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Fathers and Sons: Turgenev’s Theme in Russian Literary and Political Culture

Autor Vladimir Golstein
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 26 iun 2025
With political power in Russia flowing directly from the ruler to his subjects, the distinction between the public and private became porous. The identification of political rulers with fathers, and population with children created a dynamic that significantly shaped Russian attitudes and cultural practices, and tinted social conflicts with intensity of family dramas. This book examines artistic works generated by the reforms, revolutions, and other political transformations of the last two centuries, through the prism of generational interaction, illuminating and re-interpreting the frequently misunderstood or misread cultural events such as the reception of St. Petersburg, Dostoevsky’s and Bely's novels, Stalin’s cult of personality, and Eisenstein’s films.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9798887197432
Pagini: 370
Dimensiuni: 156 x 2340 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.69 kg
Editura: Academic Studies Press
Colecția Academic Studies Press
Locul publicării:Boston, United States

Recenzii

"The temporal sweep of Golstein’s study is truly impressive. Through the lens of generational struggle Golstein illuminates not only individual works, but the broader movements of Russian and Soviet cultural life. Fathers and sons: Turgenev’s Theme in Russian Literary and Political Culture deftly transitions from incisive close readings to a bird’s-eye view on centuries of cultural transformation." —Tatyana Gershkovich, Associate Professor of Russian Studies, Carnegie Mellon University
“In his wide-ranging study Vladimir Golstein brings into crystalline focus the role that generational conflict played in the Russian cultural consciousness of the 19th and 20th centuries. While most readers will know of the theme’s importance in works like Turgenev’s Fathers and Sons and Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov, Golstein shows these were just the tip of a vast iceberg. Using as his framework the Ur-myths of the son-devouring Cronus and the prodigal son, he offers detailed readings of the theme’s presence in works by a wide range of writers, from Pushkin, Turgenev, and Dostoevsky in the nineteenth century to Bely, Mayakovsky, and others in the twentieth, as well as films like Sergei Eistenstein’s Alexander Nevsky and Ivan the Terrible. As Golstein skillfully shows, far from being an incidental theme, the idea of generational conflict repeatedly served Russian writers as a lightning rod for key political tensions of their era.” — Thomas Seifrid, University of Southern California
“Vladimir Golstein offers a magisterial analysis of fathers (rulers) and sons (subjects) in Russian literature, cinema, and politics over the span of two centuries. Is it any wonder that artists and officials in an era of such rapid, wrenching, pervasive change would turn again and again to the clout and culpability of generations? And so the metaphor of intergenerational conflict illuminates a long series of Russia’s most significant historical touchpoints (Westernization, Decembrism, Revolution, RAPP, Socialist Realism, Chapaevism, Stalinism) and influential practitioners of literature and film (Pushkin, Lermontov, Turgenev, Chernyshevsky, Dostoevsky, Bely, Mayakovsky, Parnok, Bulgakov, Eisenstein, the Vasilyevs). While there is no denying “the danger of a single story,” scholars and students who crave a unified explanation of Russian culture since 1800 will find much to admire in Golstein’s persuasively contextualized parent/child dialectic.” — Thomas Hodge, author of Hunting Nature: Ivan Turgenev and the Organic World