Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Part 1 Chekhov in context
- 1 Dr Chekhov: a biographical essay (29 January 1860-15 July 1904)
- 2 Chekhov and his Russia
- 3 Chekhov at the Moscow Art Theatre
- Part 2 Chekhov in production
- Part 3 Chekhov the writer
- Appendix 1 Chekhov's works: primary sources from the Russian - Variations of English titles from the Russian
- Appendix 2 Selected stage productions
- Appendix 3 Selected screen versions
- Appendix 4 Illustrations
- Selected bibliography
- Index of Works by Checkov
- General Index
1 - Dr Chekhov: a biographical essay (29 January 1860-15 July 1904)
from Part 1 - Chekhov in context
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- Part 1 Chekhov in context
- 1 Dr Chekhov: a biographical essay (29 January 1860-15 July 1904)
- 2 Chekhov and his Russia
- 3 Chekhov at the Moscow Art Theatre
- Part 2 Chekhov in production
- Part 3 Chekhov the writer
- Appendix 1 Chekhov's works: primary sources from the Russian - Variations of English titles from the Russian
- Appendix 2 Selected stage productions
- Appendix 3 Selected screen versions
- Appendix 4 Illustrations
- Selected bibliography
- Index of Works by Checkov
- General Index
Summary
Chekhov was a first-generation intellectual: his grandfather was a former serf, his father a small shopkeeper. 'There is peasant blood in me', he wrote (Letters, vol. V, p. 283). But in the history of Russian culture, the name of Chekhov has become synonymous with intelligence, good upbringing - and refinement. How did these qualities come to be acquired by a provincial boy who spent his crucial formative years up to the age of nineteen in a small Russian town? Taganrog, Chekhov's birthplace, was typical of Russian provincial towns of the time: taverns, little shops, 'not a single sign without a spelling mistake'; oil lamps, and wastelands thickly overgrown with weeds. Chekhov's memories, of his 'green' years growing up in Taganrog, are full of references to puddles and unpaved streets.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Chekhov , pp. 3 - 16Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
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