- Russian literature
"This article is about literature from Russia. For the song by
Maxïmo Park , seeOur Earthly Pleasures ."Russian literature refers to the literature of
Russia or itsémigré s, and to the Russian-language literature of several independent nations once a part of what was historically Russia or theSoviet Union . Prior to the nineteenth century Russia produced very little, if any, internationally read literature, but from around the 1830s Russian literature underwent an astounding golden age, beginning with the poetAleksandr Pushkin and culminating in two of the greatest novelists in world literature,Leo Tolstoy andFyodor Dostoevsky , and the playwrightAnton Chekhov . In the twentieth century leading figures of Russian literature included internationally recognised poets such asVladimir Mayakovsky ,Boris Pasternak ,Anna Akhmatova andJoseph Brodsky , and prose writersMaxim Gorky ,Vladimir Nabokov , Mikhail Sholokhov,Mikhail Bulgakov andAleksandr Solzhenitsyn .Early history
Old Russian literature consists of several masterpieces written in the
Old Russian language (not to be confused with the contemporaneousChurch Slavonic ). Anonymous works of this nature include "The Tale of Igor's Campaign " (Слово о Полку Игореве, Slovo o Polku Igoreve) and the "Praying of Daniel the Immured " (Моление Даниила Заточника, or Moleniye Daniila Zatochnika). The so-called "жития святых" (zhitiya svyatikh,lives of the saints ) formed a populargenre of the Old Russian literature. The "Life of Alexander Nevsky " (Житие Александра Невского, or Zhitiye Aleksandra Nevskovo) offers a well-known example. Other Russian literary monuments include "Zadonschina ", "Physiologist", "Synopsis" and "A Journey Beyond the Three Seas ".Bylina s – oral folk epics – fused Christian and pagan traditions. Medieval Russian literature had an overwhelmingly religious character and used an adapted form of theChurch Slavonic language with many South Slavic elements. The first work in colloquial Russian, the autobiography of arch priestAvvakum , emerged only in the mid-17th century.Petrine era
The "Westernization" of
Russia , commonly associated with Peter the Great and Catherine the Great, coincided with a reform of the Russian alphabet and increased tolerance of the idea of employing the popular language for general literary purposes. Authors likeAntioch Kantemir , Vasily Trediakovsky, andMikhail Lomonosov in the earlier 18th century paved the way for poets like Derzhavin, playwrights like Sumarokov and Fonvizin, and prose writers like Radishchev and Karamzin, the later is often credited with creation of modern Russian literary language.Golden Era
The 19th century is traditionally referred to as the "Golden Era" of Russian literature.
Romanticism permitted a flowering of especially poetic talent: the names of Zhukovsky and later that of his protegéAleksandr Pushkin came to the fore. Pushkin is credited with both crystallizing the literary Russian language and introducing a new level of artistry to Russian literature. His best-known work is a novel in verse,Eugene Onegin . An entire new generation of poets includingMikhail Lermontov ,Evgeny Baratynsky ,Konstantin Batyushkov ,Nikolai Alekseevich Nekrasov ,Aleksey Konstantinovich Tolstoy ,Fyodor Tyutchev , andAfanasij Fet followed in Pushkin's steps.Prose was flourishing as well. The first great Russian novelist was
Nikolai Gogol . Then came Leskov,Ivan Turgenev , Saltykov-Shchedrin and Goncharov.Leo Tolstoy andFyodor Dostoevsky who soon became internationally renowned to the point that many scholars have described one or the other as the greatest novelist ever. In the second half of the centuryAnton Chekhov excelled in writing short stories and became perhaps the leading dramatist internationally of his period.Other important nineteenth-century developments included
Ivan Krylov the fabulist; non-fiction writers such asBelinsky and Herzen; playwrights such as Griboedov and Ostrovsky andKozma Prutkov (a collective pen name) the satirist.ilver Age
The beginning of the 20th century ranks as the Silver Age of Russian poetry. Well-known poets of the period include:
Alexander Blok ,Sergei Esenin ,Valery Bryusov ,Konstantin Bal'mont ,Mikhail Kuzmin ,Igor Severyanin ,Sasha Cherny ,Nikolay Gumilyov ,Maximilian Voloshin ,Innokenty Annensky ,Zinaida Gippius . The poets most often associated with the "Silver Age" areAnna Akhmatova ,Marina Tsvetaeva ,Osip Mandelstam andBoris Pasternak . These latter two women and two men are sometimes jokingly called "TheABBA of Russian poetry".While the Silver Age is considered as the development of the 19th century Russian literature tradition, some avant-garde poets tried to overturn it:
Velimir Khlebnikov ,David Burlyuk andVladimir Mayakovsky .Though the Silver Age is famous mostly for its poetry, it gave some first-rate novelists and short-story writers, such as
Alexander Kuprin , Nobel Prize winnerIvan Bunin ,Leonid Andreyev , Fedor Sologub,Aleksey Remizov ,Yevgeny Zamyatin ,Dmitry Merezhkovsky andAndrei Bely , though most of them wrote poetry as well as prose.oviet era
The first years of the Soviet regime were marked by the proliferation of avant-garde literature groups. One of the most important was the
Oberiu movement that includedNikolay Zabolotsky , Alexander Vvedensky,Konstantin Vaginov and the most famous Russian absurdistDaniil Kharms . Other famous authors experimenting with language wereAndrei Platonov ,Mikhail Zoschenko ,Yuri Olesha andIsaac Babel .But soon
Soviet ization of the country brought Sovietization of the literature.Socialist realism became the only officially approved style. NovelistsMaxim Gorky , Nobel Prize winner Mikhail Sholokhov, andAleksei Nikolaevich Tolstoi ; and poetsKonstantin Simonov andAleksandr Tvardovsky were the most prominent representatives of the officialSoviet literature . Only a few, such asIlf and Petrov , with theirpicaresque novel s about a charismatic con artistOstap Bender , could publish without strictly following the Socialist realism guidelines.Many writers wished to resist official ideology.
Mikhail Bulgakov , author ofThe Master and Margarita , andBoris Pasternak with his novelDoctor Zhivago continued the classical tradition of Russian literature with little hope of being published. TheSerapion Brothers insisted on the right to write independently of political ideology: this brought them into conflict with the government.Meanwhile, "émigré" writers, such as poets
Georgy Ivanov ,Georgy Adamov andVladislav Khodasevich ; and novelists such as Ivan Bunin,Gaito Gazdanov ,Mark Aldanov andVladimir Nabokov , continued to flourish in exile.In post-Stalin Russia, "Socialist realism" remained the only permitted style, and while some good authors such as
Yury Trifonov managed to make it through censorship barriers, most, like Nobel Prize winnerAleksandr Solzhenitsyn (who built his works on the legacy of thegulag camps), orVasily Grossman couldn't publish their major works in the USSR.The authorities tried to control Russian literature even abroad: for example, they put pressure on the
Nobel Prize committee to deny Konstantin Paustovsky the Literature Prize in 1965. The prize was awarded instead toMikhail Sholokhov who was more loyal to the Soviet regime. Pasternak was forced to refuse his Nobel Prize in 1958.Post-Communist Russia saw most of these works be published and become a part of mainstream culture. However, even before the decay of the Soviet Union, tolerance to non-mainstream art had slowly started to grow, especially during the
Khrushchev Thaw . Some works of Bulgakov, Solzhenitsyn andVarlam Shalamov were published in the 1960s. The decade brought out new popular authors, such as Strugatsky brothers who disguised Social criticism asScience fiction . Poetry became a mass cultural phenomenon:Yevgeny Yevtushenko ,Andrey Voznesensky ,Robert Rozhdestvensky andBella Akhmadulina read their poems in stadiums and attracted huge crowds.But the thaw didn't last long. In the 1970s, some of the most prominent authors were not only banned from publishing, but were also prosecuted for their Anti-Soviet sentiments or
parasitism . Solzhenitsyn was expelled from the country. Leaders of the younger generation, such as Nobel prize winning poetJoseph Brodsky , novelistsVasily Aksenov ,Eduard Limonov andSasha Sokolov , short story writerSergei Dovlatov , had to emigrate to the US, whileVenedikt Erofeyev "emigrated" to alcoholism. They remained known in the Soviet Union with the help ofsamizdat . The only relatively independent prose that could be published during this period of time was theVillage Prose , whose most prominent representatives wereViktor Astafiyev andValentin Rasputin .Post-Soviet era
The end of the 20th century has proven a difficult period for Russian literature, with relatively few distinct voices. Among the most discussed authors of these period were novelists
Victor Pelevin andVladimir Sorokin , and the poet Dmitry Alexandrovich Prigov.A relatively new trend in Russian literature is that female novelists such as
Tatyana Tolstaya ,Lyudmila Ulitskaya orDina Rubina have come into prominence.Detective stories and thrillers have proven a very successful genre of new Russian literature: in the 90s serial detective novels by
Alexandra Marinina ,Polina Dashkova andDarya Dontsova were published in millions of copies. In the next decade a more "high-brow" authorBoris Akunin with his series about the 19th century sleuthErast Fandorin became widely popular.Tradition of classic Russian novel continues with such author as
Mikhail Shishkin .The leading poets of the young generation are arguably
Dmitry Vodennikov andAndrey Rodionov , both famous not only for their verses, but also for their ability to artistically recite them.Russian literature abroad
Russian literature is not only written by Russians. In the Soviet times such popular writers as
Belarus ianVasil Bykov ,Kyrgyz Chinghiz Aitmatov andAbkhaz Fazil Iskander wrote some of their books in Russian. Some renowned contemporary authors writing in Russian have been born and live in Ukraine (Andrey Kurkov ,Marina and Sergey Dyachenko ) orBaltic States (Garros and Evdokimov ).A number of prominent Russian authors such as novelists
Mikhail Shishkin ,Ruben Gonsales Galiego ,Svetlana Martynchik andDina Rubina , poetsAlexei Tsvetkov andBakhyt Kenzheev , though born in USSR, live and work inEurope ,North America orIsrael .Themes in Russian books
Suffering, often as a means of redemption, is a recurrent theme in Russian literature. Dostoevsky in particular is noted for exploring suffering in works such as "
Notes from Underground " and "Crime and Punishment ". Christianity and Christian symbolism are also important themes, notably in the works ofDostoevsky , Tolstoy and Chekhov. In the 20th century, suffering as a mechanism of evil was explored by authors such as Solzhenitsyn in "The Gulag Archipelago ".A leading Russian literary critic of the 20th century
Viktor Shklovsky , in his book, "Zoo, or Letters Not About Love", wrote, "Russian literature has a bad tradition. Russian literature is devoted to the description of unsuccessful love affairs."ee also
*
List of Russian language poets
*Russian Formalism
*Pushkin House
*List of Russian writers
* Skazka
*Russian philosophy
*Russian science fiction and fantasy External links
* [http://www.sovlit.com Encyclopedia of Soviet Writers]
* [http://www.lib.ru/ Maxim Moshkov's E-library of Russian literature] (in Russian)
* [http://russianpoetsdatabase.blogspot.com Contemporary Russian Poets Database] (in English)
* [http://russianpoets.blogspot.com Contemporary Russian Poets in English translation]
* [http://www.russiacristiana.org/RussiaCristianaNE.htm La Nuova Europa: international cultural journal about Russia and East of Europe]
* [http://www.professorandy.com/RussianLiterature.shtml Information and Critique on Russian Literature]
* [http://russianclassics.blogspot.com Russian Classics Bulletin] by Erik Lindgren (Turgenev, Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky)
* [http://russia-ic.com/culture_art/literature/169/ History of Russian literature] Brief summary
* [http://www.bookle.ru/ Search Russian Books] (in Russian)
* [http://ruthenia.ru/tiutcheviana/search/en/drevnerus.html Philology in Runet. A special search through the sites devoted to the Old Russian literature.]
* [http://public-library.narod.ru/ Публичная электронная библиотека Е.Пескина]
*
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.