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Landmarks in Russian literature

Chapter 29: Transcriber’s Notes
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About This Book

A series of critical essays surveying major Russian writers and literary tendencies, beginning with a study of national character and the realism that shaped nineteenth-century prose. The author examines Gogol’s satire and popular cheerfulness, contrasts Tolstoy and Turgenev, considers Dostoevsky’s psychological intensity, and discusses the plays of Chekhov, while also reflecting on translation, reception, and critical perspective. Adopting an empathetic, insider-oriented stance, the essays combine close reading, biographical context, and thematic synthesis to guide readers through recurring motifs such as moral seriousness, paradoxical temperament, and the evolution of Russian narrative and dramatic techniques.

Transcriber’s Notes

A few minor omissions and inconsistencies in punctuation have been fixed.

The chapter on Dostoievky was properly renumbered to VI instead of IV.