Poetics of Brotherhood: Organic and Mechanistic Narrative in Late Tolstoi
In this article, Ilya Kliger and Nasser Zakariya treat Lev Tolstoi's conception of brotherhood from a narratological perspective. In the process, they trace the outlines of late Tolstoian narrative poetics, situating it within a variegated landscape of Tolstoi's own more properly “realist”...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Slavic review 2011, Vol.70 (4), p.754-772 |
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description | In this article, Ilya Kliger and Nasser Zakariya treat Lev Tolstoi's conception of brotherhood from a narratological perspective. In the process, they trace the outlines of late Tolstoian narrative poetics, situating it within a variegated landscape of Tolstoi's own more properly “realist” literary practice, and offering broader suggestions on the workings of narrative in its capacity to model social relations and ethical action. A narratological focus here allows them to elucidate how stories take part in contemporary understandings of social influence, human connectedness, and alienation— not only on the level of themes but also, and more deeply, on the level of the narrative organization of events. Their main focus is on one of Tolstoi's late novellas “The Forged Coupon” and his last novel Resurrection. |
doi_str_mv | 10.5612/slavicreview.70.4.0754 |
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source | Jstor Complete Legacy; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts |
subjects | Alienation Brotherhoods Ethics Influence Interpersonal relations LATE TOLSTOI Literary criticism Literature Metaphysics Narrative plot Narrative poetry Narratives Narratology Novellas Novels Organicism Peacetime Poetics Poetry Prisons Resurrection Russia Russian literature Social Influence Social Relations Social sciences Tolstoy, Leo Tolstoy, Leo (1828-1910) |
title | Poetics of Brotherhood: Organic and Mechanistic Narrative in Late Tolstoi |
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