GOGOL AND THE WESTERN SLAVOPHILIA IN CRITICAL PERSPECTIVE

Journal Title: Studia Litterarum - Year 2017, Vol 2, Issue 4

Abstract

The essay examines Gogol’s heritage from a new and somewhat “unusual” perspective: the writer is seen as one of the main Russian ideologists of the Slavic unity. Gogol’s views are therefore placed in the context of different Slavophilic trends. The question that this study addresses is only seemingly marginal; as the research has revealed, the polemics between Gogol and the representatives of the Western branch of Slavophilism is central to the work of the former. The essay analyzes Gogol’s views against the background of various ideas about the unity of the Slavs of the “Moscow” and Polish Slavophilic groups, in comparison with “Ukrainophile” views of Gogol’s countryman O.M. Bodiansky, and in their relation to the initiatives of the Minister of Public Education S.S. Uvarov who prescribed the study of the history and literature of the Slavic peoples at universities in 1835. The essay focuses on the well-know “dissident case” (delo o volnodumstve) that affected Gogol already as a student at Nezhinskaya gymnasium in the 1820s. It also covers such subjects as: Gogol’s communication with Polish emigrants, participants of the Polish uprising (1830–1831), when he was abroad in 1836–1837; Mickiewicz’s Parisian lectures in Collège de France in 1840–1844; the history of the Ukrainian-Slavic Society in 1846–1847; and the consequences of the publication of the book About the Russian State by Giles Fletcher, British ambassador to Russia in the 16th century. It also pays attention to the origins of the Polish ideological doctrine concerning the so-called “turanism” of the Russians. Thus, the article discusses the reflection of various Slavic interests and views in Gogol’s fiction and essays, and in his correspondence with friends and acquaintances, up until the last years of his life. An extensive bibliography on the subject is also provided.

Authors and Affiliations

Igor A. Vinogradov

Keywords

Related Articles

The Model and the Masterpiece (Balzac and his followers)

Balzac’s short story “The Unknown Masterpiece” (“Le Chef-d’œuvre inconnu”) is one of his most commented works. This essay offers a new reading of the story by correlating the narrative structures of the text with the d...

“I WILL RETURN / COME BACK TO YOU UNRECOGNIZED”: THE FATE OF POETRY OF MOTHER MARIA IN POST-SOVIET RUSSIA AND IN FRANCE

The article examines the history of the reception of mother Maria’s poetry in Soviet and post-Soviet Russia, in France and in Great Britain. It analyses how her image and “hypostasis” became mythologized in Russian and...

“The Testament” of XII Pandito Hambo-Lama Dashidorzhi Ithegelov in the Context of Buddhist Philosophy

The article deals with a hitherto unexamined literary text written by a famous Buddhist philosopher and scientist XII Pandito Hambo-Lama Dashidorzhi Itigelov. This text is the last poem by D. Itigelov entitled “The Test...

THE ROLE OF AUTHORIAL SELF-REFLECTION IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE NEW BELARUSIAN LITERATURE ( EARLY 20 TH CENTURY )

The essay focuses on the development of a new Belarusian literature in the early decades of the 20 th century and the ways Belarusian writers reflected on the perspectives of the national literary development. During thi...

CHILDREN AND JUVENILE LITERATURE OF THE THIRD REICH AS AN INSTRUMENT OF NAZI IDENTITY FORMATION

The article examines the role of children and juvenile literature of the Third Reich in the development of Nazi identity. In German culture of the 1930s, the image of childhood developed during the period of the Weimar...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP26192
  • DOI 10.22455/2500-4247-2017-2-4-182-207
  • Views 316
  • Downloads 15

How To Cite

Igor A. Vinogradov (2017). GOGOL AND THE WESTERN SLAVOPHILIA IN CRITICAL PERSPECTIVE. Studia Litterarum, 2(4), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-26192