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Wingless Desire in Modernist Russia
Envy and Authorship in the 1920s
Wingless Desire in Modernist Russia
Envy and Authorship in the 1920s
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Description
In Wingless Desire in Modernist Russia, Yelena Zotova argues that the concept of envy underwent a peculiar transformation in the Russian Modernist prose of the 1920s due to a series of radical shifts in societal values, with each subsequent change thwarting Russia’s volatile axiological hierarchy. Industriousness and austerity, inferior to playful genius in Pushkin’s “Mozart and Salieri,” became virtues, while the intrinsic value of nonutilitarian art was officially nullified by the Bolshevik state.Consequently, a new literary type emerged, and envy, described as “wingless desire” by Russia’s chief poet Alexander Pushkin, obtained new ownership as the envied became the envier. Superimposing twentieth-century theories of envy onto Mikhail Bakhtin’s “Author and Hero in the Aesthetic Activity” (1923), Zotova proposes that Salieri’s envy could be the wingless embryo of the Bakhtinian authorship.
Table of Contents
A Note on Translation and Transliteration
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: The Hermeneutic Challenge of Envy
Chapter 1: When Author Envies Hero
Chapter 2: Wingless Desire: Mozart and Salieri as Author and Hero
Chapter 3: A Purgatory for the Hero: Iurii Olesha's Envy
Chapter 4: The Author in Hades: Konstantin Vaginov
Chapter 5: The Surplus of Vision in the Works of Alexander Grin
Afterword: Envy, Conscience, and Taste
Bibliography
About the Author
Product details
Published | Dec 10 2020 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 296 |
ISBN | 9781793605580 |
Imprint | Lexington Books |
Dimensions | 241 x 162 mm |
Series | Crosscurrents: Russia's Literature in Context |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
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