No 4 (2024)
Articles
The Bible as a part of the literature of Old Rus’
Abstract
In the article, the Bible is treated as a component of the Old Russian literary tradition. Particular attention is focused on the functional uses of the Bible in Old Rus’, the texts of the biblical periphery, interpretation of biblical texts, and the peculiarity of the biblical poetics. The first Slavic editions of biblical books are analyzed alongside with the main trends of biblical humanism. The observations are introduced into the context of South Slavic and Western European traditions.



World civilization in miniature (personal library and the creative endeavors of A. S. Pushkin)
Abstract
A. S. Pushkin’s personal library was an immediate reflection of his geopolitical interests, shaping the poet’s creative personality. Its content makes the book collection a miniature model of world history and world civilization. It is divided into micro-libraries that include publications related to various countries and nations, further subdivided into such sections as geography, history, international relations, travel, literature, philosophy, art, dictionaries, textbooks. We thus have here the library of a writer for whom reading was the first phase of his own creativity.



I.A. Goncharov: new data and research
Magnetic Love and tears-guides: romantic cliches in the epistolary and literary legacy of I. A. Goncharov
Abstract
A number of researchers have repeatedly commented on the autobiographical nature of I. A. Goncharov’s prose, tracing figurative and quotation parallels in his epistolary and literary texts. Nevertheless, in certain cases, his letters and works feature typological rather than reminiscent connections, engaging with external sources, e. g. borrowing ready-made romantic formulas of the secular novelas of the 1830s. Samples of such borrowings are the recurring motifs of love-electricity, passion-ailment, magnetic/hypnotic gaze and unequal love. Therefore, this article is an attempt to offer a more comprehensive understanding of the emergence of magnetic analogies in the Romantic fiction of the early 19th century, as well as to analyze similar typological parallels in Goncharov’s epistolary legacy.



«And liberate the muzhiks...» (a commentator’s notes on I. A. Goncharov’s novel The Precipice)
Abstract
The article considers the internal chronology and temporal context of I. A. Goncharov’s prose works as one of the approaches to achieving the compositional unity of his novel The Precipice. The fictional time of the novel is reconstructed by comparing the temporal modes of the characters at the crossing points with the socio-historical markers of the narrative. A particular attention is paid to the Decree on Entailed Peasants (1842).



Contexts of a confessional letter (Pour et contre by I. A. Goncharov)
Abstract
The «chapter from the novel» sent by I. A. Goncharov to E. V. Tolstaya under the title Pour et Contre is traditionally considered in publishing and research as one of his letters. However, despite its inherent autobiographical features, the text follows the principles of artistic convention, which is reflected in its genre, compositional and stylistic features.



An unknown St. Petersburg feuilleton by I. A. Goncharov
Abstract
The article provides the attribution of the feuilleton, published in the newspaper Severnaya Pochta. The researcher proves I. A. Goncharov’s authorship by a set of factors: his life circumstances, genre, thematic and textual parallels with his other texts.



Remark
The road to the academic History of Russian literature: reflections on M. N. Virolainen’s works on the poetry of the Golden Age and romanticism
Abstract
The article offers the reflections on M. N. Virolainen’s Russian Romanticism as a Problem and On the Genres of the Golden Age Lyrical Poetry, that offer a new perspective on the poetry of the Pushkin era, and touches upon a number of points put forward therein. The central issue under discussion is the attribution of poetological thinking of the first third of the 19th century to the genre thinking that informs the epoch of Classicism. Even though some of the arguments put forward by M. N. Virolainen in favor of this seem valid, she considers the use by the poets of the Golden Age of elements of the Classical genres in the new contexts while preserving the memory of their origin to be a property of new poetry, rather than Classicism, and, accordingly, the underlying thinking is not a genre one, but new.



Публикации и сообщения
Between oriental stylization and autobiography: towards the history of A. S. Pushkin’s poem «From Hafiz»
Abstract
The article offers a detailed reconstruction of the writing and publishing contexts of Pushkin’s poem «From Hafiz» («Do not be Seized by the Glory of the Battle…»), written during the poet’s visit to the military zone in the course of the Russo-Turkish War and first published shortly after his return. By examining the transformations of the peritext from the autograph to the first publication, the author highlights the poem’s «domestic semantics» concealed behind its Oriental poetics, offers a more specific interpretation of the mystifying title used for the first publication (From Hafiz), and outlines the significance of this text for the formation of Pushkin’s autobiographical narrative of the 1830s.



«Books for the folk» in Russia of the 1840s: M. N. Makarov
Abstract
The article examines the short stories by M. N. Makarov of 1840–1843, using the genre-style and contextual analysis with axiological commentary. The features of the vernacular stylistics and of the fairytale folklore tradition are outlined, moral pathos and poetics, both of them reminiscent of the Gospel parable, are discussed. From the poetical and the functional perspective, they correlate with the pieces for the common people produced by F. N. Glinka and V. I. Dal’, as well as with the works published in the Rural Reader magazine by V. F. Odoyevsky and A. P. Zabloysky-Desyatovsky.



The possible origins of the anti-nihilistic discourse in Russian literature
Abstract
The article deals with the issue of the genesis of the anti-nihilistic discourse in the Russian literature of the 19th century. With the discourse chosen as the subject matter of the research, the question of the genesis of the anti-nihilistic line in the Russian literature is approached innovatively: its origins are associated with the tradition of depicting the Voltairian characters, primarily in the 18th century drama.



A. V. Sukhovo-Kobylin’s comedy The marriage of Krechinsky and the tradition of the manor theater
Abstract
The article consideres A. V. Sukhovo-Kobylin’s literary and theater debut, The Marriage of Krechinsky, in the context of the manor or serf theater, with its centennial history reaching its culmination in the 1850s. The Marriage of Krechinsky was written to be staged in one of the greatest serf theaters of the day, in Vyksa. The archives — the playwright’s diaries, his notebooks, epistolary legacy, collections of newspaper and magazine clippings with the owner’s notes — feature some mentions of Vyksa, of the guests and the hosts of the manor house, as well as of the local theater. They help to reconstruct certain events, the repertoire, and trace the reflection of the manor theater experiences in the poetics of The Marriage of Krechinsky.



The hostage of the ancient dispute: around the Poems (1887) by N. M. Minsky
Abstract
The article presents new documents related to the publication of N. M. Minsky’s book Poems (1887): the poet’s correspondence with A. M. Skabichevsky, the author of the scandalous review; excerpts from the newspaper and magazine polemics, speeches in defense of the poet by A. Volynsky and N. K. Mikhailovsky; Minsky’s letter to Mikhailovsky (1888), «a programmatic» text that captures the changes in the literary situation — the transition from positivism and utilitarianism of the «sixties» to the aestheticism and idealism of the early Symbolists.



«A swarm of names»: from the jubilee of N. V. Bugaev (1900) to the honoring of Korobkin in Andrei Bely’s novel Moscow (1926)
Abstract
The episode of honoring Professor Korobkin in the novel Moscow is based on real events, reinterpreting the celebration of the publication of the 20th issue of Matematicheskij Sbornik magazine at the Moscow Mathematical Society, which grew into a benefit event for N. V. Bugaev, Andrei Bely’s father. The characters in the analyzed episode are real people, historical personae (under their actual surnames) and characters with fictitious names. The article lists the participants of N. V. Bugaev anniversary who were subsequently introduced into the novel under their own names. The analysis of the characters presented under fictitious names leads to their real prototypes from the milieu of Professor N. V. Bugaev or Andrei Bely.



F. K. Sologub. The Mongolian paradox
Abstract
F. Sologub’s essay The Mongolian Paradox, written in 1904, is presented to the academic community. Failing to publish it during the Russo-Japanese War, Sologub went back to it during the First World War, as late as 1916. The text went through some amendments at that time. Minimal editing, while preserving the main body and the paradoxical nature of the ideas expressed, added to the essay’s actuality and turned it into a response to current historical events.



S. A. Sokolov’s Bureau of provincial press as a conduit between modernist writers and their readers
Abstract
The article traces the history of the Bureau of Provincial Press, which was organized in Moscow in late 1907. Using the newspaper data and archival sources, the article reconstructs the history of the Bureau’s creation and identifies both the writers from the metropolis and the provincial newspapers that collaborated with it. Even though the Bureau lasted for less than a year, it made a major contribution to the popularization of Modernist literature among a wide readership.



Between the two revolutions: the year 1917 in the correspondence of A. A. Izmailov and I. I. Yasinsky
Abstract
The publication features the correspondence between A. A. Izmailov and I. I. Yasinsky (1917). It focuses on Yasinsky’s collaboration with the Petrogradsky Listok newspaper: Izmailov took over as its editor in April 1916 and, along with the other well-known writers and journalists, enlisted Yasinsky to become one of the contributors. The correspondence traces the evolution of Yasinsky’s position between February and October 1917 and shows how his attitude to the events in Russia was adjusted in his book of memoirs The Novel of My Life.



Multimodal narration in the screenplays by V. V. Mayakovsky
Abstract
The article analyzes the screenplays by V. V. Mayakovsky as multimodal narratives that combine the models of feature films, documentaries and animation. Using the scripts for Farewell to the Fireplace, The Heart of Cinema, Benz No. 22 and others as the case studies, the interactions between the modes of transmitting a story line are revealed, highlighting Mayakovsky’s plan of the production as a complex synthesis of several cinematic strategies.



N. K. Gudzij on I. A. Bunin (based on the scholar’s personal archive and correspondence)
Abstract
The article, based on the research in the personal archives of N. K. Gudzij (Department of Manuscripts, Russian State Library) and the Russian Archive in Leeds (UK), traces the impact of I. A. Bunin’s work on his life and academic legacy. The data help to restore the history of Gudzij’s correspondence with V. N. Bunina and L. F. Zurov, as well as to clarify the circumstances of the emergence of the scholar’s unpublished article I. A. Bunin’s The Life of Arseniev in the Soviet Editions (excerpts from A. K. Baboreko’s letters to Gudzij are published). The full text of the article in its final version is published in the Appendix, the discrepancies with its original version are outlined in the footnotes.



A work of literature as a hyper-object (from an academic to a digital publication)
Abstract
The article examines the existential reinterpretation of a literary work, once it is posted on the «Pushkin



Заметки



Ya. P. Butkov in Literaturnaya gazeta: a failed contribution
Abstract
The article analyzes the beginning of the literary career of the writer Ya. P. Butkov. Using the data from the archives of the St. Petersburg Censorship Committee, we show that Butkov tried to publish his short story Bitka in Literaturnaya Gazeta, yet it didn’t get past the censors. In the summer of 1845, when it became known that Literaturnaya Gazeta wasn’t adhering to its own program, the censorship became particularly focused on the paper and the materials published therein.



Notes of a dead man by M. A. Bulgakov: concerning the genesis of the title
Abstract
The note discusses the «Mailbox» section of two St. Petersburg humor magazines, Satirikon and New Satirikon. It is suggested that the source of the title of Mikhail Bulgakov’s unfinished work, that eventually received the title Theatrical Novel, but was called Notes of a Dead Man by the author, could have been a letter from the Editor-in-Chief of New Satirikon Arkady Averchenko. This letter, published in the «Mailbox» section of this magazine, mentions the title of a short story «Notes of a Dead Man» by an unknown author, rejected by New Satirikon.



Обзоры и рецензии









Хроника
Transitional phenomena of literature: epochs, authors, genres, themes International research conference



27TH Academic readings of the Manuscript department, Pushkin House



EMIGRANTICA. Korostelev readings 2023 International research conference



Autobiographic records, diaries and memoirs in the Russian manuscript tradition of the 17th — early 20th centuries fifth discussion club



The twelfth hagiographic seminar



Forms of cultural recycling in modern Russia: trends and interpretations Research conference



Succession and innovation in the studies of the 18th century Russian literature Research meeting


