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9 - Byt: identity and everyday life

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 May 2010

Catriona Kelly
Affiliation:
Professor of Russian, University of Oxford
Simon Franklin
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Emma Widdis
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

THE NAMING OF EVERYDAY LIFE

The Russian word byt means something extremely basic, but cannot be translated by a single word, or even a single phrase, in other European languages. Everyday life, daily life, quotidian existence, material culture, private life, domestic life: all of these various shades of meaning are present in the term. Sometimes, but by no means always, byt is defined by being opposed to bytie, spiritual existence: in this context, the translation of byt would come close to ‘earthly existence’ as well as to ‘material life’. Additionally, byt is sometimes used as a value-laden term – a circumlocution like ‘the dreariness of quotidian life’ would capture the flavour. At the same time, byt is often used more restrictively, to mean ‘way of life’ – as in ‘the way of life of the Russian peasant’ (krestianskii byt), for example.

It is common for analysts to move from linguistic specificity to psychological distinctiveness, and to argue that the fact that byt cannot be translated means that Russians have a different attitude to daily life from Western Europeans. In a recent article, for instance, the literary critic Igor Shaitanov observed, ‘The Russian word byt has a right to gain entry to dictionaries in foreign languages alongside “samovar”, “intelligentsia”, “borzoi”, and “sputnik”. The point is that other nations do not have byt. Nowhere else, it would seem, is there such a tense relationship with the everyday, balanced on an unstable border between hatred and an intense desire to possess and dominate.

Type
Chapter
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National Identity in Russian Culture
An Introduction
, pp. 149 - 168
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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