|
Showing 1 - 25 of
293 matches in All Departments
|
The Spy (Hardcover)
Maxim Gorky
bundle available
|
R1,658
Discovery Miles 16 580
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
|
Three Man (Hardcover)
Maxim Gorky
bundle available
|
R1,781
Discovery Miles 17 810
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
|
Three Men (Hardcover)
Maxim Gorky
bundle available
|
R901
Discovery Miles 9 010
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
|
Mother (Hardcover)
Maxim Gorky
bundle available
|
R881
Discovery Miles 8 810
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
|
Mother (Hardcover)
Maxim Gorky
bundle available
|
R906
Discovery Miles 9 060
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
A small provincial Russian town is suddenly aroused from its
lethargy by the imminent arrival of the first railroad. Gorky is
less concerned here with the Industrial Revolution than with the
damaging personal effect of people who represent progress; in this
case, two engineers who come to prepare for the railroad and who
sweep into the lives of all and sundry with the force of a gale,
upsetting stalemated romances, stale marriages, and the equilibrium
of the petty bureaucracy.
Sung at a funeral and a wedding today. The full gamut of the human
experience from the ridiculous to the utterly pointless. A restless
bunch of young radicals hang out, have sex, dance, drink, moan and
philosophise at the home of a prosperous decorator. While Pyotr, a
sometime student of law, falls for the lovely, loose-living lodger,
his sister carps on about the tedium of life, lusts after Nil -
who's blind to her charms but in pursuit of the servant - and
botches her own suicide. Life. People shout, fight, eat and go to
bed. When they wake up? They start shouting again. In this house
everything fades quickly. Tears, laughter. Everything. Dissipates.
The last sounds ringing out over the lake. Then nothing. A banal
hum. A household falls to pieces as the personal and political
turmoil of pre-revolutionary Russia gathers pace. Gorky's darkly
comic first play of 1902, banned from public performance under the
Czarist regime, is seen here in an exuberant new version by Andrew
Upton. Philistines premiered at the National Theatre, London, in
May 2007.
Superb new translations of Gorky's classic memoirs of Tolstoy and
other remarkable Russians, along with unforgettable
characterizations of Gorky himself by his contemporaries Maxim
Gorky (1868-1936) enjoyed worldwide fame of a kind unmatched by
that of any other writer in the first half of the twentieth
century. Prodigiously gifted and prolific, riddled with
contradictions, praised increasingly for political rather than
literary reasons, he left a vast body of writing that contains
acknowledged masterpieces alongside many currently neglected works
that still await impartial assessment. Taken together, the pieces
in this book (many of them based on fuller texts than those of
previously published translations) present a surprising and
unfamiliar Gorky-a figure who, once the cliches are stripped away
from him, becomes ever more fascinating and enigmatic as man, as
writer, and as historical figure. Among the volume's selections are
portraits of Gorky by four particularly astute observers: poet
Vladislav Khodasevich, critics Boris Eikhenbaum and Georgy
Adamovich, and novelist Evgeny Zamiatin. Fanger's generous
annotations and brilliant introduction will make this book
indispensable to every reader with an interest in Tolstoy, Gorky,
modern Russian literature and politics, or the art of the memoir.
|
You may like...
Tenet
John David Washington, Robert Pattinson, …
DVD
(1)
R51
Discovery Miles 510
|