
Price: $20.00
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Book Condition: Near Fine
First edition. Inscribed and signed by author on front endpaper ('To Brenda, to whom this book owes so much! Best wishes, Steve Hutchings'). Jacket lightly rubbed. 1997 Hard Cover. 316 pp. This book interprets the baffling complex of meanings attached by Russian culture to the concept of everyday life, or byt, and assesses its impact on Russian modernist narrative. Drawing on modern literary theory and theology, Stephen C. Hutchings argues that byt emerged from a dialogue between two aesthetic systems, one predominant in Western Catholic and Protestant cultures, the other reflected in Orthodox iconic traditions. He offers provocative, yet careful, readings of key narrative texts from the period. CONTENTS: Acknowledgements; Note on Transliteration, Citation, and Translation; Introduction; PART ONE: Narrative and the everyday: myth, image, sign, icon, life; The development of byt in nineteenth-century Russian literature; PART TWO: Enacting the present: Chekhov, art, and the everyday; Fedor Sologub's aesthetics of narrative excess; PART THREE: The struggle with byt in Belyi's Kotik Letaev and The Christened Chinaman; Breaking the circle of the self: Vasili Rozanov's discourse of pure intimacy; At the 'I' of the storm: the iconic self in Remizov's Whirlwind Russia; Notes; Bibliography; Index.
Title: Russian Modernism: The Transfiguration of the Everyday (Cambridge Studies in Russian Literature)
Categories: Russian, Literary Criticism, Sociology, Russian, Association Copies,
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Cambridge, Cambridge University Press: 1997
ISBN Number: 0521580099
ISBN Number 13: 9780521580090
Binding: Hard Cover
Book Condition: Near Fine
Jacket Condition: Very Good
Inscription: Signed by author
Seller ID: 2289554
Keywords: RUSSIAN FICTION HISTORY CRITICISM MODERNISM,