Russian Literature - Ideals and Realities

Author(s): Peter Kropotkin

Reference

Introduction by George Woodcock



In this work, Peter Kropotkin is propounding the thesis that, in Russia, literature occupies a inique position because it is the only way of reflecting the real currents of intellectual development and of underground political opinion. The consequence, he feels, has been that the best minds of the country have chosen the poem, the novel, the satire, or literary criticism as the medium for expressing their aspirations, their conceptions of national life, and their ideals.



Concentrating on content rather than on form, on intention rather than achievement, Russian Literature provides a fair and comprehensive introduction to Russian writing up to the end of the nineteenth century. Almost every poet and prose-writer of any significance is discussed - Pushkin, Lermontoff, Gogol, Turgueneff, Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky - and every class of literature is included; criticism as well as novels, and political writings as well as poetry.







Table of Contents



Preface



The Pronunciation of Russian Names



An Introduction by George Woodcock



Chapter I: Introduction



Chapter II: Pushkin and Lermontoff



Chapter III: Gogol



Chapter IV: Turgueneff - Tolotsy



Chapter V: Gontcharoff - Dostoyevskiy - Nekrasoff



Chapter VI: The Drama



Chapter VII: The Folk Novelists



Chapter VIII: Political Literature - Satire - Art Criticism - Later Period Novelists



Bibliographical Notes



Appendices







Index



1991: 385 pages, index


Product Information

General Fields

  • : 9780921689843
  • : Black Rose Books
  • : Black Rose Books
  • : 0.539
  • : 30 September 1990
  • : 1.07 Inches X 5.49 Inches X 8.51 Inches
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Peter Kropotkin
  • : Paperback
  • : English
  • : 385