Dostoevsky and the Realists: Dickens, Flaubert, Tolstoy

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Dostoevsky and the Realists: Dickens, Flaubert, Tolstoy​ offers a radical redefinition of Realism as a historical phenomenon, grounded in the literary manifestoes of the 1840s in three national literary canons (English, French and Russian) which issue a call to writers to record the manners and mores of their societies for posterity and thus to become "local historians." The sketch of manners becomes the instituting genre of Realism but is transformed in the major novels of the Realists into history as genealogy and into a phenomenology of modern subjectivity. Dickens, Flaubert and Tolstoy are brought into relation with Dostoevsky via a shared poetics as well as through a deconstructive and/or psychoanalytic analysis of their respective novels, which are interpreted in the context of various doctrines of Beauty, including Dostoevsky’s own artistic credo of 1860. In this broad context of European aesthetics and the European literary canon, Dostoevsky’s own view of history is illuminated in a new perspective, in which his concept of the "soil" is stripped of its conservative mask behind which emerges a (post-exile) Dostoevsky with socialist, pan-European views. The portrait of Dostoevsky which thus emerges from the present study is that of a European writer with a radically modern aesthetics and with a progressivist political orientation which is in consonance with his pre-exile affiliation with utopian socialism.

Author(s): Slobodanka M. Vladiv-Glover
Series: Peter Lang Humanities list
Publisher: Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers
Year: 2019

Language: English
Pages: 216

Cover
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Dostoevsky and the Realists: Dickens, Flaubert, Tolstoy
Chapter 1: Manifestoes of Realism and the Sketch of Manners: Capturing a Moment in Time
Chapter 2: Dostoevsky’s Doctrine of Beauty as Desire of the Age
Chapter 3: Dostoevsky’s “Pochva” [“Soil”] and the ‘Genealogy’ of Russian History in The Possessed
Chapter 4: Polyphony and the Gaze in Phenomenology
Chapter 5: Sexuality, (Un-)Reason and Goliadkin as Kant’s Subject of Taste
Chapter 6: Dickens the Painter of Modern Life and the Unconscious
Chapter 7: Flaubert and the Sketch of Manners
Chapter 8: Tolstoy’s Mikhailov, the Painter of Modern Life
Chapter 9: The “Accidental Family” and Wittgenstein’s ‘Familienähnlichkeiten’
Bibliography
Index