The Literature Book

(ff) #1
179
See also: Eugene Onegin 124 ■ A Hero of Our Time 151–52 ■ Dead Souls 152 ■ Crime and Punishment 172 –7 7 ■
The Idiot 199 ■ Anna Karenina 200 ■ The Brothers Karamazov 200–01 ■ Uncle Vanya 203

Peter the Great, tsar from 1682 to


  1. Peter oversaw the adoption
    of Western customs, learning, and
    even language, to the extent that—
    by the early 19th century—the
    primary tongue spoken by the
    Russian aristocracy was French.
    The traditional literature of
    “old Russia,” notably the folk epic,
    was displaced by writing that
    focused on more modern themes,
    and the Russian language itself
    developed new literary forms that
    carried through to the 19th century.
    However, Russian writers did much
    more than ape the conventions of
    Western literature. They reacted
    to and defied its assumptions, and
    carved out their own uniquely


Russian forms of expression,
which often looked back to the
themes of earlier folktales, and
sometimes even challenged the
very concept of writing as art. In
the West, the writers of Russia’s
Golden Age were regarded with
curiosity—they were certainly
brilliant, but they were also
considered savage and unschooled.
The first flowering of the Golden
Age early in the 19th century
included works from writers such
as Alexander Pushkin, Nikolai
Gogol, and Ivan Turgenev. A
second blossoming in the 1860s
and 1870s produced the greatest
works of the period, including
Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s Crime and

Punishment (1866)—a visceral
exercise in psychological realism—
and Tolstoy’s War and Peace (1869)
and Anna Karenina (1875 –77). ❯❯

DEPICTING REAL LIFE


Tolstoy’s expansive epic War and Peace explores Russian identity
and history through the experiences of, and interactions between,
the members of five noble families—the Bezukhovs, the Bolkonskys,
the Rostovs, the Kuragins, and the Drubetskoys.

Prince Nikolai
Bolkonsky

Count Kirill
Bezukhov

Prince Andrei
Bolkonsky

Lise
Bolkonskaya

Princess Marya
Bolkonskaya

Nikolai
Rostov

Petya
Rostov

Vera
Rostova

Mademoiselle
Bourienne

Old Prince
Bolkonsky

Princess
Bolkonskaya

Old Count
Ilya Rostov

Old Countess
Natalya Rostova

Natasha
Rostova

Pierre
Bezukhov

Aline
Kuragina

Vasili
Kuragin

Liza
Bezukhova

Mashenka
Bezukhova

Unnamed
daughter

Petya
Bezukhov

Helene
Kuragina

Hippolyte
Kuragin

Anatole
Kuragin

Princess Anna
Drubetskaya

Prince Boris
Drubetskoy

If no one fought except
on his own conviction,
there would be no wars.
War and Peace

Sister or cousin

US_178-181_WarPeace.indd 179 08/10/2015 13:06

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