Literature and Society in Imperial Russia, 1800-1914Stanford University Press, 1978 - 306 páginas Ranging in topic from general discussions of literary theory to close readings of well known literary works, these nine papers address nearly every literary movement in nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century Russia, and a number of major writers, including Pushkin, Gogol, Turgenev, and Dostoevsky. Four kinds of issues are addressed: theoretical problems in the relationship of literature and society, the reading public, the rhetoric and ideologies of writers and critics, and the relationship between fictional and social worlds. In confronting some of the ways in which the social and literary aspects of Russian culture have imposed themselves upon each other, this volume seeks an approach to Russian literature that neglects neither the dynamics of social interaction nor the forms and traditions of literature. The contributors are Robert L. Belknap, Jeffrey Brooks, Edward J. Brown, Donald Fanger, Jean Franco, Robert Louis Jackson, Hugh McLean, Victor Ripp, and William Mills Todd III. |
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... conventions . Silence has fallen over the lively debate of the 1920's between the " vulgar sociology " that sought to imprison the writer's creativity within the consciousness permitted by his economic class and the WILLIAM MILLS TODD.
... conventions of artistic media become the necessary difference , since Levin considers literature not a reflection but a refraction of life.14 The relationship between writer and public that his approach suggests ( but does not develop ) ...
... conventions that regulate the discrete areas of cul- ture and the conventions that organize the relationship of these areas with each other . Pushkin depicts many types of 8 WILLIAM MILLS TODD III.
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Índice
Remapping the Boundaries | 11 |
A Rage | 29 |
Gogol and His Reader | 61 |
Readers and Reading at the End of the Tsarist | 97 |
97 | 128 |
Pisarev and the Transformation of Two Russian Novels | 151 |
The Rhetoric of an Ideological Novel | 173 |
Lifes Novel | 203 |
The Problem of | 237 |
Eugene Rudin | 259 |
297 | |