Russian 251
Passion, Pain, Perfection:

The Nineteenth-Century Russian Classics in English Translation

Wellesley College, FALL 2008
TF 9:50 a.m., Founders Hall, Room 423

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Required Texts | Recommended Criticism | Films | Course Requirements | Grading | Schedule

Required texts are available at College Bookstore; also on 3-hour reserve at the Knapp Center):
A. S. Púshkin: Eugene Onégin (trans. by Charles Johnston; revised edition). Penguin.
A. S. Púshkin: The Queen of Spades and Other Stories (trans. by Alan Myers). Oxford UP.
M. Iu. Lérmontov: A Hero of Our Time (trans. by I. P. Foote; revised edition). Penguin.
N. V. Gógol´: Dead Souls (Norton Critical edition). Norton.
N. V. Gógol´: Diary of a Madman and Other Stories (trans. by Ronald Wilks). Penguin.
K. K. Pávlova: A Double Life (trans. by Barbara Heldt). Barbary Coast Books.
I. S. Turgénev: Fathers and Sons (Norton Critical edition; 2nd edition). Norton.
F. M. Dostoévskii: Crime and Punishment (Norton Critical edition; 3rd edition). Norton.
L. N. Tolstói: Ánna Karénina (Norton Critical edition; 2nd edition). Norton.
* Mirsky, D. S. A History of Russian Literature. Northwestern UP, 1999 [1958].
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Recommended criticism (on 3-hour reserve at the Knapp Center)
(Note: “Criticism” numbers following Mirsky readings — see “Schedule” below — refer to the works of criticism listed here; students’ oral presentations will be devoted to these works. These critical works will also prove very helpful during the preparation of essays.)

1. Bayley, John. Pushkin: A Comparative Commentary. Cambridge, 1971.
2. Bayley, John. Tolstoy and the Novel. London, 1966.
3. Berlin, Isaiah. Russian Thinkers. Harmondsworth, 1978.
4. Bethea, David M., ed. Puškin Today. Bloomington, 1993.
5. Briggs, A. D. P. Alexander Pushkin: Eugene Onegin. Cambridge, 1992.
6. Christian, R. F. Tolstoy: A Critical Introduction. London, 1969.
7. Costlow, Jane. Worlds Within Worlds: The Novels of Ivan Turgenev. Princeton, 1990.
8. Debreczeny, Paul. The Other Pushkin: A Study of Alexander Pushkin's Prose Fiction. Stanford, 1983.
9. Eikhenbaum, Boris. Lermontov: A Study in Literary-Historical Evaluation. Ann Arbor, 1981.
10. Fanger, Donald. The Creation of Nikolai Gogol. Cambridge (MA), 1979.
11. Frank, Joseph. Dostoevsky: The Seeds of Revolt, 1821-1849. Princeton, 1976.
12. Frank, Joseph. Dostoevsky: The Years of Ordeal, 1850-1859. Princeton, 1983.
13. Frank, Joseph. Dostoevsky: The Stir of Liberation, 1860-1865. Princeton, 1986.
14. Frank, Joseph. Dostoevsky: The Miraculous Years, 1866-1870. Princeton, 1995.
15. Frank, Joseph. Dostoevsky: The Mantle of the Prophet, 1871-1881. Princeton, 2002.
16. Frank, Joseph. Through the Russian Prism. Princeton, 1991.
17. Fusso, Susanne, ed.. Essays on Karolina Pavlova. Evanston, 2001.
18. Greene, Diana. “Gender and Genre in Pavlova's A Double Life,” Slavic Review, Fall 1995 (vol. 54, no. 3), pp. 563-77. 19. Gustafson, Richard. Leo Tolstoy: Resident and Stranger. Princeton, 1986.
20. Hasty, Olga Peters. Pushkin's Tatiana. Madison, 1999.
21.* Heldt, Barbara. A Terrible Perfection. Bloomington, 1987.
22. Hoisington, Sona Stephan, ed. A Plot of Her Own: The Female Protagonist in Russian Literature. Evanston, 1995. 23. Hoisington, Sona Stephan, ed. & trans. Russian Views of Pushkin's Eugene Onegin. Bloomington, 1988. 24. Kelly, Catriona. History of Russian Women's Writing, 1820-1992. Oxford, 1994.
25. Leighton, Lauren. The Esoteric Tradition in Russian Romantic Literature: Decembrism and Freemasonry. University Park, PA, 1994.
26. Maguire, Robert A. Exploring Gogol. Stanford, 1994.
27. Maguire, Robert A., ed. Gogol from the Twentieth Century. Princeton, 1974.
28.* Mirsky, D. S. A History of Russian Literature. Evanston, 1999 [1958].
29.* Moser, Charles A., ed. Cambridge History of Russian Literature. Cambridge, 1992.
30. Nabokov, Vladimir. Eugene Onegin (rev. edn., 2 vols.). Princeton, 1975.
31.* Nabokov, Vladimir. Lectures on Russian Literature. New York, 1980.
32. Nabokov, Vladimir. Nikolai Gogol. Norfolk, 1944.
33. Riha, Thomas, ed. Readings in Russian Civilization (rev. edn.), vol. 2. Chicago, 1969.
34. Seth, Vikram. The Golden Gate. New York, 1986.
35.* Terras, Victor. A History of Russian Literature. New Haven, 1991.
36.* Todd III, William Mills. Fiction and Society in the Age of Pushkin. Cambridge, MA, 1986.
37. Wigzell, Faith. Reading Russian Fortunes: Print Culture, Gender, and Divination in Russia from 1765. Cambridge, 1998.
38. SUCCESSFUL ESSAYS BY PAST STUDENTS in various Russian literature courses with Prof. Hodge (various authors); filed for Russian 251 at Knapp Reserve under “Student Essays” * Denotes general works about and histories of Russian literature — for reference use throughout the semester.
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Films (on reserve at Clapp Library):
Eugene Onegin (opera by P. I. Chaikovskii)
Onegin
(UK, 1999)
Un coeur en hiver (France, 1992)
Sidewhiskers (Russia, 1991)
The Overcoat (USSR, 1959)
Anna Karenina (U.S., 1935)
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Course requirements:
1) Conscientious participation in class discussions
2) Two essays (2000-2500 words each) of analysis, criticism, interpretation or history of the literature we read, due in October and December (see Schedule below). Note: Particularly successful student essays from past classes are on reserve at Clapp Library; see critical text no. 38 above.
3) Take-home final examination (2½ hours)
4) Daily reading of e-mail and the “Russian Bulletin Board” and “RUSS251-F07” conferences in FirstClass; careful perusal of “Common Mistakes to Avoid in Formal Writing” handout
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Grading:
Course grades will be determined according to the following criteria, weighted as indicated:

30% First essay
35% Second essay
30% Final examination
5% Class participation
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SCHEDULE:
(Note: “Criticism” numbers following Mirsky readings refer to the works of criticism listed above on pp. 1-2; these works will also prove helpful during the preparation of essays.)

WEEK 1

2 Sep.              Introduction

5 Sep.              A. S. Pushkin: Eugene Onegin, Chapters 1-2 (pp. 1-56) [Mirsky, pp. 83-92; optional criticism: 1, 4, 5, 20, 22, 23, 30, 34, 36, 37]

WEEK 2

9 Sep.              Pushkin: Eugene Onegin, Chapters 3-4 (pp. 57-102)

12 Sep.            Pushkin: Eugene Onegin, Chapters 5-6 (pp. 103-46)


WEEK 3

16 Sep.            Pushkin: Eugene Onegin, Chapters 7-8 (pp. 147-201)

19 Sep.            Pushkin: “The Queen of Spades” (The Queen of Spades and Other Stories, pp. 71-100) [Mirsky, pp. 120-124; optional criticism: 1, 8]

WEEK 4

23 Sep.            M. Iu. Lermontov: A Hero of Our Time (pp. 3-53) [Mirsky, pp. 136-44, 162-5;  optional criticism: 9, 36]

26 Sep.            Lermontov: A Hero of Our Time (pp. 55-157)

WEEK 5

30 Sep.            N. V. Gogol: Dead Souls (pp. 1-90) [Mirsky, pp. 149-62; optional criticism: 10, 26, 27, 32, 36]

3 Oct.              Gogol: Dead Souls (pp. 90-190)                                 

WEEK 6

7 Oct.              Gogol: Dead Souls (pp. 190-270) [optional criticism: V. G. Belinsky, excerpt in Norton edn., pp. 453-7]
Optional first draft of first essay due today by class time

 

10 Oct.            Pavlova: A Double Life (Introduction, pp. 9-32, and text, pp. 33-132) [optional criticism: 17, 18, 21]

WEEK 7

13-14 Oct.       ☺  NO CLASSES — FALL BREAK  ☺

17 Oct.                        Turgenev: Fathers and Sons (pp. 3-58) [Mirsky, pp. 200-8; criticism: 7, 22, 31]
FIRST ESSAY DUE in Russian Dept. by class time today

 

WEEK 8

21 Oct.                        Turgenev: Fathers and Sons (pp. 58-115)

24 Oct.                        Turgenev: Fathers and Sons (pp. 115-57; 290-300)

 

WEEK 9

28 Nov.           ☺  NO CLASS TODAY — TANNER CONFERENCE  ☺

31 Oct.                        Dostoevskii: Crime and Punishment (pp. 1-74) [Mirsky, 181-5, 275-91; optional criticism: 11-16]

 

WEEK 10

4 Oct.              Dostoevskii: Crime and Punishment (pp. 75-236)

7 Nov.             Dostoevskii: Crime and Punishment (pp. 237-369)

 

WEEK 11

11 Nov.           Dostoevskii: Crime and Punishment (pp. 370-465)

14 Nov.           Dostoevskii: Crime and Punishment (conclusion)

 

WEEK 12

18 Nov.           Tolstoi, Anna Karenina (pp. 1-106) [Mirsky, pp. 256-75; optional criticism: critical essays appended to Norton edn., esp. Boris Eikhenbaum; also 2, 3, 6, 19, 31]

21 Nov.           Tolstoi, Anna Karenina (pp. 107- 216)

WEEK 13

25 Nov.           Tolstoi, Anna Karenina (pp. 216-321)

26-28 Nov.      ☺  THANKSGIVING BREAK — NO CLASS  ☺

 

WEEK 14

2 Dec.              Tolstoi, Anna Karenina (pp. 321-499)
Optional first draft of second essay due today by class time

5 Dec.              Tolstoi, Anna Karenina (pp. 500-740)  

          

WEEK 15

9 Dec.              Tolstoi, Anna Karenina (conclusion); students receive take-home final examination
                        SECOND ESSAY DUE in Russian Dept. by class time today

 

19 Dec.            RUSSIAN 251 TAKE-HOME FINAL EXAMINATION DUE in Hodge's box in              the Russian Department (Founders 416) by 4:30 p.m.

 


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