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Collected here are Gogol's finest tales - from the demon-haunted
'St John's Eve' to the strange surrealism of 'The Nose', from the
heart-rending trials of the copyist in 'The Overcoat' to those of
the delusional clerk in 'The Diary of a Madman' - allowing readers
to experience anew the unmistakable genius of a writer who paved
the way for Dostoevsky and Kafka. To this superb new translation -
the first in twenty-five years and destined to become the
definitive edition of Gogol's short fiction - Richard Pevear and
Larissa Volokhonsky bring the same clarity and fidelity to the
original that they brought to their brilliant translation of
Dostoevsky's works and to War and Peace.
This version of A Government Inspector is a Yorkshire take on
Gogol's 1836 fantastical Russian satire. The setting is here
transposed to a small northern town in the twenty-first century.
Deborah McAndrew's version of A Government Inspector goes beyond
literal translation, but is absolutely faithful to Gogol's stated
intention to peel away the surface layers of ordinary people and
expose the corruption beneath. It's exuberant, brilliantly witty
and original, and audiences will revel in the references to
government officials' expenses claims and women's beach volley
ball...Northern Broadsides, one of the country's finest and
best-loved touring theatre companies, breathes life and vigour into
this nearly 200-year-old story.Absurdly funny, clever and strangely
familiar, this feels to be the next One Man Two Guvnors. The
production premieres at Harrogate Theatre from 7 - 22 September
before embarking on an English national tour until December 1st.
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Dead Souls (Paperback)
Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol
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R306
R278
Discovery Miles 2 780
Save R28 (9%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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A stranger arrives in a Russian backwater community with a bizarre proposition for the local landowners: cash for their "dead souls," the serfs who have died in their service and for whom they must continue to pay taxes until the next census. The landowner receives a payment and a relief of his tax burden, and the stranger receives--"what? Gogol's comic masterpiece offers a vast and satirical painting of the Russian panorama as it traces the path and encounters of its mysterious protagonist in pursuit of his dubious scheme. "Dead Souls, regarded as both a realistic portrait of nineteenth-century Russia and a work of great symbolism, continues to inspire twenty-first century authors and readers.
This is a dual-language book with the Russian text on the left
side, and the English text on the right side of each spread. The
texts are precisely synchronized. Fragments of Dead Souls' second
volume, which Gogol burnt shortly before his death, are not
included in this edition. See more details about this and other
books on Russian Novels in Russian and English page on Facebook.
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Dead Souls (Paperback)
Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol
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R705
R663
Discovery Miles 6 630
Save R42 (6%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Dead Souls (Paperback)
D. J. Hogarth; Introduction by John Cournos; Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol
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R421
Discovery Miles 4 210
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Dead Souls (Paperback)
D. J. Hogarth; Edited by Vincent Kelvin; Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol
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R544
Discovery Miles 5 440
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Dead Souls (Paperback)
D. J. Hogarth; Introduction by John Cournos; Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol
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R460
Discovery Miles 4 600
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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CONTENTS INTRODUCTION TARAS BULBA CHAPTER I CHAPTER II CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV CHAPTER V CHAPTER VI CHAPTER VII CHAPTER VIII CHAPTER IX
CHAPTER X CHAPTER XI CHAPTER XII ST. JOHN'S EVE THE CLOAK HOW THE
TWO IVANS QUARRELLED CHAPTER I CHAPTER II CHAPTER III CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V CHAPTER VI CHAPTER VII THE MYSTERIOUS PORTRAIT PART I
PART II THE CALASH
CONTENTS PREFACE THE MANTLE THE NOSE MEMOIRS OF A MADMAN A MAY
NIGHT THE VIY
Contents INTRODUCTION CHARACTERS OF THE PLAY DIRECTIONS FOR ACTORS
THE INSPECTOR-GENERAL ACT I ACT II ACT III ACT IV ACT V LAST SCENE
SILENT SCENE
According to John Cournos, "Taras Bulba" is the finest epic in
Russian literature and helped Gogol to influence Russian literature
for generations. Ernest Hemingway called Taras Bulba "One of the 10
greatest books of all time." Gogol has written in "Taras Bulba" his
own reproach to the nineteenth century. It is sad and joyous like
one of those Ukrainian songs which have helped to inspire him to
write it. The story is rich in adventure, battle scenes and touches
of Gogol's humor. The other 5 stories included in this book are: -
St. John's Eve - The Cloak - How the Two Ivans Quarreled - The
Mysterious Portrait - The Calash
One of the most influential short stories ever written, Nikolai
Gogol's ''The Overcoat'' first appeared in 1842 as part of a
four-volume publication of its author's Collected Works. The story
is considered not only an early masterpiece of Russian Naturalism-a
movement that would dominate the country's literature for
generations-but a progenitor of the modern short story form itself.
"We all came out from under Gogol's 'Overcoat'" is a remark that
has been variously attributed to Dostoevsky and Turgenev. That
either or both might have said it is an indication of the
far-reaching significance of Gogol's work.
Gogol's writings have been seen as a bridge between the genres
of romanticism and realism in Russian literature. Progressive
critics of his day praised Gogol for grounding his prose fictions
in the everyday lives of ordinary people, and they claimed him as a
pioneer of a new "naturalist" aesthetic. Yet, Gogol viewed his work
in a more conservative light, and his writing seems to incorporate
as much fantasy and folklore as realistic detail. "The Overcoat,"
which was written sporadically over several years during a
self-imposed exile in Geneva and Rome, is a particularly dazzling
amalgam of these seemingly disparate tendencies in Gogol's writing.
The story begins by taking its readers through the mundane and
alienating world of a bureaucratic office in St. Petersburg where
an awkward, impoverished clerk must scrimp and save in order to
afford a badly needed new winter coat. As the story progresses, we
enter a fairy-tale world of supernatural revenge, where the clerk's
corpse is seen wandering city streets ripping coats off the backs
of passersby. Gogol's story is both comic and horrific-at once a
scathing social satire, moralistic fable, and psychological
study.
List of Contents:
Introduction to Nikolai Gogol
Book 1: The Overcoat
Book 2: Taras Bulba
Book 3: St. John's Eve
Book 4: The Nose
Book 5: The Mysterious Portrait
Book 6: The Calash
Taras Bulba is a magnificent story portraying the life of the
Ukrainian Cossacks who lived by the Dnieper River in the sixteenth
century. Taras Bulba is an old and hardened warrior who feels a
little rusty from lack of action. When his two sons return from
school at Kiev, he eagerly takes them to the "setch," the camping
and training island of the Cossacks. There they spend their time
drinking and remembering old glories. It happens, however, that the
Cossacks are going through an uneasy truce with their Turkish
hegemones and the Tartar horsemen. Taras Bulba, always the
warmonger, harangues the Cossacks, engineers a change in
leadership, and leads them to attack the Catholic Poles. The
Cossacks ride West, destroying everything they meet with
extraordinary brutality. Finally, they lay siege to a walled city,
but Andrew, Taras's younger son, discovers that the woman he loves
is inside. A masterful and brutal story of the horrors of war.
Newly designed and typeset in a modern 6-by-9-inch format by Waking
Lion Press.
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Dead Souls (Hardcover)
Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol; Introduction by Clifford Odets
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R1,535
Discovery Miles 15 350
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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1923. Odets writes in his introduction that the brutal censorship
imposed upon the great Russian Empire of Gogol's time by its feudal
lords and masters is comparable in our time to only that imposed
upon the peoples of certain Fascist states. Enlightenment was not
then a word to utter lightly on a muddy street corner. But Gogol
set out to enlighten the Russian people, and his method was
curiously simple. Of his central character Tchitchikov, in Dead
Souls he states, Him I have taken as a type to show forth the vices
and failings, rather than the merits and virtues, of the
commonplace Russian individual; and the characters which revolve
around him have also been selected for the purpose of demonstrating
our national weaknesses and shortcomings.
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