From Gorky to Pasternak: Six Modern Russian Writers

From Gorky to Pasternak: Six Modern Russian Writers

$20.00 AUD

Availability: in stock at our Tullamarine warehouse

Condition: SECONDHAND

This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.


Condition remarks:
Binding: Hardcover; appears structurally sound, showing expected shelf wear commensurate with age. Jacket: Dust jacket present; light edge wear and minor age-toning. Pages: Generally clean and bright, maintaining excellent readability. Markings: Previous owner.

In this seminal work of literary scholarship, Helen Muchnic illuminates the fractured and brilliant landscape of early twentieth-century Russian letters by tracing the lives and artistic evolutions of six titans of the Soviet era. Through the disparate voices of Maxim Gorky, Alexander Blok, Vladimir Mayakovsky, Leonid Leonov, Mikhail Sholokhov, and Boris Pasternak, Muchnic masterfully delineates the precarious tightrope walked by intellectuals caught between revolutionary idealism and the tightening grip of state censorship.   By analyzing these figures not merely as historical subjects but as distinct architects of their own aesthetic schools, the text serves as a profound microcosm of a society undergoing violent, epochal change. Muchnic’s prose is both scholarly and evocative, offering the reader an essential key to understanding how these writers navigated the chasm between personal artistic vision and the crushing weight of political mandate, ultimately immortalizing the spirit of a complex and troubled century.

Author: Helen Muchnic
Format: Hardback

Genre: Literary theory

Description


Condition remarks:
Binding: Hardcover; appears structurally sound, showing expected shelf wear commensurate with age. Jacket: Dust jacket present; light edge wear and minor age-toning. Pages: Generally clean and bright, maintaining excellent readability. Markings: Previous owner.

In this seminal work of literary scholarship, Helen Muchnic illuminates the fractured and brilliant landscape of early twentieth-century Russian letters by tracing the lives and artistic evolutions of six titans of the Soviet era. Through the disparate voices of Maxim Gorky, Alexander Blok, Vladimir Mayakovsky, Leonid Leonov, Mikhail Sholokhov, and Boris Pasternak, Muchnic masterfully delineates the precarious tightrope walked by intellectuals caught between revolutionary idealism and the tightening grip of state censorship.   By analyzing these figures not merely as historical subjects but as distinct architects of their own aesthetic schools, the text serves as a profound microcosm of a society undergoing violent, epochal change. Muchnic’s prose is both scholarly and evocative, offering the reader an essential key to understanding how these writers navigated the chasm between personal artistic vision and the crushing weight of political mandate, ultimately immortalizing the spirit of a complex and troubled century.