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Teaching Nineteenth-Century Russian Literature: Essays in Honor of
Robert L. Belknap grew out of a conference in honour of Robert
Belknap, an outstanding teacher and scholar. The collected essays
present concrete strategies for teaching the works of some of
Russia's best-known writers: Pushkin, Lermontov, Gogol, Turgenev,
Saltykov-Shchedrin, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, and Chekhov. They address
the teaching of these iconic works of Russian literature in
different contexts and to different audiences, from undergraduate
students reading Russian classics in the context of general
education courses to graduate students exploring the larger context
of Russian print culture. Most of the essays address teaching in
English translation, a few in the original, but all offer useful
strategies that can be adopted for teaching to any audience.
Contributors include: Robert L. Belknap, Elizabeth Klosty Beaujour,
Ksana Blank, Ellen Chances, Nicholas Dames, Andrew R. Durkin,
Jefferson J.A. Gatrall, Svetlana Slavskaya Grenier, Robert Louis
Jackson, Liza Knapp, Deborah A. Martinsen, Olga Meerson, Maude
Meisel, Robin Feuer Miller, Marcia A. Morris, Gary Saul Morson,
Catharine Theimer Nepomnyashchy, Cathy Popkin, Irina Reyfman,
Rebecca Stanton, William Mills Todd III, and Nancy Workman.
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Plots (Paperback)
Robert L. Belknap; Introduction by Robin Feuer Miller
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R639
R560
Discovery Miles 5 600
Save R79 (12%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Robert L. Belknap's theory of plot illustrates the active and
passive roles literature plays in creating its own dynamic reading
experience. Literary narrative enchants us through its development
of plot, but plot tells its own story about the making of
narrative, revealing through its structures, preoccupations, and
strategies of representation critical details about how and when a
work came into being. Through a rich reading of Shakespeare's King
Lear and Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment, Belknap explores the
spatial, chronological, and causal aspects of plot, its brilliant
manipulation of reader frustration and involvement, and its
critical cohesion of characters. He considers Shakespeare's
transformation of dramatic plot through parallelism, conflict,
resolution, and recognition. He then follows with Dostoevsky's
development of the rhetorical and moral devices of
nineteenth-century Russian fiction, along with its epistolary and
detective genres, to embed the reader in the murder Raskolnikov
commits. Dostoevsky's reinvention of the psychological plot was
profound, and Belknap effectively challenges the idea that the
author abused causality to achieve his ideological conclusion. In a
final chapter, Belknap argues that plots teach us novelistic rather
than poetic justice. Operating according to their own logic, plots
provide us with a compelling way to see and order our world.
Long unavailable, "The Structure of "The Brothers Karamazov"" is a
classic in American Slavic studies. Robert L. Belknap's study
clarifies the complex architectonics of Dostoevsky's most carefully
constructed and painstakingly written book by employing
structuralist critical methods. This first paperback edition
includes a new preface by the author, reflecting on the theory of
the book and on recent developments in Dostoevsky criticism and
relevant critical theory.
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Plots (Hardcover)
Robert L. Belknap; Introduction by Robin Feuer Miller
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R755
R715
Discovery Miles 7 150
Save R40 (5%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Robert L. Belknap's theory of plot illustrates the active and
passive roles literature plays in creating its own dynamic reading
experience. Literary narrative enchants us through its development
of plot, but plot tells its own story about the making of
narrative, revealing through its structures, preoccupations, and
strategies of representation critical details about how and when a
work came into being. Through a rich reading of Shakespeare's King
Lear and Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment, Belknap explores the
spatial, chronological, and causal aspects of plot, its brilliant
manipulation of reader frustration and involvement, and its
critical cohesion of characters. He considers Shakespeare's
transformation of dramatic plot through parallelism, conflict,
resolution, and recognition. He then follows with Dostoevsky's
development of the rhetorical and moral devices of
nineteenth-century Russian fiction, along with its epistolary and
detective genres, to embed the reader in the murder Raskolnikov
commits. Dostoevsky's reinvention of the psychological plot was
profound, and Belknap effectively challenges the idea that the
author abused causality to achieve his ideological conclusion. In a
final chapter, Belknap argues that plots teach us novelistic rather
than poetic justice. Operating according to their own logic, plots
provide us with a compelling way to see and order our world.
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