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Presenting for the first time Akim Volynsky's (1861-1926)
pre-balletic writings on Leonardo da Vinci, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Otto
Weininger, and on such illustrious personalities as Zinaida
Gippius, Ida Rubinstein, and Lou Andreas-Salome, And Then Came
Dance provides new insight into the origins of Volynsky's
life-altering journey to become Russia's foremost ballet critic. A
man for whom the realm of art was largely female in form and whose
all-encompassing image of woman constituted the crux of his
aesthetic contemplation that crossed over into the personal and
libidinal, Volynsky looks ahead to another Petersburg-bred high
priest of classical dance, George Balanchine. With an undeniable
proclivity toward ballet's female component, Volynsky's dance
writings, illuminated by examples of his earlier gendered
criticism, invite speculation on how truly ground-breaking and
forward-looking this critic is.
Epic and the Russian Novel from Gogol to Pasternak examines the
origin of the nineteen- century Russian novel and challenges the
Lukacs-Bakhtin theory of epic. By removing the Russian novel from
its European context, the authors reveal that it developed as a
means of reconnecting the narrative form with its origins in
classical and Christian epic in a way that expressed the Russian
desire to renew and restore ancient spirituality. Through this
methodology, Griffiths and Rabinowitz dispute Bakhtin's
classification of epic as a monophonic and dead genre whose time
has passed. Due to its grand themes and cultural centrality, the
epic is the form most suited to newcomers or cultural outsiders
seeking legitimacy through appropriation of the past. Through
readings of Gogol's Dead Souls-a uniquely problematic work, and one
which Bakhtin argued was novelistic rather than epic-Dostoevsky's
Brothers Karamazov, Pasternak's Dr. Zhivago, and Tolstoy's War and
Peace, this book redefines "epic" and how we understand the sweep
of Russian literature as a whole.
Presenting for the first time Akim Volynsky's (1861-1926)
pre-balletic writings on Leonardo da Vinci, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Otto
Weininger, and on such illustrious personalities as Zinaida
Gippius, Ida Rubinstein, and Lou Andreas-Salome, And Then Came
Dance provides new insight into the origins of Volynsky's
life-altering journey to become Russia's foremost ballet critic. A
man for whom the realm of art was largely female in form and whose
all-encompassing image of woman constituted the crux of his
aesthetic contemplation that crossed over into the personal and
libidinal, Volynsky looks ahead to another Petersburg-bred high
priest of classical dance, George Balanchine. With an undeniable
proclivity toward ballet's female component, Volynsky's dance
writings, illuminated by examples of his earlier gendered
criticism, invite speculation on how truly ground-breaking and
forward-looking this critic is.
The first translation of the writings of Akim Volynsky, the
greatest ballet authority of early twentieth-century Russia Akim
Volynsky was a Russian literary critic, journalist, and art
historian who became Saint Petersburg's liveliest and most prolific
ballet critic in the early part of the twentieth century. This
book, the first English edition of his provocative and influential
writings, provides a striking look at life inside the world of
Russian ballet at a crucial era in its history. Stanley J.
Rabinowitz selects and translates forty of Volynsky's
articles-vivid, eyewitness accounts that sparkle with details about
the careers and personalities of such dance luminaries as Anna
Pavlova, Mikhail Fokine, Tamara Karsavina, and George Balanchine,
at that time a young dancer in the Maryinsky company whose keen
musical sense and creative interpretive power Volynsky was one of
the first to recognize. Rabinowitz also translates Volynsky's
magnum opus, The Book of Exaltations, an elaborate meditation on
classical dance technique that is at once a primer and an
ideological treatise. Throughout his writings, Rabinowitz argues in
his critical introduction, which sets Volynsky's life and work
against the backdrop of the principal intellectual currents of his
time, Volynsky emphasizes the spiritual and ethereal qualities of
ballet.
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