golden age russian literature

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golden ages russian literature 1. golden ages russian literature 2. 1830s and 1840s: romanticism 3. realism 4. the end of the golden age 1. golden ages russian literature the golden age of russian literature is notably not a term often employed in literary criticism. it does not refer to any particular school or movement (e.g., classicism, romanticism, realism); rather, it encompasses several of them. as such, it immediately falls prey to all the shortcomings of such literary categorizations, not the least of which is imprecision. the term furthermore demands, eo ipso, a pair of ungilded ages at either end, and might lead one to an easy and unstudied dismissal of works outside its tenure. finally, those who wrote during its span were not particularly aware of living in an aureate age, and they certainly never consciously identified themselves as belonging to a unified or coherent faction—any similarity is adduced from …
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term under discussion. nicholas riasanovsky, in a history of russia, offers the following span: the golden age of russian literature has been dated roughly from 1820 to 1880, from pushkin's first major poems [his stylized, voltairean folk-epic ruslan and liudmila ] to dostoevsky's last major novel [brothers karamazov ]. riasanovsky's dates are notably narrower than those mentioned above. his span omits the first two decades of the century, and with them the late pseudo-classicism of derzhavin, as well as the sentimentalism and ossianic romanticism of nikolai karamzin and vasily zhukovsky—schools that constituted pushkin's and gogol's frame of reference and laid the verbal foundation for the later glorious literary output of russia. on the far end, it disbars the final two decades of the nineteenth century, anton chekhov and maksim gorky notwithstanding. ending the golden age in 1880 furthermore neatly excludes the second half of tolstoy's remarkable sixty-year career. 2. 1830s …
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p an acquaintance in that year, and gogol claimed that pushkin had given him the kernel of the ideas for his two greatest works: dead souls (1842), perhaps the comic novel par excellence; and the uproarious inspector general (1836), generally recognized as the greatest russian play and one that certainly ranks as one of the world's most stageable. pushkin also served as the springboard for another literato of the golden age, lermontov, who responded to pushkin's death (in a duel) in 1837 with his impassioned "death of a poet," a poem which launched lermontov's brief literary career (he was killed four years later in a duel). although his corpus is smallish—he had written little serious verse before 1837—and much of it was left unpublished until after his death (mostly for censorial reasons), lermontov is generally considered russia's second-greatest poet. he also penned a prose masterpiece, a hero of our time, …
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iberia. when he returned to st. petersburg, he published notes from the house of the dead, an engrossing fictionalized memoir of the years he had spent in penal servitude. the work was his first critical success since poor folk, and he followed it, during the 1860s and 1870s, with a series of novels that were both critical and popular successes, including notes from underground (1864) and crime and punishment (1866)—both, in part, rejoinders to the positivistic and utilitarian geist of the time. his masterpiece brothers karamazov (1880) won him the preeminent position in russian letters shortly before his death in 1881. gogol's death in 1852 moved ivan turgenev to write an innocuous commemorative essay, for which he was arrested, jailed for a month, and then banished to his estate. that year, his sportsman's sketches was first published in book form, and popular response to the vivid sketches of life in …
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ss: turgenev wrote the journal's editor to praise the work and encourage the anonymous author, and dostoyevsky wrote to a friend from faraway siberia to learn the identity l. n., whose story had so engaged him. along with dostoyevsky, tolstoy's prose dominated the russian literary and intellectual spheres during the 1860s and 1870s. war and peace (1869), his magnum opus, describes the russian victory over napoleon's army. anna karenina (1878), a russian version of a family novel, was published serially in the russian messenger (the same journal that soon thereafter published dostoyevsky's brothers karamazov ) and is generally considered one of the finest novels ever written. 4. the end of the golden age although none of tolstoy's works (before 1884) treated politics and social conflict in the direct manner of dostoyevsky or turgenev, they were nonetheless socially engaged, treating obliquely historical or philosophical questions present in contemporary debates. this circumspectness …

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golden ages russian literature 1. golden ages russian literature 2. 1830s and 1840s: romanticism 3. realism 4. the end of the golden age 1. golden ages russian literature the golden age of russian literature is notably not a term often employed in literary criticism. it does not refer to any particular school or movement (e.g., classicism, romanticism, realism); rather, it encompasses several of them. as such, it immediately falls prey to all the shortcomings of such literary categorizations, not the least of which is imprecision. the term furthermore demands, eo ipso, a pair of ungilded ages at either end, and might lead one to an easy and unstudied dismissal of works outside its tenure. finally, those who wrote during its …

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