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The Irony of the Ideal
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Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Part I: The Titanic and the Demonic: Faust’s Heirs
  • 1. Faust and Peter on the Seashore: From Goethe to Pushkin
  • a. Comparativistics and Typology
  • b. Toil and the Elements
  • c. The Bronze Horseman as the Anti-Faust
  • d. Demonic Irony
  • e. Pushkin between Goethe and Mickiewicz
  • f. Apocalypse
  • g. The Transformation of the Faustian into the Mephistophelian
  • 2. The Bronze Horseman and the Golden Fish: Pushkin’s Fairy Tale-Poem
  • a. Semantic Convertibility
  • b. Textual Parallels
  • c. The Subjugation of the Elements, and Their Retribution
  • d. Peter and the Old Woman: A Pair of Autocrats
  • e. The Fate of the “Little Man”
  • f. The Family and the State
  • g. The Poem and the Tale as a Single Work
  • 3. The Motherland-Witch: The Irony of Style in Nikolai Gogol
  • a. The Irony of Style and the Apotheosis of Russia
  • b. An Aesthetic Demonology of Russia
  • The Stare or Fixed Gaze
  • Rootedness to the Spot
  • Light and Chiming
  • Ghostly Light
  • Chiming and Weeping
  • Dream and Waking
  • Fast Riding, Flickering
  • c. Patriotism and Eroticism
  • d. Blok Gives Gogol’s Secret Away
  • e. Gogol, Betrayed by Words: The Irony of Style
  • Part II: The Great in the Little: Bashmachkin’s Offspring
  • 1. The Saintly Scribe: Akaky Bashmachkin and Prince Myshkin
  • 2. The Figure of Repetition: The Philosopher Nikolai Fedorov and His Literary Prototypes
  • 3. The Little Man in a Case: The Bashmachkin-Belikov Syndrome
  • Part III: The Irony of Harmony
  • 1. Childhood and the Myth of Harmony
  • 2. The Defamiliarization of Lev Tolstoy
  • a. The Death of Ivan Ilyich
  • b. “Alesha-the-Pot”
  • c. Happy and Unhappy Families: Anna Karenina
  • 3. Soviet Heroics and the Oedipus Complex
  • a. “Big Brother”: Between Freud and Orwell
  • b. The Mythological Basis of Materialism
  • c. Militant Atheism and the Oedipus Complex
  • d. The Call of the Underworld: The Erotics of the Worker’s Blow
  • e. Materialism as Rooted in Mat
  • f. Mother-Worshippers and Incestors
  • Part IV: Being as Nothingness
  • 1. A Farewell to Objects, or, the Nabokovian in Nabokov
  • 2. The Secret of Being and Nonbeing in Vladimir Nabokov
  • a. The Chain of Negations: Omnipresent “Nonnons”
  • b. “A Series of Hinged Lids”
  • c. Physical Vacuum and the Buddhist Nirvana
  • d. The Secret of the Afterlife
  • 3. Andrei Platonov between Nonbeing and Resurrection
  • a. Russian Literature and German Philosophy
  • b. The Nonbeing within Being
  • c. Between Martin Heidegger and Nikolai Fedorov
  • d. A Strange Language: On the Other Side of Subject and Object
  • e. The Boring Void and Deathening
  • f. Nabokov and Platonov: A Metaphysical Dispute
  • 4. Dream and Battle: Oblomov, Korchagin, Kopenkin
  • a. Oblomovka and Chevengur
  • b. Warrior-Dreamers
  • c. Oblomagin: Bipolarity in Russian Culture
  • Part V: The Silence of the Word
  • 1. Language and Silence as Forms of Being
  • a. Quietude and Silence
  • b. The Word as Being
  • c. The Beingfulness of the Russian Word
  • 2. The Ideology and Magic of the Word: Anton Chekhov, Daniil Kharms, and Vladimir Sorokin
  • a. The Word-Figment: Daniil Kharms and Anton Chekhov
  • b. Three Literary Episodes: The Silence within and around the Word
  • 3. The Russian Code of Silence: Politics and Mysticism
  • a. The Eternal Quiet
  • b. Two Silences: Political and Mystical
  • c. The Formative, Informative, and Fictive Word: The Self-Devouring of Language
  • Part VI: Madness and Reason
  • 1. Methods of Madness and Madness as a Method: Poets and Philosophers
  • a. Hölderlin and Batiushkov
  • b. Two Half-Witted States (poloumie): Poetic and Philosophical
  • c. Madness as Method
  • d. The Self-Critique of Pure Reason
  • 2. Poetry as Ecstasy and as Interpretation: Boris Pasternak and Osip Mandelʹshtam
  • a. Alien Language: Poetry and Kabbalah
  • b. Pasternak, Hasidism, and the Sparks of the Universe
  • c. Mandelʹshtam, Talmudism, and the Textbook of Infinity
  • 3. The Lyric of Idiotic Reason: Folkloric Philosophy in Dmitrii Prigov
  • a. Folkloric Philosophism: The Poetics of Platitude
  • b. The Stripped Consciousness. A World without a Groove. Allthing and Allbody.
  • c. The Banality of Abstraction: The Deeply Thoughtful Unconscious
  • The Cyclical Development of Literature
  • Conclusion
  • a. Literature and Metaphysics
  • b. Metanarratives
  • c. Metaphysics without a Metanarrative

About the Author

Mikhail Epstein is Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of Cultural Theory and Russian Literature at Emory University (USA) and Honorary Professor of Durham University (UK). His research interests include new directions in the humanities, contemporary philosophy and religion, Russian literature, and postmodernism. He has authored 30 books, and his works have been translated into 23 languages.

Reviews

“Not every world-class cultural critic can also produce the breathtaking close reading—but such is Epstein’s gift. He sees equally clearly from the outside looking in and the inside looking out. This tour de force chronicle, covering three centuries of literary masterpieces, starts with the Faustian demonic in Pushkin and ends with Russian Being and Nothingness: Nabokov, Platonov, forms of falling silent. Throughout, Epstein reveals the deep affinities between German philosophy and Russian fictions. Russian ontology has been perhaps the more ecstatic and insistent to destroy what it worships. And the fate of Russian literature has been to inspire the planet.”
*Caryl Emerson, Princeton University*

“It won’t be an exaggeration to say that Epstein takes Russian literature more seriously (and passionately) than any other contemporary critic does. Moreover, he takes it in its totality—from Lomonosov to Prigov and beyond—as a living metaphysical Gospel of Russian culture which consists of a number of basic clusters or knots of ironic paradoxes and develops in cycles and phases (he even offers a compelling Periodical Table of Russian literature). In a series of vertiginous interpretations of works of Russian writers, Epstein immerses us into the dangerous waters of the ‘metaphysical unconscious’ of Russian literature but always preserves a full command of his rational analysis—a risky game in which he gains numerous victories (don’t miss his illuminating discussion of ‘controlled madness’ in Pushkin, Batiushkov, and Kabakov). This intellectually and methodologically challenging and lucidly written (and translated) book represents a fine example of the art of thinking about literature and should become a major touchstone for readers of Russian literature within and outside of the academia.”
*Ilya Vinitsky, Professor of Russian, Princeton University*

A. S. Brown’s impressive translation, together with the volume’s strong internal coherence, amply justifies the appearance of a book that shows a remarkable consistency of thought over several decades. Like all his chosen interlocutors, Epstein is a writer with his own path, his put’.
*The Times Literary Supplement*

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