Vestnik of Northern (Arctic) Federal University.
Series "Humanitarian and Social Sciences"
ISSN 2227-6564 e-ISSN 2687-1505 DOI:10.37482/2687-1505
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Section: Philology Download (pdf, 4.2MB )UDC821.161.1AuthorsOl’ga S. SukhikhLobachevsky State University of Nizhni Novgorod; ul. Bol’shaya Pokrovskaya 37, Nizhny Novgorod, 603000, Russian Federation; e-mail: ruslitxx@list.ru AbstractThis article compares the image of the heroine Natasha Kalymova in Mikhail Osorgin’s novel Witness to History with the image of the hero Kirillov in Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Demons. The aim was to identify the similarities and the differences between the views of these characters on life, death and suicide. Using the comparative typological method, the paper collates the characters’ philosophical views and the author’s attitude toward them. A conclusion is made that Natasha Kalymova, like Kirillov, is guided primarily by her desire to free herself from any circumstances, including weaknesses rooted in the human nature. These characters’ philosophical views are similar in their understanding of voluntary death as the highest manifestation of personality. Natasha Kalymova’s fearlessness is explained by her aspiration to be master of her own destiny, life and death. She is mindful of her actions that should inevitably result in death and sees it as the utmost manifestation of free will. Similarly, Kirillov in Dostoevsky’s novel believes that the “principal freedom” is the ability of a person to terminate his/her own life. In both characters, the natural fear of death is overcome by this idea. Both of them consider voluntary death as absolute freedom partly due to their atheistic views. Kirillov dies, while Natasha Kalymova survives and gets the opportunity to see life in a different, pantheistic way, her new reflections being largely shared by Osorgin.KeywordsFyodor Dostoevsky, Demons, Mikhail Osorgin, Witness to History, issue of life and death, issue of freedom, philosophy of suicideReferences1. Muzhaylova E.A. Dva “igroka” russkoy literatury: F.M. Dostoevskogo i M.A. Osorgina [Two Gamblers in Russian Literature: Fyodor Dostoevsky’s and Mikhail Osorgin’s]. Available at: http://www.rusnauka.com/2_KAND_2008/Philologia/25777.doc.htm (accessed 15 July 2016).2. Muzhaylova E.A. Dostoevskiy i Osorgin: tipologiya pochvennichestva [Dostoevsky and Osorgin: The Typology of the Pochvennichestvo Movement]. Ufa, 2008. 193 p. 3. Lobanova G.I. “Malen’kiy chelovek” v vikhre istorii: opyt analiza romanov M. Osorgina 1920–1930 gg. [The Little Man in the Whirlwind of History: Analysing Mikhail Osorgin’s Novels of the 1920s – 1930s]. Ufa, 2008. 207 p. 4. Fradkina S.Ya. Na perekrestke traditsiy (“Sivtsev Vrazhek” Mikhaila Osorgina i traditsii russkoy klassiki) [At the Crossroads of Traditions (Sivtsev Vrazhek by Mikhail Osorgin and the Traditions of Russian Classical Literature)]. Mikhail Osorgin. Stranitsy zhizni i tvorchestva [Mikhail Osorgin: Chapters of His Life and Work]. Perm, 1994, pp. 13–21. 5. Evlampiev I.I. Kirillov i Khristos. Samoubiytsy Dostoevskogo i problema bessmertiya [Kirillov and Christ. Suicides in Dostoevsky’s Works and the Issue of Eternal Life]. Available at: http://anthropology.ru/ru/text/evlampiev-ii/kirillov-i-hristos-samoubiycy-dostoevskogo-i-problema-bessmertiya (accessed 1 August 2016). 6. Berdyaev N.A. Otkroveniya o cheloveke v tvorchestve Dostoevskogo [Revelations About Man in Dostoevsky’s Works]. P. 8. Available at: http://litlife.club/br/?b=114526&p=8 (accessed 1 August 2016). 7. Ermilova G.G. Sobytie padeniya v romane F.M. Dostoevskogo “Besy” [The Fall in Demons by Fyodor Dostoevsky]. Available at: http://www.booksite.ru/fulltext/dos/toj/evs/kii/dostojevskii_f/sbor_stat/4.htm (accessed 1 August 2016). 8. Belov S.V. Roman F.M. Dostoevskogo “Besy”: nekotorye aspekty vospriyatiya [Demons by Fyodor M. Dostoyevsky: Some Aspects of Perception]. Vestnik SPbGUKI, 2013, no. 4, pp. 130–136. 9. Petukhov V.B. Serebryanyy vek russkoy kul’tury i terrorizm [The Silver Age of Russian Culture and Terrorism]. Ulyanovsk, 2006. 128 p. 10. Chkhartishvili G. Pisatel’ i samoubiystvo [Writer and Suicide]. Available at: http://royallib.com/book/chhartishvili_grigoriy/pisatel_i_samoubiystvo.html (accessed 6 August 2016). |
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