Anna Karenina in our time: seeing more wisely
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New Haven [u.a.]
Yale Univ. Press
2007
|
Schriftenreihe: | Russian literature and thought
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0714/2007013706.html Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext |
Beschreibung: | Tolstoy and the Twenty-first century -- Dolly and Stiva : prosaic good and evil -- Anna -- Levin |
Beschreibung: | XX, 263 S. 25 cm |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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---|---|
adam_text |
η
this invigorating new assessment of Anna
Karenina, Gary
Saul Morson overturns tradi¬
tional interpretations of the classic novel and
shows why readers have misunderstood Tol¬
stoy's characters and intentions. Morson argues
that Tolstoy's ideas are far more radical than has
been thought: his masterpiece challenges deeply
held conceptions of romantic love, the process
of social reform, modernization, and the nature
of good and evil. By investigating the ethi¬
cal, philosophical, and social issues with which
Tolstoy grappled, Morson finds in Anna
Karenina
powerful connections with the concerns of
today. He proposes that Tolstoy's effort to see
the world more wisely can deeply inform our
own search for wisdom in the present day,
The book offers brilliant analyses of Anna,
Karenin, Dolly Levin, and other characters, with
a particularly subtle portrait of Anna's extrem¬
ism and self-deception. Morson probes Tolstoy's
important insights (evil is often the result of
negligence; goodness derives from small, every¬
day deeds) and completes the volume with an
irresistible, original list of One Hundred Sixty-
Three Tolstoyan Conclusions.
Contents
Acknowledgments
xi
List of References and Abbreviations
xiii
Introduction
1
Chapter One. Tolstoy and the Twenty-first Century
7
Tolstoy today,
9.
Theoretical and practical knowledge,
13.
Astronomy and
utopia,
16.
God substitutes,
20.
Contingency and presentness,
23.
Decisions in
a world of uncertainty,
25.
Complexity and impurity,
26.
Tolstoy and the realist
novel of ideas,
27.
The prosaic novel,
28.
Fallacies of perception and plot,
30.
Prosaics,
31.
Chapter Two. Dolly and
Stiva:
Prosaic Good and Evil
33
Happiness,
35.
Two bad lives,
35.
Overcoming the bias of the artifact,
36.
Re¬
training perception,
37.
The third story,
38.
The prosaic hero,
38.
Dolly's quan¬
dary,
40.
Habits,
41.
Arriving at a question (Part Six, chapter
16), 42.
Looking is
an action, AA. Work,
45.
Stiva
and the Russian idea of evil,
48.
Negligence and
negative events,
49.
The forgettory,
50.
Honesty,
51.
Fatalism and blame,
52.
He
had never clearly thought out the subject,
53.
Chapter Three. Anna
55
Introduction to a Contrary Reading
57
Part One. Anna and the Kinds of Love
62
Murder an infant (a Tolstoyan meditation),
62.
Fatality,
63.
Narcissism,
65.
Marrying Romeo,
68.
Love and work,
68.
Why they quarrel,
69.
Broderie
an¬
glaise,
70.
Eroticism and dialogue,
71.
The prosaic sublime,
72.
Kitty's mistake,
74.
Crises,
75.
The word love,
76.
The second proposal and how it works,
77.
Tiny alterations,
77.
Part Two. Anna and the Drama of Looking
79
Honesty, continued,
79.
Fake simplicity,
79.
What touches Dolly the most,
81.
Relativity,
82.
Ears,
84.
Narrating from within,
85.
Mimicry,
88.
Some strategic
absences,
88.
Aleksey Aleksandrovich plans a conversation,
89.
Lying without
speaking,
92.
Their past marriage,
93.
The Pallisers at breakfast,
95.
The short¬
est chapter,
97.
Vronsky,
97.
Vronsky's attempted suicide,
98.
Vronskys loath¬
ing,
101.
Vronsky tries to talk,
102.
Responsibility at a remove,
104.
Races and
circuses,
105.
What Anna sees and what Tolstoy says,
106.
Watching watching
watching,
108.
A false confession,
108.
For the first time,
109.
I tried to hate,
111. The only character who saves a life,
112.
Divorce and the children,
113.
Why
Anna refuses a divorce,
115.
Part Three. Anna's Suicide and the Totalism of Meaning
118
Nothing but love,
118.
Dehumanizing Anna,
119.
Impurity and inconsistency,
120.
The temptation to allegory,
121.
Frou-Frou's suicide?
123.
The dynamics of
quarrels,
124.
Why the epigraph is troubling,
127.
Two interpretations of the
epigraph, and an unexpected third one,
129.
Totalism and isolation,
130.
Con¬
trary evidence?
132.
Anna the philosopher,
133.
The madness of reason and the
choice of fatalism,
134.
Foreshadowing,
135.
Annie,
136.
The red bag,
137.
The
epigraph's fourth meaning,
138.
Chapter Four. Levin
141
Part One. Why Reforms Succeed or Fail
143
The significance of Russian history,
143.
Toryism and Whiggism,
145.
St. Peters¬
burg,
145.
Aristocracy,
146.
Duty and culture,
147.
A strange sort of duty,
148.
Levin's book,
149.
What Is Agriculture?
150.
The root cause,
151.
Friction,
152.
The elemental force,
154.
Why the elemental force cannot be resisted,
155.
Why
minds wander,
156.
Learning to mow,
157.
Reform by template,
158.
How re¬
forms can take,
159.
When asymmetry works,
160.
Discounting history,
161.
Untangling the labyrinth of possibilities,
163.
Destructive conservatism,
164.
Disciplines,
165.
War andPeace vs. Anna
Karenina, 166.
Speed,
167.
Part Two: Levin's Idea, Its Corollaries and Analogues: Self-improvement,
Christian Love, Counterfeit Art, and Authentic Thinking
168
Extending Levin's idea,
168.
Three ways not to answer,
169.
Kitty and self-
improvement,
171.
The fake way to avoid being fake,
175.
Karenin and Chris¬
tian love,
176.
The sound of listening,
177.
The terror of pity,
178.
The accom¬
panying message,
179.
The stages of comprehension,
180.
Wishing her dead,
181.
Eavesdropping on vindication,
183.
He did not think,
185.
Christian love and
the elemental force,
186.
No escape,
188.
Christian love and prosaic goodness,
188.
Counterfeit art. What is interesting?
190.
Counterfeit thinking and Sergey
Ivanovich's beliefs,
192.
How Suva's opinions change,
193.
Svyazhsky and magic
words,
194.
One's own thought,
196.
Part Three. Meaning and Ethics
197
The Svyazhsky enigma,
197.
An unbeliever's prayer,
198.
Two problems,
199.
Why there are many problems,
200.
The Svyazhsky enigma in its sharpest form,
202.
The sole solution to all the riddles of life and death is untrue,
203.
Flem¬
ing,
203.
What is "incontestably necessary,"
204.
Levin's casuistry,
205.
The
moral wisdom of the realist novel,
208.
The wisdom of behavior,
209.
Wisdom
does not come from the peasant,
209.
Given without proof,
210.
Miracle and
narrative,
212.
Why vision is not singular,
213.
Dostoevsky answers Tolstoy,
214.
The first Tolstoyan reply: Moral distance,
217.
The second Tolstoyan reply, and
three maxims about social judgments,
217.
The third Tolstoyan reply: Theoreti¬
cal illustrations vs. novelistic cases,
218.
The fourth Tolstoyan reply: Galileo and
Dolly,
218.
The fifth Tolstoyan reply: Presence,
219.
A still more senseless prayer
and a new mistaken question,
220.
The meaning of meaningfulness,
221.
One Hundred Sixty-Three Tolstoyan Conclusions
223
Notes
235
Index
' 245 |
adam_txt |
η
this invigorating new assessment of Anna
Karenina, Gary
Saul Morson overturns tradi¬
tional interpretations of the classic novel and
shows why readers have misunderstood Tol¬
stoy's characters and intentions. Morson argues
that Tolstoy's ideas are far more radical than has
been thought: his masterpiece challenges deeply
held conceptions of romantic love, the process
of social reform, modernization, and the nature
of good and evil. By investigating the ethi¬
cal, philosophical, and social issues with which
Tolstoy grappled, Morson finds in Anna
Karenina
powerful connections with the concerns of
today. He proposes that Tolstoy's effort to see
the world more wisely can deeply inform our
own search for wisdom in the present day,
The book offers brilliant analyses of Anna,
Karenin, Dolly Levin, and other characters, with
a particularly subtle portrait of Anna's extrem¬
ism and self-deception. Morson probes Tolstoy's
important insights (evil is often the result of
negligence; goodness derives from small, every¬
day deeds) and completes the volume with an
irresistible, original list of One Hundred Sixty-
Three Tolstoyan Conclusions.
Contents
Acknowledgments
xi
List of References and Abbreviations
xiii
Introduction
1
Chapter One. Tolstoy and the Twenty-first Century
7
Tolstoy today,
9.
Theoretical and practical knowledge,
13.
Astronomy and
utopia,
16.
God substitutes,
20.
Contingency and presentness,
23.
Decisions in
a world of uncertainty,
25.
Complexity and impurity,
26.
Tolstoy and the realist
novel of ideas,
27.
The prosaic novel,
28.
Fallacies of perception and plot,
30.
Prosaics,
31.
Chapter Two. Dolly and
Stiva:
Prosaic Good and Evil
33
Happiness,
35.
Two bad lives,
35.
Overcoming the bias of the artifact,
36.
Re¬
training perception,
37.
The third story,
38.
The prosaic hero,
38.
Dolly's quan¬
dary,
40.
Habits,
41.
Arriving at a question (Part Six, chapter
16), 42.
Looking is
an action, AA. Work,
45.
Stiva
and the Russian idea of evil,
48.
Negligence and
negative events,
49.
The forgettory,
50.
Honesty,
51.
Fatalism and blame,
52.
He
had never clearly thought out the subject,
53.
Chapter Three. Anna
55
Introduction to a Contrary Reading
57
Part One. Anna and the Kinds of Love
62
Murder an infant (a Tolstoyan meditation),
62.
Fatality,
63.
Narcissism,
65.
Marrying Romeo,
68.
Love and work,
68.
Why they quarrel,
69.
Broderie
an¬
glaise,
70.
Eroticism and dialogue,
71.
The prosaic sublime,
72.
Kitty's mistake,
74.
Crises,
75.
The word love,
76.
The second proposal and how it works,
77.
Tiny alterations,
77.
Part Two. Anna and the Drama of Looking
79
Honesty, continued,
79.
Fake simplicity,
79.
What touches Dolly the most,
81.
Relativity,
82.
Ears,
84.
Narrating from within,
85.
Mimicry,
88.
Some strategic
absences,
88.
Aleksey Aleksandrovich plans a conversation,
89.
Lying without
speaking,
92.
Their past marriage,
93.
The Pallisers at breakfast,
95.
The short¬
est chapter,
97.
Vronsky,
97.
Vronsky's attempted suicide,
98.
Vronskys loath¬
ing,
101.
Vronsky tries to talk,
102.
Responsibility at a remove,
104.
Races and
circuses,
105.
What Anna sees and what Tolstoy says,
106.
Watching watching
watching,
108.
A false confession,
108.
For the first time,
109.
I tried to hate,
111. The only character who saves a life,
112.
Divorce and the children,
113.
Why
Anna refuses a divorce,
115.
Part Three. Anna's Suicide and the Totalism of Meaning
118
Nothing but love,
118.
Dehumanizing Anna,
119.
Impurity and inconsistency,
120.
The temptation to allegory,
121.
Frou-Frou's suicide?
123.
The dynamics of
quarrels,
124.
Why the epigraph is troubling,
127.
Two interpretations of the
epigraph, and an unexpected third one,
129.
Totalism and isolation,
130.
Con¬
trary evidence?
132.
Anna the philosopher,
133.
The madness of reason and the
choice of fatalism,
134.
Foreshadowing,
135.
Annie,
136.
The red bag,
137.
The
epigraph's fourth meaning,
138.
Chapter Four. Levin
141
Part One. Why Reforms Succeed or Fail
143
The significance of Russian history,
143.
Toryism and Whiggism,
145.
St. Peters¬
burg,
145.
Aristocracy,
146.
Duty and culture,
147.
A strange sort of duty,
148.
Levin's book,
149.
What Is Agriculture?
150.
The root cause,
151.
Friction,
152.
The elemental force,
154.
Why the elemental force cannot be resisted,
155.
Why
minds wander,
156.
Learning to mow,
157.
Reform by template,
158.
How re¬
forms can take,
159.
When asymmetry works,
160.
Discounting history,
161.
Untangling the labyrinth of possibilities,
163.
Destructive conservatism,
164.
Disciplines,
165.
War andPeace vs. Anna
Karenina, 166.
Speed,
167.
Part Two: Levin's Idea, Its Corollaries and Analogues: Self-improvement,
Christian Love, Counterfeit Art, and Authentic Thinking
168
Extending Levin's idea,
168.
Three ways not to answer,
169.
Kitty and self-
improvement,
171.
The fake way to avoid being fake,
175.
Karenin and Chris¬
tian love,
176.
The sound of listening,
177.
The terror of pity,
178.
The accom¬
panying message,
179.
The stages of comprehension,
180.
Wishing her dead,
181.
Eavesdropping on vindication,
183.
He did not think,
185.
Christian love and
the elemental force,
186.
No escape,
188.
Christian love and prosaic goodness,
188.
Counterfeit art. What is interesting?
190.
Counterfeit thinking and Sergey
Ivanovich's beliefs,
192.
How Suva's opinions change,
193.
Svyazhsky and magic
words,
194.
One's own thought,
196.
Part Three. Meaning and Ethics
197
The Svyazhsky enigma,
197.
An unbeliever's prayer,
198.
Two problems,
199.
Why there are many problems,
200.
The Svyazhsky enigma in its sharpest form,
202.
The sole solution to all the riddles of life and death is untrue,
203.
Flem¬
ing,
203.
What is "incontestably necessary,"
204.
Levin's casuistry,
205.
The
moral wisdom of the realist novel,
208.
The wisdom of behavior,
209.
Wisdom
does not come from the peasant,
209.
Given without proof,
210.
Miracle and
narrative,
212.
Why vision is not singular,
213.
Dostoevsky answers Tolstoy,
214.
The first Tolstoyan reply: Moral distance,
217.
The second Tolstoyan reply, and
three maxims about social judgments,
217.
The third Tolstoyan reply: Theoreti¬
cal illustrations vs. novelistic cases,
218.
The fourth Tolstoyan reply: Galileo and
Dolly,
218.
The fifth Tolstoyan reply: Presence,
219.
A still more senseless prayer
and a new mistaken question,
220.
The meaning of meaningfulness,
221.
One Hundred Sixty-Three Tolstoyan Conclusions
223
Notes
235
Index
' 245 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Morson, Gary Saul 1948- |
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discipline_str_mv | Slavistik |
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id | DE-604.BV023044706 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T19:22:02Z |
indexdate | 2024-10-16T08:01:13Z |
institution | BVB |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016248176 |
oclc_num | 122313427 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-384 DE-521 DE-739 DE-11 |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-384 DE-521 DE-739 DE-11 |
physical | XX, 263 S. 25 cm |
publishDate | 2007 |
publishDateSearch | 2007 |
publishDateSort | 2007 |
publisher | Yale Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Russian literature and thought |
spelling | Morson, Gary Saul 1948- Verfasser (DE-588)122594142 aut Anna Karenina in our time seeing more wisely Gary Saul Morson New Haven [u.a.] Yale Univ. Press 2007 XX, 263 S. 25 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Russian literature and thought Tolstoy and the Twenty-first century -- Dolly and Stiva : prosaic good and evil -- Anna -- Levin Tolstoy, Leo / graf / 1828-1910 / Anna Karenina Tolstoy, Leo <graf, 1828-1910> Anna Karenina Tolstoj, Lev Nikolaevič 1828-1910 Anna Karenina (DE-588)4137252-9 gnd rswk-swf Tolstoj, Lev Nikolaevič 1828-1910 Anna Karenina (DE-588)4137252-9 u DE-604 http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0714/2007013706.html Digitalisierung UB Passau application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016248176&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Passau application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016248176&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext |
spellingShingle | Morson, Gary Saul 1948- Anna Karenina in our time seeing more wisely Tolstoy, Leo / graf / 1828-1910 / Anna Karenina Tolstoy, Leo <graf, 1828-1910> Anna Karenina Tolstoj, Lev Nikolaevič 1828-1910 Anna Karenina (DE-588)4137252-9 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4137252-9 |
title | Anna Karenina in our time seeing more wisely |
title_auth | Anna Karenina in our time seeing more wisely |
title_exact_search | Anna Karenina in our time seeing more wisely |
title_exact_search_txtP | Anna Karenina in our time seeing more wisely |
title_full | Anna Karenina in our time seeing more wisely Gary Saul Morson |
title_fullStr | Anna Karenina in our time seeing more wisely Gary Saul Morson |
title_full_unstemmed | Anna Karenina in our time seeing more wisely Gary Saul Morson |
title_short | Anna Karenina in our time |
title_sort | anna karenina in our time seeing more wisely |
title_sub | seeing more wisely |
topic | Tolstoy, Leo / graf / 1828-1910 / Anna Karenina Tolstoy, Leo <graf, 1828-1910> Anna Karenina Tolstoj, Lev Nikolaevič 1828-1910 Anna Karenina (DE-588)4137252-9 gnd |
topic_facet | Tolstoy, Leo / graf / 1828-1910 / Anna Karenina Tolstoy, Leo <graf, 1828-1910> Anna Karenina Tolstoj, Lev Nikolaevič 1828-1910 Anna Karenina |
url | http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0714/2007013706.html http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016248176&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016248176&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT morsongarysaul annakareninainourtimeseeingmorewisely |