“Rus’, where are you racing to?”: from a bird-troika to a railway (Gogol, Dostoevsky and others)
Автор: Sytina Yuliya N.
Журнал: Проблемы исторической поэтики @poetica-pro
Статья в выпуске: 4 т.16, 2018 года.
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The article is devoted to the images of troika and railway in Russian literature of the 19th century. Russia began to develop rapidly after Peter the Great’s reforms. The question of the country’s development vector became particularly relevant in the 1840s. It caused the controversy of Westernizers and Slavophiles. In literature Russia’s path began to be related to the metaphor of a fast movement. Gogol created the symbol of Russia as a rushing troika in the finale of the poem “Dead Souls”. This symbol refers to the idea of Holy Russia. Slavophile K. Aksakov gave an enthusiastic assessment of the final lines of the poem. Westernizer Belinsky did not agree with Aksakov’s interpretation. He proposed an alternative symbol of Russia as a progressive country whose symbol was a railway. V. Sologub in his story “Tarantas” ridiculed on Gogol’s and Slavophiles’ views on the assumption of the common sense based on which the current dispute about the choice between the Russian ways of development is speculative and unreliable. Later, Dostoevsky entered into polemics refreshing the images of a Living Troika and a Mechanic Railway. Through lens of his realism these two symbols become larger and mean not just the ways of development of Russia, but two principles of beingness - the organic, striving for the holiness, and the infernal ones. Nevertheless, Dostoevsky and Gogol coincide in the main thing - the Easter archetype is fundamental for both of them.
N. v. gogol, f. m. dostoevsky, v. a. sologub, v. g. belinsky, symbols of the path and movement, historiosophy, westernizers and slavophiles
Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/147226177
IDR: 147226177 | DOI: 10.15393/j9.art.2018.5601