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Petersburg

Petersburg( )
Author: Bely, Andrei
Translator: Bely, Andrei
Notes by: A Maguire, Robert
E Malmstad, John
Introduction by: A Maguire, Robert
E Malmstad, John
ISBN:978-0-253-20219-2
Publication Date:Jan 1979
Publisher:Indiana University Press
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:AUD $32.59
Book Description:

... a translation that captures Bely's idiosyncratic language and the rhythm of his prose, and without doing violence to English, conveys not only the literal meaning of the Russian but also its echoes and implications." --The New York Review of Books

This translation of Petersburg finally makes it possible to recognize Andrei Bely's great novel of 1913 as a crucial Russian instance of European modernist fiction." --Inquiry

All people who go in for the B's--Beckett,...
More Description

Book Details
Pages:384
Detailed Subjects: Fiction / Literary
Fiction / City Life
Fiction / Historical / General
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):15.24 x 22.86 x 2.489 cm
Book Weight:0.541 Kilograms
Author Biography
Bely, Andrei (Author)
A symbolist poet, Andrei Bely was also a literary critic and theorist and one of the most important figures in twentieth-century Russian fiction. His Petersburg (1916-35) is one of the century's great novels. He initially studied science but had begun his literary career even before graduation. His early poetry was shaped by mystical beliefs associated with the concept of the Divine Wisdom, beliefs shared by Aleksandr Blok and other younger symbolist poets. In later years, Bely was deeply affected by the German anthroposophist Rudolf Steiner, whom he began to follow in 1912. Blok's writings from that time on bear the imprint of his commitment to Steiner's teachings.

Bely's prose continued the stylistic traditions of Nikolai Gogol, about whose work he wrote. Brilliantly innovative in language, composition, and subject matter, Bely's fiction had a great impact on early Soviet literature. His novels The Silver Dove (1910), and St. Petersburg (1913) deal with Russian history in broad cultural perspective, focusing especially on East-West opposition. Kotik Letaev (1918), anticipated stream-of-consciousness techniques in Western fiction in its depiction of the psyche of a developing infant. The Christened Chinaman (1927), an autobiographical novel, is also highly innovative in its language and three-level narrative.

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