Lermontov's Narratives of HeroismNorthwestern University Press, 1998 - 244 This is the first study of Russian writer Mikhail Lermontov (1814-41) that attempts to integrate the in-depth interpretations of all his major texts--including his famous A Hero of Our Time, the novel that laid the foundation for the Russian psychological novel. Lermontov's explorations of the virtues and limitations of heroic, self-reliant conduct have subsequently become obscured or misread. This new book focuses upon the peculiar, disturbing, and arguably most central feature of Russian culture: its suspicion of and hostility toward individual achievement and self-assertion. The analysis and interpretation of Lermontov's texts enables Golstein to address broader cultural issues by exploring the reasons behind the persistent misreading of Lermontov's major works and by investigating the cultural attitudes that shaped Russia's reaction to the challenges of modernity. |
Spis treści
The Russian Context | 28 |
Chapter Four The Enigma of Heroism in Lermontovs The Song | 85 |
Pechorin in The Fatalist | 110 |
Chapter Six Lermontov versus Marlinsky or | 133 |
The Making | 154 |
Afterword The Man That Hath No Music in Himself | 186 |
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237 | |
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