Russian Writers and the Fin de Siècle
Herausgeber: Bowers, Katherine; Kokobobo, Ani
Russian Writers and the Fin de Siècle
Herausgeber: Bowers, Katherine; Kokobobo, Ani
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
An essay collection that explores Russian literature and culture in relation to the late nineteenth-century fin de siècle.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Stephen HutchingsRussian Literary Culture in the Camera Age79,99 €
- J L BlackNicholas Karamzin and Russian Society in the Nineteenth Century48,99 €
- Auguste Rabutauxde la Prostitution En Europe Depuis l'Antiquité Jusqu'à La Fin Du Xvie Siècle (Éd.1881)26,99 €
- Fernand BournonÉtat Des Communes Fin XIXe Siècle Villemomble: Notice Historique & Renseignements Administratifs16,99 €
- TartièreVoyage d'Un Landais À La Fin Du Xviie Siècle Fin, Et Situation Des Landes À Cette Époque15,99 €
- TartièreVoyage d'Un Landais À La Fin Du Xviie Siècle15,99 €
- Mary PeaceChanging Sentiments and the Magdalen Hospital63,99 €
-
-
-
An essay collection that explores Russian literature and culture in relation to the late nineteenth-century fin de siècle.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 316
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Oktober 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 426g
- ISBN-13: 9781107423077
- ISBN-10: 1107423074
- Artikelnr.: 48807496
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 316
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Oktober 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 426g
- ISBN-13: 9781107423077
- ISBN-10: 1107423074
- Artikelnr.: 48807496
Introduction: the fin-de-siècle mood in Russian literature Ani Kokobobo and
Katherine Bowers; 1. The Russian Rougon-Macquart: degeneration and
biological determinism in The Golovlev Family Kate Holland; 2. The hiding
places of the self in Dostoevsky's Adolescent Yuri Corrigan; 3. A
childhood's garden of despair: Dostoevsky and 'The Boy at Christ's
Christmas Party' Robin Feuer Miller; 4. The railway and the elemental
force: Slavophilism, Pan-Slavism, and apocalyptic anxieties in Anna
Karenina Alexander Burry and S. Ceilidh Orr; 5. 'Mister Russian Beast':
civilization's discontents in Turgenev Emma Lieber; 6. Masculine
degeneration in Dostoevsky's Demons Connor Doak; 7. The burden of
superfluity: reconsidering female heroism in Chekhov's The Seagull Jenny
Kaminer; 8. The fall of the house: Gothic narrative and the decline of the
Russian family Katherine Bowers; 9. Corpses of desire and convention:
Tolstoy's and Artsybashev's grotesque realism Ani Kokobobo; 10. The little
man in the overcoat: Gogol and Krzhizhanovsky Muireann Maguire; 11. Icons,
eclipses and stepping off the train: Vladimir Korolenko and the Ocherk Jane
Costlow; 12. Decadent ecosystems in Uncle Vanya: a chorographic meditation
Thomas Newlin; 13. The mute body: Leonid Andreev's abject realism Edith W.
Clowes; 14. The thinking oyster: Turgenev's 'Drama of Dying' as the decay
of Russian realism Ilya Vinitsky; 15. An afterword on the potential of ends
Caryl Emerson; Bibliography.
Katherine Bowers; 1. The Russian Rougon-Macquart: degeneration and
biological determinism in The Golovlev Family Kate Holland; 2. The hiding
places of the self in Dostoevsky's Adolescent Yuri Corrigan; 3. A
childhood's garden of despair: Dostoevsky and 'The Boy at Christ's
Christmas Party' Robin Feuer Miller; 4. The railway and the elemental
force: Slavophilism, Pan-Slavism, and apocalyptic anxieties in Anna
Karenina Alexander Burry and S. Ceilidh Orr; 5. 'Mister Russian Beast':
civilization's discontents in Turgenev Emma Lieber; 6. Masculine
degeneration in Dostoevsky's Demons Connor Doak; 7. The burden of
superfluity: reconsidering female heroism in Chekhov's The Seagull Jenny
Kaminer; 8. The fall of the house: Gothic narrative and the decline of the
Russian family Katherine Bowers; 9. Corpses of desire and convention:
Tolstoy's and Artsybashev's grotesque realism Ani Kokobobo; 10. The little
man in the overcoat: Gogol and Krzhizhanovsky Muireann Maguire; 11. Icons,
eclipses and stepping off the train: Vladimir Korolenko and the Ocherk Jane
Costlow; 12. Decadent ecosystems in Uncle Vanya: a chorographic meditation
Thomas Newlin; 13. The mute body: Leonid Andreev's abject realism Edith W.
Clowes; 14. The thinking oyster: Turgenev's 'Drama of Dying' as the decay
of Russian realism Ilya Vinitsky; 15. An afterword on the potential of ends
Caryl Emerson; Bibliography.
Introduction: the fin-de-siècle mood in Russian literature Ani Kokobobo and
Katherine Bowers; 1. The Russian Rougon-Macquart: degeneration and
biological determinism in The Golovlev Family Kate Holland; 2. The hiding
places of the self in Dostoevsky's Adolescent Yuri Corrigan; 3. A
childhood's garden of despair: Dostoevsky and 'The Boy at Christ's
Christmas Party' Robin Feuer Miller; 4. The railway and the elemental
force: Slavophilism, Pan-Slavism, and apocalyptic anxieties in Anna
Karenina Alexander Burry and S. Ceilidh Orr; 5. 'Mister Russian Beast':
civilization's discontents in Turgenev Emma Lieber; 6. Masculine
degeneration in Dostoevsky's Demons Connor Doak; 7. The burden of
superfluity: reconsidering female heroism in Chekhov's The Seagull Jenny
Kaminer; 8. The fall of the house: Gothic narrative and the decline of the
Russian family Katherine Bowers; 9. Corpses of desire and convention:
Tolstoy's and Artsybashev's grotesque realism Ani Kokobobo; 10. The little
man in the overcoat: Gogol and Krzhizhanovsky Muireann Maguire; 11. Icons,
eclipses and stepping off the train: Vladimir Korolenko and the Ocherk Jane
Costlow; 12. Decadent ecosystems in Uncle Vanya: a chorographic meditation
Thomas Newlin; 13. The mute body: Leonid Andreev's abject realism Edith W.
Clowes; 14. The thinking oyster: Turgenev's 'Drama of Dying' as the decay
of Russian realism Ilya Vinitsky; 15. An afterword on the potential of ends
Caryl Emerson; Bibliography.
Katherine Bowers; 1. The Russian Rougon-Macquart: degeneration and
biological determinism in The Golovlev Family Kate Holland; 2. The hiding
places of the self in Dostoevsky's Adolescent Yuri Corrigan; 3. A
childhood's garden of despair: Dostoevsky and 'The Boy at Christ's
Christmas Party' Robin Feuer Miller; 4. The railway and the elemental
force: Slavophilism, Pan-Slavism, and apocalyptic anxieties in Anna
Karenina Alexander Burry and S. Ceilidh Orr; 5. 'Mister Russian Beast':
civilization's discontents in Turgenev Emma Lieber; 6. Masculine
degeneration in Dostoevsky's Demons Connor Doak; 7. The burden of
superfluity: reconsidering female heroism in Chekhov's The Seagull Jenny
Kaminer; 8. The fall of the house: Gothic narrative and the decline of the
Russian family Katherine Bowers; 9. Corpses of desire and convention:
Tolstoy's and Artsybashev's grotesque realism Ani Kokobobo; 10. The little
man in the overcoat: Gogol and Krzhizhanovsky Muireann Maguire; 11. Icons,
eclipses and stepping off the train: Vladimir Korolenko and the Ocherk Jane
Costlow; 12. Decadent ecosystems in Uncle Vanya: a chorographic meditation
Thomas Newlin; 13. The mute body: Leonid Andreev's abject realism Edith W.
Clowes; 14. The thinking oyster: Turgenev's 'Drama of Dying' as the decay
of Russian realism Ilya Vinitsky; 15. An afterword on the potential of ends
Caryl Emerson; Bibliography.