Mikhail Zoshchenko

Mikhail Zoshchenko

EnglishPaperback / softbackPrint on demand
Scatton Linda Hart
Cambridge University Press
EAN: 9780521114974
Print on demand
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Detailed information

Mikhail Zoshchenko was a household name in the Soviet Union from the 1920s until the crackdown on the arts after World War II. This is a full-length study in English of his career, and of his critical and political reception in a society where the purpose of art was service to the state. It places his longer works and the events leading up to his literary assassination in 1946 in the context of the short, riotous works that won him mass readership and a devoted following among contemporary writers who agreed with each other on little else. Dr Scatton identifies stylistic and thematic unities in his prose, and argues that Zoshchenko's later works were natural outgrowths of his earlier experiments and not, as is often stated, aberrations or expressions of subservience to the regime. Both as a master of Russian prose and a victim of Stalinist literary politics, Zoshchenko has been the object of critical rediscovery and reassessment over the last 15 years. This book describes that process.
EAN 9780521114974
ISBN 0521114977
Binding Paperback / softback
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Publication date June 25, 2009
Pages 316
Language English
Dimensions 216 x 140 x 18
Country United Kingdom
Readership Professional & Scholarly
Authors Scatton Linda Hart
Illustrations 12 Halftones, unspecified
Series Cambridge Studies in Russian Literature