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How Russian Literature Became Great

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How Russian Literature Became Great explores the cultural and political role of a modern national literature, orchestrated in a Slavonic key but resonating far beyond Russia's borders.

Rolf Hellebust investigates a range of literary tendencies, philosophies, and theories from antiquity to the present: Roman jurisprudence to German Romanticism, French Enlightenment to Czech Structuralism, Herder to Hobsbawm, Samuel Johnson to Sainte-Beuve, and so on. Besides the usual Russian suspects from Pushkin to Chekhov, Hellebust includes European writers: Byron and Shelley, Goethe and Schiller, Chateaubriand and Baudelaire, Dante, Mickiewicz, and more.

As elsewhere, writing in Russia advertises itself via a canon of literary monuments constituting an atemporal "ideal order among themselves" (T.S. Eliot). And yet this is a tradition that could only have been born at a specific moment in the golden nineteenth-century age of historiography and nation-building. The Russian example reveals the contradictions between immutability and innovation, universality and specificity at the heart of modern conceptions of tradition from Sainte-Beuve through Eliot and down to the present day.

The conditions of its era of formation—the prominence of the crucial literary-historical question of the writer's social function, and the equation of literature with national identity—make the Russian classical tradition the epitome of a unified cultural text, with a complex narrative in which competing stories of progress and decline unfold through the symbolic biographical encounters of the authors who constitute its members. How Russian Literature Became Great thus offers a new paradigm for understanding the paradoxes of modern tradition.

ISBN-13: 9781501773419

Media Type: Hardcover

Publisher: Northern Illinois University Press

Publication Date: 01-15-2024

Pages: 252

Product Dimensions: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.69d

Series: NIU Series in Slavic - East European - and Eurasian Studies

Rolf Hellebust teaches comparative literature with the Brilliant Club university access charity in London. He is the author of Flesh to Metal.

What People are Saying About This

Gary Saul Morson

How did the greatest period of Russian literature come to be seen as the 'classical' period? How did the idea of this tradition as something above and beyond the works it contains get established? What are the characteristics Russians assign to this tradition? These are among the interesting questions Hellebust addresses.

Caryl Emerson

In the case of the Russian nationso argues this wise and unsettling bookto become great is to construct a charismatic faith-object out of native fictional narratives and then market this identity to others. Rolf Hellebust shows how this self-serving tradition did not passively accumulate but was actively molded and strategically deployed.