Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- List of Names
- List of Russian Cultural Concepts
- Three Brief Biographies – Rozanov, Merezhkovskii and Shestov
- Part One Vasilii Rozanov
- Part Two Dmitrii Merezhkovskii
- 5 Chekhov and Merezhkovskii: Two Types of Artistic-Philosophical Consciousness
- 6 Negating His Own Negation: Merezhkovskii's Understanding of Chekhov's Role in Russian Culture
- 7 An Illuminating Misinterpretation? On Merezhkovskii's Literary Criticism of Chekhov
- 8 Can Merezhkovskii See the Spirit in the Prose of Flesh?
- Part Three Lev Shestov
- Notes on Contributors
7 - An Illuminating Misinterpretation? On Merezhkovskii's Literary Criticism of Chekhov
from Part Two - Dmitrii Merezhkovskii
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- List of Names
- List of Russian Cultural Concepts
- Three Brief Biographies – Rozanov, Merezhkovskii and Shestov
- Part One Vasilii Rozanov
- Part Two Dmitrii Merezhkovskii
- 5 Chekhov and Merezhkovskii: Two Types of Artistic-Philosophical Consciousness
- 6 Negating His Own Negation: Merezhkovskii's Understanding of Chekhov's Role in Russian Culture
- 7 An Illuminating Misinterpretation? On Merezhkovskii's Literary Criticism of Chekhov
- 8 Can Merezhkovskii See the Spirit in the Prose of Flesh?
- Part Three Lev Shestov
- Notes on Contributors
Summary
The Literary Critic Mirrored by His Subject
It is one of the well known premises of hermeneutics that interpreting a piece of art not only illuminates the subject of interpretation, but also sheds light on its interpreter. In regard to A. P. Chekhov, this phenomenon is often so strongly pronounced that, given Russian literary criticism at the turn of the nineteenth century, A. D. Stepanov even declares Chekhov's work to be a ‘mirror of literary criticism’. Stepanov's observation also proves appropriate for the present collection of essays. The volume shows Chekhov through the eyes of Russian thinkers and portrays these Russian thinkers through the mirror of their literary criticism. A special place in these reflections of Chekhov is held by Dmitrii Merezhkovskii, who in his essays repeatedly discussed Chekhov and his literary work between 1888 and 1914, and whose opinion on Chekhov changed profoundly through this period. The shifting of Merezhkovskii's judgement on Chekhov, – from his early appreciation of Chekhov's literary talent to his later polemics against Chekhov's alleged religious nihilism, do not depend so much on a development of Chekhov's art. From early on, Chekov's literary work shows a relatively constant philosophy of life and poetics. Merezhkovskii's literary criticism of Chekhov should rather be seen as a mirror that reflects Merezhkovskii's own spiritual development. Nevertheless, his criticism remains open to both sides, illuminating the subject of criticism as well as the critic – even where Merezhkovskii obviously misinterprets Chekhov.
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- Anton Chekhov Through the Eyes of Russian ThinkersVasilii Rozanov, Dmitrii Merezhkovskii and Lev Shestov, pp. 129 - 140Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2010