe and expand our sense of our own nature. We are all much the richer spiritually for his achievement. One of the happy accidents of literary history is that War and Peace and Fyodor 'RVWRHYVN\¶VCrime and PunishmentZHUH¿UVW published in the same literary periodical, The Russian Messenger. )XUWKHUPRUHDV-DQHW7XFNHUH[SODLQVERWKQRYHOVH[SUHVVFRQFHUQ whether Russia should continue to conform its culture to West (XURSHDQ PRGHOV VLPXOWDQHRXVO\ VHL]LQJ RQ WKH VDPH ¿JXUH vii Napoleon Bonaparte, in one case leading a literal invasion of the country, in the other inspiring a premeditated murder. -
Dvigubski Full Dissertation
The Figured Author: Authorial Cameos in Post-Romantic Russian Literature Anna Dvigubski Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2012 © 2012 Anna Dvigubski All rights reserved ABSTRACT The Figured Author: Authorial Cameos in Post-Romantic Russian Literature Anna Dvigubski This dissertation examines representations of authorship in Russian literature from a number of perspectives, including the specific Russian cultural context as well as the broader discourses of romanticism, autobiography, and narrative theory. My main focus is a narrative device I call “the figured author,” that is, a background character in whom the reader may recognize the author of the work. I analyze the significance of the figured author in the works of several Russian nineteenth- and twentieth- century authors in an attempt to understand the influence of culture and literary tradition on the way Russian writers view and portray authorship and the self. The four chapters of my dissertation analyze the significance of the figured author in the following works: 1) Pushkin's Eugene Onegin and Gogol's Dead Souls; 2) Chekhov's “Ariadna”; 3) Bulgakov's “Morphine”; 4) Nabokov's The Gift. In the Conclusion, I offer brief readings of Kharms’s “The Old Woman” and “A Fairy Tale” and Zoshchenko’s Youth Restored. One feature in particular stands out when examining these works in the Russian context: from Pushkin to Nabokov and Kharms, the “I” of the figured author gradually recedes further into the margins of narrative, until this figure becomes a third-person presence, a “he.” Such a deflation of the authorial “I” can be seen as symptomatic of the heightened self-consciousness of Russian culture, and its literature in particular. -
Tolstoy in Prerevolutionary Russian Criticism
Tolstoy in Prerevolutionary Russian Criticism BORIS SOROKIN TOLSTOY in Prerevolutionary Russian Criticism PUBLISHED BY THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS FOR MIAMI UNIVERSITY Copyright ® 1979 by Miami University All Rights Reserved Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Sorokin, Boris, 1922 Tolstoy in prerevolutionary Russian criticism. Bibliography: p. Includes index. 1. Tolstoi, Lev Nikolaevich, graf, 1828-1910—Criticism and interpretation—History. 2. Criticism—Russia. I. Title. PG3409.5.S6 891.7'3'3 78-31289 ISBN 0-8142-0295-0 Contents Preface vii 1/ Tolstoy and His Critics: The Intellectual Climate 3 2/ The Early Radical Critics 37 3/ The Slavophile and Organic Critics 71 4/ The Aesthetic Critics 149 5/ The Narodnik Critics 169 6/ The Symbolist Critics 209 7/ The Marxist Critics 235 Conclusion 281 Notes 291 Bibliography 313 Index 325 PREFACE Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910) has been described as the most momen tous phenomenon of Russian life during the nineteenth century.1 Indeed, in his own day, and for about a generation afterward, he was an extraordinarily influential writer. During the last part of his life, his towering personality dominated the intellectual climate of Russia and the world to an unprecedented degree. His work, moreover, continues to be studied and admired. His views on art, literature, morals, politics, and life have never ceased to influence writers and thinkers all over the world. Such interest over the years has produced an immense quantity of books and articles about Tolstoy, his ideas, and his work. In Russia alone their number exceeded ten thousand some time ago (more than 5,500 items were published in the Soviet Union between 1917 and 1957) and con tinues to rise. -
Maria Taroutina on Katherine MH Reischl: Photographic
Katherine M. H. Reischl. Photographic Literacy: Cameras in the Hands of Russian Authors. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2018. 320 pp. $49.95, cloth, ISBN 978-1-5017-2436-7. Reviewed by Maria Taroutina (Yale-NUS College) Published on H-SHERA (July, 2020) Commissioned by Hanna Chuchvaha (University of Calgary) Katherine Reischl’s eloquent new monograph tion of the photographic medium, so much so that examines the complex and multivalent ways in the writer’s frequently reproduced image became which some of Russia’s leading authors understood an important visual emblem for his entire epoch. and engaged with the novel medium of photogra‐ The chapter also investigates the subtle and perva‐ phy. The book begins with the 1860s and runs sive influence that photography exerted on Tol‐ roughly through to the late 1930s, with the conclu‐ stoy’s writing and highlights several instances of sion focusing on the post-World War II works of the author’s “camera eye” at work in his various Vladimir Nabokov and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. novels, such as The Cossacks (1863) and Anna Reischl traces the chronological evolution of pho‐ Karenina (1878). It culminates with a discussion of tography as a technological, cultural, and visual Tolstoy’s “crisis of authorship” and the intense dis‐ medium, while simultaneously analyzing a diverse pute that broke out over his copyright and literary set of authorial word-image strategies that were legacy between his wife, Sofia, and his chief disci‐ employed by key literary figures at specific histori‐ ple, Vladimir Chertkov, with the latter prevailing so cal junctures. Each discrete case study is contextu‐ that Tolstoy’s image ultimately became “the prop‐ alized within a dense network of political, ideologi‐ erty of the public sphere” (p. -
Tolstoy's Oak Tree Metaphor
BJPsych Advances (2015), vol. 21, 185–187 doi: 10.1192/apt.bp.114.013490 Tolstoy’s oak tree metaphor: MINDREADING depression, recovery and psychiatric ‘spiritual ecology’ Jeremy Holmes times for Leo. They had 13 children. However, Jeremy Holmes is a retired SUMMARY with Tolstoy’s increasing fame, accumulated consultant medical psychotherapist and general psychiatrist. He is Tolstoy’s life and work illustrate resilience, disciples and hangers-on, and eccentric views the transcendence of trauma and the enduring currently Visiting Professor to (e.g. on marital celibacy – a precept he signally the Department of Psychology, impact of childhood loss. I have chosen the failed to practise!) the marriage deteriorated, University of Exeter, UK. famous oak tree passage from War and Peace to often into open warfare, and was beset by Correspondence Jeremy Holmes, illustrate recovery from the self-preoccupation of School of Psychology, University of depression and the theme of ‘eco-spirituality’ – Sophia’s suicide threats (Fig 2). At the age of 82, Exeter, Exeter EX4 4QG, UK. Email: the idea that post-depressive connectedness and possibly in the early stages of a confusional state, [email protected] love apply not just to significant others but also to Tolstoy precipitously left home, accompanied by nature and the environment. his daughter Alexandra. A day later he died of pneumonia at Astapovo railway station en route DECLARATION OF INTEREST to the Caucasus. None. War and Peace I seem to re-read War and Peace roughly every Leo Tolstoy’s novels War and Peace (1869) 20 years – my fourth cycle is fast approaching. -
Tolstoy and Cosmopolitanism
CHAPTER 8 Tolstoy and Cosmopolitanism Christian Bartolf Leo Tolstoy (1828–1910) is known as the famous Russian writer, author of the novels Anna Karenina, War and Peace, The Kreutzer Sonata, and Resurrection, author of short prose like “The Death of Ivan Ilyich”, “How Much Land Does a Man Need”, and “Strider” (Kholstomer). His literary work, including his diaries, letters and plays, has become an integral part of world literature. Meanwhile, more and more readers have come to understand that Leo Tolstoy was a unique social thinker of universal importance, a nineteenth- and twentieth-century giant whose impact on world history remains to be reassessed. His critics, descendants, and followers became almost innu- merable, among them Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi in South Africa, later called “Mahatma Gandhi”, and his German-Jewish architect friend Hermann Kallenbach, who visited the publishers and translators of Tolstoy in England and Scotland (Aylmer Maude, Charles William Daniel, Isabella Fyvie Mayo) during the Satyagraha struggle of emancipation in South Africa. The friendship of Gandhi, Kallenbach, and Tolstoy resulted in an English-language correspondence which we find in the Collected Works C. Bartolf (*) Gandhi Information Center - Research and Education for Nonviolence (Society for Peace Education), Berlin, Germany © The Author(s) 2018 121 A.K. Giri (ed.), Beyond Cosmopolitanism, DOI 10.1007/978-981-10-5376-4_8 122 C. BARTOLF of both, Gandhi and Tolstoy, and in the Tolstoy Farm as the name of the second settlement project of Gandhi -
Kreutzer Sonata: Expressions of Human Anguish in Music, Literature and Beyond
1 Presentation for the GLS West Coast Symposium at St. John’s College in Santa Fe, NM Marja Karelia Simon Fraser University [email protected] Kreutzer Sonata: Expressions of Human Anguish in Music, Literature and Beyond The Kreutzer Sonata exemplifies expressions of human anguish through a perfect blend of music, literature and other arts. I will argue, as does Martha Nussbaum, that “music is intimately linked with our deepest strivings and most powerful emotions”, and that The Kreutzer Sonata provides the ideal vehicle for such sentiments having profoundly provoked artistic genres for over three hundred years. Our chain of events begins with the Kreutzer Sonata that was composed by Beethoven three years after his deafness crisis. In 1802, Beethoven had written the Heiligenstadt Testament where he expressed his anguish about his deteriorating hearing and writes that “how could I possibly admit an infirmity in the one sense which ought to be more perfect in me than in others. What humiliation it is for me when someone standing next to me heard a flute in the distance or a shepherd singing and I heard nothing. Such incidents drove me almost to despair, a little more of that and I would have ended my life – it was only my art that held me back. It seemed to me impossible to leave the world until I had brought forth all that I felt within me” The Heiligenstadt Testament was both an outpouring of grief in the face of his growing deafness and a determination to persevere in his art despite this impediment, and the result was his monumental violin sonata No.9 in A Major, Opus 47 for piano and violin. -
Traditional Social Organisation of the Chechens
Traditional social organisation of the Chechens Patrilineages with domination and social control of elder men. The Chechens have a kernel family called dëzel1 (дёзел), consisting of a couple and their children. But this kernel family is not isolated from other relatives. Usually married brethren settled in the neighbourhood and cooperated. This extended family is called “ts'a” (цIа - “men of one house”); the word is etymologically connected with the word for “hearth”. The members of a tsa cooperated in agriculture and animal husbandry. Affiliated tsa make up a “neqe” or nek´´e (некъий - “people of one lineage”). Every neqe has a real ancestor. Members of a neqe can settle in one hamlet or in one end of a village. They can economically cooperate. The next group of relatives is the “gar“ (гар - “people of one branch“). The members of a gar consider themselves as affiliated, but this can be a mythological affiliation. The gars of some Chechen groups function like taips (s. below). Taip The main and most famous Chechen social unit is the “taip” (tajp, tayp, тайп) A taip is a group of persons or families cooperating economically and connected by patrilinear consanguineous affiliation. The members of a taip have equal rights2. In the Russian and foreign literature taips are usually designated as “clans”. For the Chechens the taip is a patrilinear exogam group of descendants of one ancestor. There were common taip rules and/ore features3 including: • The right of communal land tenure; • Common revenge for murder of a taip member or insulting -
The Circassian Thistle: Lev Nikolaevich Tolstoy's Khadzhi
ABSTRACT THE CIRCASSIAN THISTLE: TOLSTOY’S KHADZHI MURAT AND THE EVOLVING RUSSIAN EMPIRE by Eric M. Souder The following thesis examines the creation, publication, and reception of Lev Nikolaevich Tolstoy’s posthumous novel, Khadzhi Murat in both the Imperial and Soviet Russian Empire. The anti-imperial content of the novel made Khadzhi Murat an incredibly vulnerable novel, subjecting it to substantial early censorship. Tolstoy’s status as a literary and cultural figure in Russia – both preceding and following his death – allowed for the novel to become virtually forgotten despite its controversial content. This thesis investigates the absorption of Khadzhi Murat into the broader canon of Tolstoy’s writings within the Russian Empire as well as its prevailing significance as a piece of anti-imperial literature in a Russian context. THE CIRCASSIAN THISTLE: TOLSTOY’S KHADZHI MURAT AND THE EVOLVING RUSSIAN EMPIRE A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of Miami University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Department of History by Eric Matthew Souder Miami University Oxford, Ohio 2014 Dr. Stephen Norris Dr. Daniel Prior Dr. Margaret Ziolkowski TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction………………………………………………………………………………………1 Chapter I - The Tolstoy Canon: The Missing Avar……………………………………………….2 Chapter II – Inevitable Editing: The Publication and Censorship of Khadzhi Murat………………5 Chapter III – Historiography and Appropriation: The Critical Response to Khadzhi Murat……17 Chapter IV – Conclusion………………………………………………………………………...22 Afterword………………………………………………………………………………………..24 Bibliography……………………………………………………………………………………..27 ii Introduction1 In late-October 1910, Lev Nikolaevich Tolstoy died at Astopovo Station, approximately 120 miles from his family estate at Yasnaya Polyana in the Tula region of the Russian Empire.