The motif of the prodigal son in Ivan Turgenev's novels

Автор: Gabdullina Valentina Ivanovna

Журнал: Проблемы исторической поэтики @poetica-pro

Статья в выпуске: т.11, 2013 года.

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The author questions the perception of Ivan Turgenev as a "non- Christian writer" and studies the problem of the prodigal son motif functioning in a series of his novels. In his novels, Turgenev pictured different phases of the archetypal story, originating from the Gospel parable of the prodigal son. In the novel Rudin he depicted the phase of spiritual wanderings of the hero who had lost touch with his native land — Russia. In his next novels (Home of the Gentry, Fathers and Sons and Smoke), after moving his hero in circles and returning him to his parents' home, Turgenev reconstructs the model of human behavior, reflected in the parable, thereby recognizing the immutability of the idea formalized in the Gospel. The motif of the return to Russian land gets its completion in Turgenev's last novel Virgin Soil, in which the author paradoxically connects the Westernist idea with the Gospel imperative. Solomin, the son of a deacon, sent by his wise father out to Europe "to get education", studies in England, masters the European knowledge and returns back "to his native land" to establish his own business in inland Russia. Thus, a series of Turgenev's novels, in which he portrayed different phases of social life, are interlinked with the motif of the prodigal son, who is represented by novels' main characters.

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Gospel motif, archetype, prodigal son, ivan turgenev''s novels

Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/14748857

IDR: 14748857

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