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The Reluctant Modernist

Andrei Belyi and the Development of Russian Fiction, 1902-1914

Roger Keys author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:6th Jun '96

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Reluctant Modernist cover

Andrei Belyi (1880-1934) is generally regarded as the greatest and most influential prose-writer to emerge from the Symbolist movement in Russia at the turn of the twentieth century. His early prose `symphonies' and novels are often compared with the work of such European `modernists' as Joyce and Proust. This is the first book to attempt a systematic analysis of the place of Belyi's fiction within the modernist prose tradition in Russia; a tradition which has been obscured by decades of ideological distortion. Paradoxically, Belyi himself, a mystic by nature who sought only transcendent certainty from the flux of experience, would have been reluctant to claim this tradition as his own. Keys demonstrates the inadequacy of the various `isms' (Symbolism, Impressionism, etc.) which have until recently bedevilled most critical attempts to sort out the prose of the period, giving a comprehensive overview of Belyi criticism from both within and outside the Soviet Union. The book includes a detailed analysis of Belyi's prose works, paying keen attention to his philosophical and literary influences, including extensive reading of Kant and Gogol and its particular effect upon his theory and practice, and locating him firmly in his own Russian context. Sections devoted to Belyi's greatest novel, Petersburg, and other works, such as The Silver Dove and Dramatic Symphony, analyse Belyi's use of structure and plot, leitmotifs and acoustic symbolism. The book marks Belyi's attempts to reconcile the Symbolist vision of the writer as having revelatory mystical authority with the concept of `perspectivism', implied author, narrator and character offering a number of different voices which cannot claim cognitive authority beyond the fictional context in which they occur.

Keys does an excellant job of integrating all newly available primary and secondary materials . This is a good book. ... Keys is a careful researcher and a subtle reader of Belyi. ... Keys' command of the material is excellant, and his book will provide a fine research tool for the reader who wants to become acquainted both with Belyi's primary prose texts and with the state of secondary Belyi studies in Russia and in the West./Angela Brintlinger/International Review of Modernism/Vol 1 No 2 Spring/Summer 1998

ISBN: 9780198151609

Dimensions: 224mm x 145mm x 21mm

Weight: 501g

288 pages