Yes, the Russian literary canon is tainted by imperialism

Australia News News

Yes, the Russian literary canon is tainted by imperialism
Australia Latest News,Australia Headlines
  • 📰 TheEconomist
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 68 sec. here
  • 3 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 31%
  • Publisher: 92%

In some circles Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine has called into question not just the value of reading Russian masterworks, but also the morality

Save time by listening to our audio articles as you multitask, Oksana Zabuzhko, a Ukrainian writer, argued powerfully that Western readings of major Russian authors had ignored their imperialist attitudes and indulged their drastic moral relativism and sympathy for criminals. Literature, she observed, “is of one flesh with the society for which and about which it writes”. Books are “the camouflage net” of Russia’s tanks in Ukraine.

Pushkin’s imperialist bent also shows up in “The Prisoner of the Caucasus”. The poem describes a young Russian officer who is captured in the Caucasus before being saved by a Circassian woman. In the epilogue the narrator celebrates Russia’s violent subjugation of the region and declares that “everything is subject to the Russian sword”. Here, too, it seems that Pushkin’s critique of tsarist power does not extend to its imperialism.

Dostoyevsky’s Russian chauvinism is often expressed in spiritual rather than militaristic terms. Following his lengthy exile in Siberia during the 1850s—the result of his association with the Petrashevsky Circle of radical intellectuals—he became a devout Orthodox Christian. In his thinking, those who rejected the Orthodox God, such as Catholics or Jews, were anathema. Dostoyevsky’s long-standing hostility to both crops up in his novel “The Idiot”.

Yet elsewhere Tolstoy repudiates militarism and violence of all kinds. His exquisite late novella “Hadji Murat” tells the story of a Caucasian warrior trying to save his family amid a Russian conquest; it sympathises with his plight and excoriates tsarist aggression. As the mix of patriotism and pacifism in Tolstoy’s work shows, literature is an inherently ambiguous medium. Great books can rarely be simplified to a single meaning or moral.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

TheEconomist /  🏆 6. in UK

Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Russia Officially Claims Ownership Of Ukraine Nuclear Plant | OilPrice.comRussia Officially Claims Ownership Of Ukraine Nuclear Plant | OilPrice.comRussian President Vladimir Putin has decreed Ukraine’s Zaporozhye Nuclear Power Plant is a Russian federal asset, absorbing all facilities and employees as the Kremlin’s push in the east loses momentum against Ukrainian forces.
Read more »

Why Ales Bialiatski Won the 2022 Nobel Peace PrizeWhy Ales Bialiatski Won the 2022 Nobel Peace PrizeThe 2022 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to the jailed Belarusian human rights advocate Ales Bialiatski, as well as two human rights organizations
Read more »

Georgia Grapples With Russia’s Mobilization Exodus | OilPrice.comGeorgia Grapples With Russia’s Mobilization Exodus | OilPrice.comGeorgia is grappling with another massive wave of Russians fleeing mobilization in their home country
Read more »

War in Ukraine shakes up weapons industry with new trends and unlikely winnersWar in Ukraine shakes up weapons industry with new trends and unlikely winnersThe war in Ukraine has supplied a lucrative shop window for arms manufacturers, creating some unlikely winners amid a surge in demand for heavy weaponry ✍️ KieronMonks
Read more »

She-Hulk episode 8 just confirmed Netflix's Daredevil TV show is canon in the MCUShe-Hulk episode 8 just confirmed Netflix's Daredevil TV show is canon in the MCUMarvel has just confirmed Netflix's Daredevil is canon in the MCU
Read more »

Kirill Rogov on what Russians really think of the war in UkraineKirill Rogov on what Russians really think of the war in UkraineVladimir Putin’s mobilisation “looks like forced improvisation and it is disrupting the balance of interests and loyalties in Russian society, where views on the war are very mixed”, writes Kirill Rogov
Read more »



Render Time: 2025-04-02 13:09:51