Sovereign Fictions Poetics and Politics in the Age of Russian Realism

A Book Talk with Ilya Kliger

Monday, November 11, 2024 - 5:30pm

College Hall 209

An exploration of Russian realist fiction reveals a preoccupation with the absolutist state.

The nineteenth-century novel is generally assumed to owe its basic social imaginaries to the ideologies, institutions, and practices of modern civil society. In Sovereign Fictions, Ilya Kliger asks what happens to the novel when its fundamental sociohistorical orientation is, as in the case of Russian realism, toward the state. Kliger explores Russian realism’s distinctive construals of sociality through a broad range of texts from the 1830s to the 1870s, including major works by Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Gogol, Pushkin, Lermontov, Goncharov, and Turgenev, and several lesser-known but influential books of the period, including Alexander Druzhinin’s Polinka Saks (1847), Aleksei Pisemsky’s One Thousand Souls (1858), and Vasily Sleptsov’s Hard Times (1865). Challenging much current scholarly consensus about the social dynamics of nineteenth-century realist fiction, Sovereign Fictions offers an important intervention in socially inflected theories of the novel and in current thinking on representations of power and historical poetics. (Source: The University of Chicago Press)

 

Ilya Kliger is an Associate Professor/Director of Undergraduate Studies of the Department of Russian and Slavic Studies with interests in 19th-century Russian and French novel, theory of the novel, literary theory, critical theory, philosophy and literature , Russian Formalism, Historical Poetics.