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Featured researches published by Andrew Barratt.


Slavic and East European Journal | 1999

Maksim Gorky: Selected Letters

Frederick H. White; Andrew Barratt; Barry P. Scherr; Maksim Gorky

It has been Gorkys great misfortune to be remembered mostly for the wrong things - for his apparent support of the Stalin regime; for his direct involvement in the foundation of the Union of Soviet Writers; and for the composition of the novel Mother (held up by generations of Soviet critics as the model for Socialist Realist fiction). With the advent of glasnost and perestroika, and the subsequent collapse of the Soviet order itself, these conventional notions are at last becoming subject to a radical and necessary reappraisal in Gorkys native land. Yet, despite the steady stream of revisionist attitudes, the republication of controversial works long suppressed in Soviet Russia, and the publication of new material from the archives, the creation of a full biography is likely to remain a distant prospect for many years. The present volume has been conceived first of all as a sketch towards such a new biography. It contains 177 letters, written between 1889 and Gorkys death in 1936, and selected so as to allow Gorky to tell the story of his own life and reveal his hopes and fears, his observations and preoccupations over a literary career which spanned almost fifty years. Gorkys letters are of considerable interest on a number of levels: biographically; as representations of the development of Russian literature; in terms of the light they shed on many writers of the period (such as Lenin, Chekov, Tolstoy, and Pasternak) as well as major political figures (including Lenin and Stalin), and as period documents in their own right. Remarkable for its sheer immensity and the variety of its addressees, Gorkys correspondence provides a unique personal commentary on all aspects of Russian culture and society in the era of revolution, by one of the most fascinating figures of an extraordinary generation.


Archive | 1990

Russian theatre in the age of modernism

Robert Russell; Andrew Barratt


Modern Language Review | 1985

The X-Factor in Zamyatin's "We"

Andrew Barratt


Modern Language Review | 1991

A wicked irony : the rhetoric of Lermontov's A hero of our time

D. J. Richards; Andrew Barratt; A. D. P. Briggs


Modern Language Review | 1989

Maksim Gorky: A Reference Guide

Andrew Barratt; Edith W. Clowes


Modern Language Review | 1982

Yurii Olesha's 'Envy'

Robert Russell; Andrew Barratt


Europe-Asia Studies | 1991

Gor'ky, glasnost' and Perestroika: The death of a cultural superhero?

Andrew Barratt; Edith W. Clowes


Modern Language Review | 1995

The Early Fiction of Maksim Gorky

Barry P. Scherr; Andrew Barratt


Slavic and East European Journal | 1994

The early fiction of Maksim Gorky : six essays in interpretation

Andrew Barratt; Maksim Gorʹkiĭ


Modern Language Review | 1989

Bulgakov's Last Decade: The Writer as Hero@@@Between Two Worlds: A Critical Introduction to 'The Master and Margarita'

Peter Doyle; J. A. E. Curtis; Andrew Barratt

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