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The Golden Period of Russian Literature

B.Sathiyamoorthy Assistant Professor of English Edayathangudy G.S. Pillay Arts & Science Colege Nagapattinam. The Golden Period of Russian Literature. The Golden Age of Russian Lit. A century of realism and reflection. When exactly was "The "Golden Age"?. 1830's - 1917.

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The Golden Period of Russian Literature

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  1. B.SathiyamoorthyAssistant Professor of EnglishEdayathangudy G.S. Pillay Arts & Science ColegeNagapattinam • The Golden Period of Russian Literature

  2. The Golden Age of Russian Lit • A century of realism and reflection

  3. When exactly was "The "Golden Age"? 1830's - 1917 Courtesy of Google Images

  4. Prominent Writers • Pushkin - National Poet • Gogol - Satirist/Realist • Turgenev - Short Story Writer • Tolstoy - Greatest writer ever (?) • Dostoevsky - Prolific Author and philosopher • Chekhov - Short Story Writer

  5. Remarkable Works

  6. Prominent Works

  7. Most highlighted work in Russian Literature

  8. "We all come out of Gogol's 'Overcoat' " • - Dostoevsky

  9. “To go wrong in one's own way is better than to go right in someone else's.” • - Dostoevsky (Crime and Punishment)

  10. Contradictions • Reason VS individual desires • State VS Individual • Fate VS Free Will • Educated Elite VS Peasantry/Bourgeois Courtesy of Google Images

  11. Literary Themes • Occupation = Classification • Suicide as a heroic means of escape • The "everyman" and the anti-hero • Revenge = Ultimate Reward • Property as Prize ...

  12. Epigraph to Anna Karenina • Vengence is mine; I shall repay it - Romans 12:19

  13. Literary Movements 1. Naturalism • Often considered a subcategory of realism, it grew in popularity towards the end of the 19th century (a post Darwinian mindset) • It is a literary style that hopes to depict life as honestly as possible, without any sense of idealism • Naturalist authors tend to show characters who have "compulsive instincts toward sexuality, hunger, and/or the accumulation of goods " ("Naturalism")

  14. 2. Populism • Populism emerged after the reforms of Alexander II • University students were hugely influenced by "progressive" European attitudes and formed a socialist group called the Populists (Mooers) • This literary movement "praised the soil and the earth" (Mooers) and addressed the needs/concerns of the peasants

  15. Works Cited • Mooers, John. Russian Literature. Prenhart Publishers, New York, New York: 1996. Print • "Naturalism" Literary Movements: Washington State University. 5 February 2014. Web

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