ABSTRACT

This book, first published in 1944, is a comprehensive survey of post-revolutionary Russian literature up to the early 1940s. A huge range of writers are examined, and the analysis is made in the knowledge of the sometimes considerable pressure brought by the Government on writers in Soviet Russia. Links are made by the author between the writers being assessed, as well as to the Russian writers that had come before them. As a wide-ranging analysis of Soviet literature, this book has rarely been bettered.

part |320 pages

Soviet Russian Literature

chapter Chapter I|22 pages

Pre-Revolutionary Writers After 19241

chapter Chapter II|9 pages

Two Revolutionary Romantics

chapter Chapter III|28 pages

The Revival of the Novel

chapter Chapter IV|19 pages

Writers of Everyday Life

chapter Chapter V|24 pages

The Proletarian Writers

chapter Chapter VI|11 pages

Yury Olesha and his “Envy”

chapter Chapter VII|13 pages

Literature of The Five-Year Plan

chapter Chapter VIII|26 pages

“Counter-Revolutionary” Tendencies in Soviet Literature

chapter Chapter IX|12 pages

The Historical Novel

chapter Chapter X|21 pages

The Poets

chapter Chapter XI|15 pages

The Drama

chapter Chapter XII|19 pages

Literary Criticism and Literary Theories

chapter Chapter XIII|18 pages

Government Policy in Matters of Literature

chapter Chapter XIV|15 pages

Latest Developments

Socialist Realism.—Nationalism Versus “Westernism”, and “Classicism” Vetsus “Modernism”

chapter |68 pages

Epilogue: 1935-1943