Consequences of Consciousness: Turgenev, Dostoevsky, and TolstoyStanford University Press, 2007 - 238 頁 Russian psychological prose has made a distinct contribution to world culture--not only to literature, but also to practical psychology and even to neuropsychology. Consequences of Consciousness focuses primarily on Russian ideas of the self and subjectivity, and how these ideas find expression in the fiction of Turgenev, Dostoevsky, and Tolstoy--the most important founding authors of the Russian school of psychological realism. These writers explore both the limits and the autonomy of subjective consciousness, and their books are as relevant today as they have ever been. Through close analysis of many well-known texts, Orwin reveals that these three authors conversed with each other through their works. She emphasizes the role Western thought played in the development of their psychological prose and how it was transformed by a Russian context. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 18 筆
第 122 頁
... prison come vividly to my mind's eye now . The years of prison that followed are much fainter in my memory . Some of them seem to have withdrawn completely into the background , mingling together , and leaving one undiluted impression ...
... prison come vividly to my mind's eye now . The years of prison that followed are much fainter in my memory . Some of them seem to have withdrawn completely into the background , mingling together , and leaving one undiluted impression ...
第 127 頁
... prison he falls into a deep depression and dies " without even once calling a doctor to his side . " 51 As an honest ... prison and everyone there accepts their authenticity ; the prison- ers are " literate " in this respect ( " no one ...
... prison he falls into a deep depression and dies " without even once calling a doctor to his side . " 51 As an honest ... prison and everyone there accepts their authenticity ; the prison- ers are " literate " in this respect ( " no one ...
第 162 頁
... prison , and then to “ desperate " ( otchaiannye ) pris- oners , to whom he devotes an entire chapter ( 8 ) in part 1.10 The connection between the military and prison milieus is an obvious one in midnineteenth- century Russia . The ...
... prison , and then to “ desperate " ( otchaiannye ) pris- oners , to whom he devotes an entire chapter ( 8 ) in part 1.10 The connection between the military and prison milieus is an obvious one in midnineteenth- century Russia . The ...
內容
Introduction I | 1 |
The Platonic and the Turgenevian | 57 |
Dostoevskys Critique of Turgenev | 92 |
著作權所有 | |
7 個其他區段未顯示
其他版本 - 查看全部
常見字詞
Adolescence Alyosha Andrei Kolosov Anna Karenina Annenkov artistic B-PSS Bazarov Belinsky Brothers Karamazov chapter characters childhood confession consciousness convicts Cossacks courage crime Critical D-PSS Dead Demons depict Dickens Dosto Dostoevsky Eugene Onegin evil Fathers and Children Faust feelings fiction freedom Goethe Goryanchikov Granovsky hero Herzen human Ibid ideal ideas impulses individual inner Ivan Jean-Jacques Rousseau Karamzin Karmazinov Kasian Katya later letter literary Liza Luria Makar Matryosha mind modern moral murder narrative narrator narrator's nature Nekhliudov Netochka Netochka Nezvanova nihilist Nikolenka Notes Notes from Underground novel Odoevsky passions peasant personality philosophical Plato poet poetic Poor prison Pushkin Pyotr Radilov readers realists reality reason reflection romantic longing Rousseau Russian literature Russian psychological prose self-conscious sentimental Slavophile Socrates soul Sportsman's Sketches Stavrogin Stepan Trofimovich Stiva story Strakhov thought tion Tolstoy Tolstoy's translation truth Tu-PSS Turgenev Underground understand Valkovsky Varvara Varya Vladimir Odoevsky writer young