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Russian Literature of the 19th Century

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... about books with Tatyana/Tanya. Second part. Tatyana borrows a book ... Questionable borders. Different languages, different religions, different customs ' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Russian Literature of the 19th Century


1
Russian Literature of the 19th Century
2
Fifth Week
  • Date for First Exam 9/30
  • Study guide on website now

3
Last Tuesday
  • Lermontov Hero of Our Times
  • Martha Fienes Onegin (1999)
  • Bernard Roses Anna Karenina (1997)

4
Romanticism
  • feelings, emotions, individualism
  • exotic, supernatural, dreams
  • mixed genres, irony, narrative devices
  • mystery, intrigue, complex emotions
  • poetry, later prose (novels and short stories)

5
First part of the film
  • Onegins life in Petersburg
  • Onegin traveling to country estate of uncle
  • Onegin taking over
  • Onegin meeting Lensky
  • Onegin meeting Larin family
  • Onegin talking about books with Tatyana/Tanya

6
Second part
  • Tatyana borrows a book
  • Onegin stays in the country
  • Onegin and Lensky quarrel over Olga
  • Tatyana overhears them
  • Tatyana writes letter to Onegin

7
Third Part
  • Name day party
  • Tanya and Eugene talk
  • Disappointing conclusion
  • Onegin dances with Olga
  • Lensky furious prepares challenge
  • Lensky and Olga make up
  • Neighbor delivers challenge pushes the duel

8
Fourth Part
  • Duel Lensky killed
  • Onegin leaves the country
  • Tanya visits his library
  • Tanya taken to Petersburg for season
  • Tanya marries cousin of Onegin
  • Onegin travels
  • Onegin meets Tanya again

9
Anna Karenina
  • Associate with 1870s
  • Music Tchaikovsky
  • Plot issues
  • Levin and Kitty rejection
  • Levin and brother quest, death
  • Kitty and Vronsky rejection
  • Stiva and Dolly reconciliation
  • Vronsky and Anna meeting, dancing, loving
  • Problems

10
Realism
  • Attention to everyday details (more than
    necessary for story line)
  • Hero not so unlike others
  • Topical events
  • Setting not central
  • Social criticism
  • Real world grounding (supernatural out)
  • Emphasis on verisimilitude

11
Criticism
  • Social and artistic commentary
  • Vissarion Belinsky (1811-48) Letter to Gogol
    1847
  • Strong, influential voice for liberal causes
  • Strong preference for European approaches

12
Mikhail Lermontov 1814-41
  • Lyric Poetry, narrative poetry
  • Drama
  • Hero of Our Times (Novel)

13
Biography
  • Aristocratic background father in military
  • death of mother raised by grandmother
  • Education boarding school, Moscow U, military
    school
  • Military service

14
Caucasus
  • trouble because of political verse
    (anti-aristocracy)
  • obsession with ranks, social snobbery
  • role of poet (Death of a Poet blames Nicholas and
    court)
  • love of Caucasus (as child in resorts in Georgia
    as soldier)
  • 26 when he was killed in duel.

15
Hero of Our Times
  • Publication history
  • Textual issues
  • Translations
  • Vladimir Nabokov

16
Setting for the novel
17
More detail
18
Context
19
Russia and the Caucasus
  • Long tradition of resistance to Russian authority
  • Mountain tribes complex ethnicity
  • Questionable borders
  • Different languages, different religions,
    different customs
  • Caucasians Russians Cossacks

20
Authors Introduction
  • What is the purpose of it?
  • What relation does it have to the stories?
  • Dissociate narrator(s) from Lermontov himself?
  • Pechorin as type (composite)

21
Introduction to Pechorins Journal
  • Why is it placed after Bela and Maksim
    Maksimich?
  • How does it affect the way we read the stories
    from the journal?
  • Are we convinced of Pechorins sincerity?
  • Is the author publishing the stories only
    because of a desire to be useful?
  • Does he like Pechorin? (wicked irony?)?
  • Tantalizing full bio of Pechorin some day

22
Irony
  • Simple saying one thing, meaning another
  • Complex (romantic) saying one thing, perhaps
    meaning many other things as well
  • Hero is complex because of ironic possibilities

23
Bela
  • Characters
  • Bela
  • Pechorin
  • Maksim Maksimich
  • Narrator-traveler
  • Plot (Romantic vs Realistic)

24
Point?
  • Narrative intrigue
  • Character, psychology
  • Passions? (lovefor women and horses, obsession,
    jealousy, revenge)

25
Kazbich and Azamat
26
Maksim Maksimich
  • Narrator meets Pechorin
  • What do we learn about Pechorin?
  • Physical description 56-57
  • Character?
  • How do the first two stories fit chronologically?
  • Motivation explanation for how narrator has
    Pechorins writings

27
Taman
  • Plot?
  • What do we learn about Pechorin this time?
  • Prejudices?
  • Irony here?
  • What are the passions here?

28
Taman Pictures
29
Taman 2
30
Taman 3
31
Princess Mary
  • How would you describe Pechorin?
  • What happens in the story?
  • How would you describe Pechorins relationship
    with Mary? Grushnitsky? Vera?
  • Whats the point of this story? Does it try to
    tell you something about love?

32
Pechorin
33
Mary and Grushnitsky
34
Duel
35
Fatalist
36
Summing Up
  • Formal approach
  • Excellent stories passion, suspense, sex and
    violence
  • Descriptions of nature provide exotic backdrop
  • Effective use of difficult literary devices
    (forms of coincidence narrative removes)
  • Diminishing narrative distance
  • Excellent language

37
More Formalist Features
  • Irony (unreliable narrators)
  • Parody of popular genres
  • Society tale, adventure story, Byronic tale

38
Affinities with epic Homers Odyssey
  • Structure
  • Divergence of fabula and sjuzhet
  • Picaresque and episodic
  • Intertextuality

39
Romanticism to Realism
  • Byronic hero moodiness sense of mystery
    alienation from society and rebellion against
    social convention strong desire for personal
    freedom
  • Ironic treatment of Byronic hero?

40
Philosophical Approach
  • Study of fate, chance
  • Meaning of life issues

41
Sociological
  • Critique of status seeking
  • Critique of high society
  • Picture of customs of mountain people
  • Study of social type superfluous man

42
Superfluous Man
  • Onegin is example Pechorin too?
  • a representative type embodying the sense of
    alienation and futility felt by many intelligent
    young aristocrats, unable to find an outlet for
    their talents in contemporary society

43
Psychological
  • Study of particular character compulsive
    interference in lives of others
  • Motivation for behavior?
  • Pure ego?
  • Attention seeking?
  • Assertion of specialness (inferiority complex)

44
Psychological realism? Early example?
  • Self-delusion
  • Contradictory behavior
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