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Date added: 30.3.2015
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The primal scene of all nineteenth-century Western thought might well be the moment an observer gazed at someone poor, most commonly on the streets of a great metropolis, and wondered what the spectacle meant in human, moral, political, and metaphysical terms. In Russia, where so much of the population was impoverished, the moment held special significance. David Herman examines how Russian writers portrayed this poverty and what their portrayal reveals and articulates about core values of Russian culture.Focussing on specific texts but addressing the literary tradition as a whole, Herman begins with Karamzins immensely popular story Poor Liza, the first in a sequence of poverty narratives that self-consciously address one another. He then considers Pushkins Egyptian Nights- Gogols Overcoat, Petersburg tales, and Selected Passages- and Dostoevskys Idiot and 1880 Pushkin speech.With a series of innovative readings, Poverty of the Imagination teases out a Russian discourse on lack which owes its peculiar richness to an insistence on solving simultaneously problems of social justice, national identity, and the ethics of the human imagination. As prominently as poverty figures in Russian literature, this is the first sustained analysis of its literary, conceptual, and cultural implications. As such, it deepens our understanding and appreciation of some of the most widely read literature of all time. Poverty Of The Imaginationnineteenth Century Russian Literature About The Poor by David Herman