The Author as Hero

About The Book

An original reading of three famous novels reveals a significant shift in the Russian tradition of psychological prose; Justin Weir develops a persuasive analysis of the complex relationship between authorial self-reflection and literary tradition in three of the most famous Russian novels of the first half of the twentieth century: Mikhail Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita Boris Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago and Vladimir Nabokov's The Gift. All three novelists respond to a dual crisis according to Weir: the general modernist destabilization of identity and the estrangement from literary tradition that followed the Russian Revolution. Using various self-reflexive literary devices (such as the mise en abyme) these authors reincorporate literary tradition into their works and in the process generate a distinctive view of identity. Character in these novels is neither the outcome of a continuous process of Building nor a direct function of the individual's relation to larger historical events. Rather character is defined in the act of writing itself so that every hero must be a sort of author. The outcome is a new novelistic art that focuses on the identity of the artist as revealed through his writing. With its innovative interpretation of these novels and its compelling historical cultural and theoretical insights The Author as Hero offers a new view of an important moment in the evolution of Russian literature.
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