Russian & Soviet Literary Biography, 19th Century Russian Literature - Literary Criticism, Imperial Russian History - General & Miscellaneous, Critics & Historians - Literary Biography
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Overview
With the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russians have turned to their past to discover alternative intellectual traditions to those of revolution and socialism. In the mid-1800s, Apollon Grigorev, one of the most influential literary critics and thinkers of nineteenth-century Russia, was at the forefront of the conservative anti-revolutionary movement. Deemed, as he himself ironically observed, 'unnecessary' within the radical climate of his own day, and obscured by a century of anti-conservative suppression, Grigorev's ideas are only now coming to light. Troubled by the growing inclination of radicals towards social engineering and the notion of infinite progress, Grigorev proposed the alternative of organic development. Drawing on the idealist philosophy of Schelling, he stressed the primacy of life over theory, of the concrete over the abstract, and of the ethical over the social. He maintained that the ideal was not directly accessible, but rather expressed in the arts of particular nations and peoples. In a rare departure from the polarized politics of his day, he urged the organic development of Russia through a gradual merging of opposing elements. As a literary critic, he exerted considerable influence on the era's most prominent writers, serving as chief critic on Dostoevsky's journals, Time and Epoch, and helping to shape those ideas that we now see as profoundly Dostoevskian. This is the first English-language biography of Grigorev and one of the few works in English on the Russian conservative tradition. In addition to treating his subject's life and work, Dowler summarizes Grigorev's major critical articles, thereby providing a comprehensive introduction to this important thinker.Editorials
Booknews
The first English-language biography of the anti-revolutionary Russian literary critic of the 19th century, treating his life and work and summarizing his major critical articles. Explores his ideas in the primacy of life over theory and the ethical over the social, and his influence on the era's most prominent writers, especially Dostoevsky. Of interest to scholars in Russian literature and history. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)Book Details
Published
September 14, 1995
Publisher
Toronto ; University of Toronto Press, 1995.
Pages
286
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780802007124