ABSTRACT

This volume contains two concise works by the innovative twentieth-century literary critic Janko Lavrin, offering accessible and thoughtful introductions to the two greatest Russian novelists. It provides a perfect point of access into the often bewildering world of Russian literature, and the troubled geniuses which created it.

Tolstoy: An Approach, first published in 1944, is an attempt to interpret Tolstoy as an artist and thinker in light of the twentieth-century experience: specifically, it seeks to discern the relationship between Tolstoy the novelist and Tolstoy the religious pseudo-prophet, thereby articulating the contours of his most essential ethical and psychological insights.

In Dostoevsky: A Study, published first in 1943, Lavrin suggests a wide range of valuable observations and intriguing possibilities, exploring the enigmatic and perennially fascinating Dostoevsky in terms of the inter-connections between his life, his thought, his relationships, his writing, and the socio-cultural circumstances in which he found himself.

chapter I|18 pages

Some General Remarks

chapter II|16 pages

The Art of Tolstoy (I)

chapter III|15 pages

The Art of Tolstoy (II)

chapter IV|17 pages

Tolstoy’s Dilemma

chapter V|14 pages

Culture and Nature

chapter VI|12 pages

The ‘Dragon of Death’

chapter VII|11 pages

Tolstoy and Religion

chapter VIII|12 pages

The Millennium

chapter IX|16 pages

A Puritan’s Progress

chapter X|12 pages

The Last Act

chapter XI|11 pages

Tolstoy and the Revolution

chapter XII|9 pages

Tolstoy and Nietzsche

chapter |2 pages

Conclusion

chapter |2 pages

Index

chapter |1 pages

Original Copyright Page

chapter |1 pages

Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Copyright Page

chapter |1 pages

A Prefatory Note

chapter |1 pages

Table of Contents

chapter I|26 pages

Some Notes on Dostoevsky’s Life

chapter II|12 pages

Dostoevsky as Artist

chapter III|16 pages

Dostoevsky as Psychologist

chapter IV|10 pages

The Quest of Values

chapter V|9 pages

The ‘Underworld’ Spirit

chapter VI|12 pages

The Bankruptcy of the Superman

chapter VII|8 pages

A Russian Don Quixote

chapter VIII|15 pages

Stavrogin’s Fate

chapter IX|9 pages

A Raw Youth

chapter X|11 pages

‘The Two Kinds of Truth’

chapter XI|9 pages

Christ and His Double

chapter XII|9 pages

Towards a Synthesis

chapter |1 pages

Conclusion