For Humanity's Sake: The Bildungsroman in Russian Culture

For Humanity's Sake is the first study in English to trace the genealogy of the classic Russian novel, from Pushkin to Tolstoy to Dostoevsky. Lina Steiner demonstrates how these writers' shared concern for individual and national education played a major role in forging a Russian cultural identity.

For Humanity's Sake highlights the role of the critic Apollon Grigor'ev, who was first to formulate the difference between Western European and Russian conceptions of national education or Bildung – which he attributed to Russia's special sociopolitical conditions, geographic breadth, and cultural heterogeneity. Steiner also shows how Grigor'ev's cultural vision served as the catalyst for the creative explosion that produced Russia's most famous novels of the 1860s and 1870s. Positing the classic Russian novel as an inheritor of the Enlightenment's key values – including humanity, self-perfection, and cross-cultural communication – For Humanity's Sake offers a unique view of Russian intellectual history and literature.

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For Humanity's Sake: The Bildungsroman in Russian Culture

For Humanity's Sake is the first study in English to trace the genealogy of the classic Russian novel, from Pushkin to Tolstoy to Dostoevsky. Lina Steiner demonstrates how these writers' shared concern for individual and national education played a major role in forging a Russian cultural identity.

For Humanity's Sake highlights the role of the critic Apollon Grigor'ev, who was first to formulate the difference between Western European and Russian conceptions of national education or Bildung – which he attributed to Russia's special sociopolitical conditions, geographic breadth, and cultural heterogeneity. Steiner also shows how Grigor'ev's cultural vision served as the catalyst for the creative explosion that produced Russia's most famous novels of the 1860s and 1870s. Positing the classic Russian novel as an inheritor of the Enlightenment's key values – including humanity, self-perfection, and cross-cultural communication – For Humanity's Sake offers a unique view of Russian intellectual history and literature.

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For Humanity's Sake: The Bildungsroman in Russian Culture

For Humanity's Sake: The Bildungsroman in Russian Culture

by Lina Steiner
For Humanity's Sake: The Bildungsroman in Russian Culture

For Humanity's Sake: The Bildungsroman in Russian Culture

by Lina Steiner

eBook

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Overview

For Humanity's Sake is the first study in English to trace the genealogy of the classic Russian novel, from Pushkin to Tolstoy to Dostoevsky. Lina Steiner demonstrates how these writers' shared concern for individual and national education played a major role in forging a Russian cultural identity.

For Humanity's Sake highlights the role of the critic Apollon Grigor'ev, who was first to formulate the difference between Western European and Russian conceptions of national education or Bildung – which he attributed to Russia's special sociopolitical conditions, geographic breadth, and cultural heterogeneity. Steiner also shows how Grigor'ev's cultural vision served as the catalyst for the creative explosion that produced Russia's most famous novels of the 1860s and 1870s. Positing the classic Russian novel as an inheritor of the Enlightenment's key values – including humanity, self-perfection, and cross-cultural communication – For Humanity's Sake offers a unique view of Russian intellectual history and literature.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781442696099
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Publication date: 11/19/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 280
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Lina Steiner is an academic advisor attached to the Chair of Theoretical Philosophy at the Institute for Philosophy at Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Part I: Culture (Obrazovanie, Bildung) and the Bildungsroman on Russian Soil

1. Russian Literature from the National Awakening of the 1800s to the Rise of Pochvennichestvo in the 1850s

2. Apollon Grigor'ev's Theory of Russian Culture

3. Yurii Lotman's Idea of the “Semiosphere”

4. The Semiospheric Novel and the Broadening of Cultural Self-Consciousness

Part II: Nineteenth-Century Russian Novels of Emergence

5. Pushkin's Quest for National Culture: The Captain's Daughter as a Russian Bildungsroman

6. Educating Russia, Building Humanity: Tolstoy's War and Peace

7. Dostoevsky on Individual Reform and National Reconciliation: The Adolescent

Conclusion

Appendix: The Russian Texts

Notes

Bibliography

Index

What People are Saying About This

Anne Lounsbery

‘A work of assiduous scholarship, For Humanity’s Sake makes a significant, original argument about a key aspect of the Russian novelistic tradition that has been very little addressed. Carefully argued and based on a prodigious amount of research, this book demonstrates Lina Steiner’s deeply impressive knowledge of an immense critical literature.’

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