 Much of Russian literature is St. Petersburg literature: set
in the city, about the city, or written by writers living there.
This unique guide profiles fifteen authors whose works and lives
were intimately connected to this magnificent setting. Biographical
sketches focus on the city as the writers knew it, a sense of
their work, the literary and social circles in which they moved,
and the sites associated with them.
Travelers can wander through the museum where
the teenage Vladimir Nabokov romanced his girlfriend and see
the prison where Anna Akhmatova was inspired to write her epic
poem about the Great Terror. They can find the statue that comes
to life in Pushkin’s poem The
Bronze Horseman and visit the square where Crime and Punishment’s
murderer/hero kneels on the ground to ask God’s forgiveness. Literary
St. Petersburg opens the door to one of the most beautiful
cities on earth and a body of literature that is as rich, subtle,
and expressive as any in the world.
From the introduction:
Russian literature began
in St. Petersburg—a
late start, considering that the city was founded in 1703. Russia
was largely isolated from the West during the years of the Renaissance,
and at the turn of the eighteenth century it was still feudal
and deeply religious; the living conditions and worldview of
its people had changed little since medieval times. Even the
nobility was largely uneducated. Secular art did not exist. Written
Russian was used mainly for ecclesiastical writings and had little
in common with the language that people actually spoke. When
Milton was writing Paradise Lost and Molière
his great plays, Russia still had no literary language to speak
of. But in 1682, Peter I, better known as Peter the
Great, was crowned emperor. Within thirty years he had built
a new city on Russia’s western border, made it his capital,
and set about transforming Russian society with ideas he had
picked up in Germany, France, Holland, and Italy. It was his
initial reforms of the Russian language, and his encouragement
of a secular press, that allowed Russians to develop, over the
course of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, a literary
language and a body of literature that was as rich, subtle, and
expressive as anything in the West. The speed with which Russian
literature “caught up” was extraordinary. The setting
for this achievement was mainly St. Petersburg, where the first
literary salons formed and the first of the famous “thick
journals” on politics and literature were published.
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Over the decades Petersburg has been home to scores of novelists,
poets, journalists, and essayists. In writing this book I’ve
focused primarily on writers who not only lived in Petersburg
but also wrote about the city. I’ve also included two writers,
Leo Tolstoy and Andrei Bely, who did not live in the city for
significant lengths of time but whose depiction of Petersburg
has been particularly influential and inspired. I’ve limited
this guide to writers whose work is easily available in English
translation, though some will of course be less familiar to English
readers than others. This is by no means an exhaustive list of
Petersburg writers, or of the streets, monuments, and buildings
that the writers described and inhabited. I’ve chosen the
most significant and representative sites, which I hope will
give a flavor of the city as well as of the writers, and I’ve
assumed that most visitors to Petersburg will not want to ride
two hours by subway, bus, and tram to see—for instance—the
suburban park where Alexander Blok liked to take his afternoon
walks. For readers who do want to know and see more of literary
Petersburg, there’s a selected bibliography. |