Книга: Katherine Mansfield, Anton Chekhov, Henry Lawson, Anita Desai, Horacio Quiroga, Leila Aboulela «World Stories»

World Stories

Серия: "Macmillan Literature Collections"

This collection brings together six stories from six different countries (India, Argentina, Russia, New Zealand, Sudan and Australia). They tell the tales of families and individuals, of love, loss and struggles against adversity. Their universal themes are coloured by the culture and society of the countries they describe.

Издательство: "Macmillan Education" (2013)

Формат: 130x200, 192 стр.

ISBN: 978-023-0-44119-4

Купить за 1069 руб на Озоне

Katherine Mansfield

Infobox Writer
name = Kathleen Mansfield Murry


imagesize = 180px
caption =
pseudonym = Katherine Mansfield
birthdate = Birth date|1888|10|14
birthplace = Wellington, New Zealand
deathdate = Death date and age|1923|01|09|1888|10|14
deathplace = Fontainebleau, France
occupation =
nationality = New Zealand
period =
genre =
subject =
movement = Modernism
spouse =
partner =
children =
relatives = Elizabeth von Arnim (cousin)
influences =
influenced =


website =

Kathleen Mansfield Murry (14 October 18889 January 1923) was a prominent New Zealand modernist writer of short fiction who wrote under the pen name of Katherine Mansfield.

Biography

Mansfield was born Kathleen Mansfield Beauchamp into a socially prominent family in Wellington, New Zealand. The daughter of a banker and born to a middle-class colonial family, she was also a first cousin of author Countess Elizabeth von Arnim. Mansfield had two older sisters and a younger brother, born in 1894. Mansfield wrote, in her journals, of feeling alienated to some extent in New Zealand, and, in general terms, of how she became disillusioned due to the repression of the Māori people—who were often portrayed in a sympathetic or positive light in her later stories, such as "How Pearl Button Was Kidnapped".citebook|author=Katherine Mansfield|title=Selected Stories|publisher=Oxford World's Classics|isbn=9780192839862]

Her first published stories appeared in the "High School Reporter" and the Wellington Girls' High School magazine, in 1898 and 1899. She moved to London in 1903, where she attended Queen's College, London, along with her two sisters. A talented cellist, she was not at first attracted to literature. After finishing her schooling in England, Beauchamp returned to her New Zealand home in 1906, only then beginning to write short stories. She rapidly wearied of the provincial New Zealand lifestyle, however, and two years later headed again for London.

Back in London in 1908, Beauchamp quickly fell into the bohemian way of life lived by many artists and writers of that era. [ [http://www.britishempire.co.uk/biography/mansfield.htm] "Brististempire.co.uk" Retrieved on 05-25-07] With little money, she met, married and left her first husband, George Bowden, all within just three weeks. Before long, she became pregnant by a family friend from New Zealand (Garnet Trowell, a professional violinist) and her mother sent her to Bavaria. [ [http://www.britishempire.co.uk/biography/mansfield.htm http://www.britishempire.co.uk/biography/mansfield.htm] "Britishempire.co.uk" Retrieved on 05-25-07 ] However, she suffered a miscarriage in 1909, possibly brought on by lifting her trunk off the top of a wardrobe.

Back in England, her work drew the attention of several publishing houses, and Beauchamp adopted the pen-name Katherine Mansfield on the publication of her first collection of short stories, "In a German Pension", in 1911. She also contracted gonorrhoea around this time, an event that was to plague her with arthritic pain for the rest of her short life, as well as to make her view herself as a 'soiled' woman.

Although discouraged by the volume's lack of success, Mansfield submitted a lightweight story to a new avant-garde magazine called "Rhythm". The piece was rejected by the magazine's editor, John Middleton Murry, who requested something darker. Mansfield responded with "The Woman at the Store," a tale of murder and mental illness that Murry called "the best story by far that had been sent to "Rhythm"."

Visitors to her flat often found her dressed in a kimono, and, when Murry called on her, she served him cups of teas in bowls because she had no cups and saucers. Soon after publication of "The Woman at the Store", Mansfield, attracted to Murry, invited him to move into the spare bedroom of her sparsely furnished bohemian flat. They began an eccentric, on-again off-again relationship, which eventually led to marriage in 1918. They moved home many times, and often lived apart. Some have characterised their "child-love" as co-dependent, and despite her strong attraction to the good-looking Murry, Mansfield would often feel neglected, especially in the later years when she suffered from tuberculosis. Neither seemed to believe in strong commitments, although there are signs that Mansfield may have lived to regret their style of marriage. Her close friend, Ida Baker, often looked after her when she and Murry were apart.

Mansfield's life and work were changed forever by the death of her brother, a soldier, during World War I. She was shocked and traumatised by the experience, so much so that her work began to take refuge in the nostalgic reminiscences of their childhood in New Zealand. [ [http://www.britishempire.co.uk/biography/mansfield.htm http://www.britishempire.co.uk/biography/mansfield.htm] "Britishempire.co.uk" Retrieved on 05-25-07 ] During these years, she also formed important professional friendships with writers such as D. H. Lawrence and Virginia Woolf, who later claimed "And I was jealous of [Mansfield's] writing. The only writing I've ever been jealous of. She had the vibration".

Mansfield continued writing in the years between "In a German Pension" and her second story collection, "Prelude", which eventually appeared in 1918. However, she rarely published any of this work, and sank into depression. Her health declined further after a near-fatal attack of pleurisy after she contracted tuberculosis in 1917. It was while combating TB--including suffering a serious haemorrhage in 1918--in various health spas across Europe, that Mansfield began to create the works for which she would become best known.

"Miss Brill," the bittersweet story of a fragile woman living an ephemeral life of observation and simple pleasures in Paris, established Mansfield as one of the preeminent writers of the Modernist period, upon its publication in 1920's "Bliss". The title story from that collection, "Bliss," which involved a similar character facing her husband's infidelity, also found critical acclaim. She followed with the equally praised collection, " [http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/mansfield/garden/party.html The Garden Party] ", published in 1922.

Final years

Mansfield spent her last years seeking increasingly unorthodox cures for her tuberculosis. In February 1922, she consulted the Russian physician Ivan Manoukhin. His "revolutionary" treatment, which consisted of bombarding her spleen with X-rays, caused Mansfield to develop heat flashes and numbness in her legs.

The "Dictionary of National Biography" reports that she now came to feel that her attitude to life had been unduly rebellious, and she sought, during the days that remained to her, to renew and compose her spiritual life. In October 1922, Mansfield moved to Georges Gurdjieff's Institute for the Harmonious Development of Man in Fontainebleau, France, where she was under the care of Olgivanna Lazovitch Hinzenburg (later, Mrs. Frank Lloyd Wright). Mansfield suffered a fatal pulmonary hemorrhage in January 1923, after running up a flight of stairs to show Murry how well she was. [cite book|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=OP_bJDyvBnoC&pg=PT126&lpg=PT126&dq=%22katherine+mansfield%22+stairs+murry&source=web&ots=lvc5Oqts0R&sig=dC2mYDmOQUv0jVqujB9-qYO9vGQ|title=The Creative Mystique: From Red Shoes Frenzy to Love and Creativity|author=Susan Kavaler-Adler|pages=p 113|year=1996|id=ISBN 0415914124] She was buried in a cemetery in the Fontainebleau District in the town of Avon.

Mansfield proved to be a prolific writer in the final years of her life, and much of her prose and poetry remained unpublished at her death. Murry took on the task of editing and publishing her works.

His efforts resulted in two additional volumes of short stories in 1923 ("The Dove's Nest") and in 1924 ("Something Childish"), as well as her "Poems", "The Aloe", a collection of critical writings ("Novels and Novelists") and a number of editions of Mansfield's previously unpublished letters and journals.

Legacy

Katherine Mansfield is widely considered one of the best short story writers of her period. A number of her works, including "Miss Brill", "Prelude", "The Garden Party", "The Doll's House", and later works such as "The Fly", are frequently collected in short story anthologies. Mansfield also proved ahead of her time in her adoration of Russian playwright and short story writer Anton Chekhov, and incorporated some of his themes and techniques into her writing.

Mount Roskill Grammar School in Auckland, Rangiora High School in North Canterbury, Tauranga Girls' College in Tauranga, Westlake Girls' High School in Auckland, Macleans College in Auckland, Wellington Girls' College in Wellington, Southland Girls' High School in Invercargill and Rangitoto College in Auckland have a house named after her. Karori Normal School in Wellington has a stone monument dedicated to her with a plaque commemorating her work and her time at the school.

A street in Menton, France, where she lived and wrote, is named after her and a Fellowship is offered annually to enable a New Zealand writer to work at her former home, the Villa Isola Bella. New Zealand's pre-eminent short story competition is also named in her honour.

Works

Collections

*"In a German Pension" (1911), ISBN 1-86941-014-9
*"The Garden Party: and Other Stories" (1922), ISBN 1-86941-016-5
*"The Doves' Nest: and Other Stories" (1923), ISBN 1-86941-017-3
*"Bliss: and Other Stories" (1923)
*"Poems" (1923), ISBN 0-19-558199-7
*"Something Childish" (1924), ISBN 1-86941-018-1, first published in the U.S. as "The Little Girl"
*"The Journal of Katherine Mansfield" (1927, 1954), ISBN 0-88001-023-1
*"The Letters of Katherine Mansfield" (2 vols., 1928-29)
*"The Aloe" (1930), ISBN 0-86068-520-9
*"Novels and Novelists" (1930), ISBN 0-403-02290-8
*"The Short Stories of Katherine Mansfield" (1937)
*"The Scrapbook of Katherine Mansfield" (1939)
*"The Collected Stories of Katherine Mansfield" (1945, 1974), ISBN 0-14-118368-3
*"Letters to John Middleton Murry, 1913-1922" (1951), ISBN 0-86068-945-X
*"The Urewera Notebook" (1978), ISBN 0-19-558034-6
*"The Critical Writings of Katherine Mansfield" (1987), ISBN 0-312-17514-0
*"The Collected Letters of Katherine Mansfield" (4 vols., 1984-96)
**Vol. 1, 1903-17, ISBN 0-19-812613-1
**Vol. 2, 1918-19, ISBN 0-19-812614-X
**Vol. 3, 1919-20, ISBN 0-19-812615-8
**Vol. 4, 1920-21, ISBN 0-19-818532-4
*"The Katherine Mansfield Notebooks" (2 vols., 1997), ISBN 0-8166-4236-2

hort stories

*"The Woman At The Store" (1912)
*"How Pearl Button Was Kidnapped" (1912)
*"Millie" (1913)
*"Something Childish But Very Natural" (1914)
*"The Little Governess" (1915)
*"Pictures" (1917)
*"Feuille d'Album" (1917)
*"A Dill Pickle" (1917)
*"Je ne parle pas français" (1917)
*"Prelude" (1918)
*"An Indiscreet Journey" (1920)
*"Bliss" (1920)
*"Miss Brill" (1920)
*"Psychology" (1920)
*"Sun and Moon" (1920)
*"The Wind Blows" (1920)
*"Mr Reginald Peacock's Day" (1920)
*"Marriage à la Mode" (1921)
*"The Voyage" (1921)
*"Her First Ball" (1921)
*"Mr and Mrs Dove" (1921)
*"Life of Ma Parker" (1921)
*"The Daughters of the Late Colonel" (1921)
*"The Stranger" (1921)
*"The Man Without a Temperament" (1921)
*"At The Bay" (1922)
*"The Fly" (1922)
*"The Garden Party" (1922)
*"A Cup of Tea" (1922)
*"The Doll's House" (1922)
*"A Married Man's Story" (1923)
*"The Canary"" (1923)

ee also

*New Zealand literature
*Elizabeth von Arnim, cousin and novelist
*John Middleton Murry, husband and editor

References

External links

* [http://www.katherinemansfield.com/ Official website]
* [http://www.katherinemansfield.net/index.htm An extensive website based on resource material for the new biography by Kathleen Jones ]
* [http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=2924 Literary Encyclopedia biography]
* [http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/kmansfi.htm Biography]
* [http://mansfield.raconter.net Biography, Works Review]
* [http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/name-208662.html Images & e-texts of her works at NZeTC]
*
* [http://gutenberg.net.au/plusfifty-a-m.html#mansfield Works by Katherine Mansfield] at [http://gutenberg.net.au Project Gutenberg Australia]
* [http://emotional-literacy-education.com/classic-books-online-b/gprty10.htm The Garden Party at "Encyclopedia of the Self"]
* [http://www.katherinemansfield.com/ Birthplace Trust Wellington]
* [http://www.gurdjieff-bibliography.com/Current/katherinemansfield.htm Katherine Mansfield at Fontainebleau]
* [http://www.eastoftheweb.com/cgi-bin/read_db.pl?search_field=&order_by=author_last%2Ctitle&page=1&search_for=mansfield Some Katherine Mansfield Short Stories]
* [http://www.bnz.co.nz/About_Us/1,,3-34-482,00.html Bank of New Zealand Katherine Mansfield Awards]
* [http://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/objectdetails.aspx?oid=41995&coltype=art&regno=1940-0009-1 Portrait of Katherine Mansfield by Anne Estelle Rice]
*

Persondata
NAME= Mansfield, Katherine
ALTERNATIVE NAMES= Murray, Katherine Mansfield; Beauchamp, Katherine Mansfield
SHORT DESCRIPTION= Author
DATE OF BIRTH= 14 October 1888
PLACE OF BIRTH= Wellington New Zealand.
DATE OF DEATH= 9 January 1923)
PLACE OF DEATH= Institute for the Harmonious Development of Man, Fontainebleau, France

Источник: Katherine Mansfield

Anton Chekhov

Anton Chekhov

May 5, 1889
Born Anton Pavlovich Chekhov
29 January 1860(1860-01-29)
Taganrog, Russian Empire
Died 15 July 1904(1904-07-15) (aged 44)
Badenweiler, German Empire
Occupation Physician, short story writer, playwright
Nationality Russian



Signature

Anton Pavlovich Chekhov (Russian: Антон Павлович Чехов, pronounced [ɐnˈton ˈpavləvʲɪtɕ ˈtɕexəf]; 29 January 1860[1] – 15 July 1904)[2] was a Russian physician, dramatist and author who is considered to be among the greatest writers of short stories in history.[3] His career as a dramatist produced four classics and his best short stories are held in high esteem by writers and critics.[4][5] Chekhov practiced as a doctor throughout most of his literary career: "Medicine is my lawful wife", he once said, "and literature is my mistress."[6]

Chekhov renounced the theatre after the disastrous reception of The Seagull in 1896, but the play was revived to acclaim in 1898 by Constantin Stanislavski's Moscow Art Theatre, which subsequently also produced Chekhov's Uncle Vanya and premiered his last two plays, Three Sisters and The Cherry Orchard. These four works present a challenge to the acting ensemble[7] as well as to audiences, because in place of conventional action Chekhov offers a "theatre of mood" and a "submerged life in the text."[8]

Chekhov had at first written stories only for financial gain, but as his artistic ambition grew, he made formal innovations which have influenced the evolution of the modern short story.[9] His originality consists in an early use of the stream-of-consciousness technique, later adopted by James Joyce and other modernists, combined with a disavowal of the moral finality of traditional story structure.[10] He made no apologies for the difficulties this posed to readers, insisting that the role of an artist was to ask questions, not to answer them.[11]

Contents

Biography

Childhood

Young Chekhov in 1882
The Taganrog Boys Gymnasium in the late 19th century. The cross on top is no longer present.
Portrait of young Chekhov in country clothes
Young Chekhov (left) with brother Nikolai in 1882
Chekhov family and friends in 1890. (Top row, left to right) Ivan, Alexander, Father; (second row) unknown friend, Lika Mizinova, Masha, Mother, Seryozha Kiselev; (bottom row) Misha, Anton
Chekhov's classic look: pince-nez, hat and bow-tie
Melikhovo, now a museum
Anton Chekhov in 1893
O. Braz: "Portrait of Anton Chekhov"
Chekhov with Leo Tolstoy at Yalta, 1900
Chekhov and Olga, 1901, on honeymoon
Chekhov bios

Anton Chekhov was born on 29 January 1860, the third of six surviving children, in Taganrog, a port on the Sea of Azov in southern Russia. His father, Pavel Yegorovich Chekhov, the son of a former serf, ran a grocery store. A director of the parish choir, devout Orthodox Christian, and physically abusive father, Pavel Chekhov has been seen by some historians as the model for his son's many portraits of hypocrisy.[12] Chekhov's mother, Yevgeniya, was an excellent storyteller who entertained the children with tales of her travels with her cloth-merchant father all over Russia.[13][14] "Our talents we got from our father," Chekhov remembered, "but our soul from our mother."[15] In adulthood, Chekhov criticised his brother Alexander's treatment of his wife and children by reminding him of Pavel's tyranny:

Let me ask you to recall that it was despotism and lying that ruined your mother's youth. Despotism and lying so mutilated our childhood that it's sickening and frightening to think about it. Remember the horror and disgust we felt in those times when Father threw a tantrum at dinner over too much salt in the soup and called Mother a fool.[16][17]

Chekhov attended a school for Greek boys, followed by the Taganrog gymnasium, now renamed the Chekhov Gymnasium, where he was kept down for a year at fifteen for failing a Greek exam.[18] He sang at the Greek Orthodox monastery in Taganrog and in his father's choirs. In a letter of 1892, he used the word "suffering" to describe his childhood and recalled:

When my brothers and I used to stand in the middle of the church and sing the trio "May my prayer be exalted", or "The Archangel's Voice", everyone looked at us with emotion and envied our parents, but we at that moment felt like little convicts.[19]

In 1876, Chekhov's father was declared bankrupt after over-extending his finances building a new house,[20] and to avoid the debtor's prison fled to Moscow, where his two eldest sons, Alexander and Nikolay, were attending university. The family lived in poverty in Moscow, Chekhov's mother physically and emotionally broken.[21] Chekhov was left behind to sell the family possessions and finish his education.

Chekhov remained in Taganrog for three more years, boarding with a man called Selivanov who, like Lopakhin in The Cherry Orchard, had bailed out the family for the price of their house.[22] Chekhov had to pay for his own education, which he managed by—among other jobs—private tutoring, catching and selling goldfinches, and selling short sketches to the newspapers.[23] He sent every ruble he could spare to Moscow, along with humorous letters to cheer up the family.[23] During this time, he read widely and analytically, including Cervantes, Turgenev, Goncharov, and Schopenhauer;[24][25] and he wrote a full-length comedy drama, Fatherless, which his brother Alexander dismissed as "an inexcusable though innocent fabrication."[26] Chekhov also enjoyed a series of love affairs, one with the wife of a teacher.[23]

In 1879, Chekhov completed his schooling and joined his family in Moscow, having gained admission to the medical school at Moscow University.[27]

Early writings

Chekhov now assumed responsibility for the whole family.[28] To support them and to pay his tuition fees, he wrote daily short, humorous sketches and vignettes of contemporary Russian life, many under pseudonyms such as "Antosha Chekhonte" (Антоша Чехонте) and "Man without a Spleen" (Человек без селезенки). His prodigious output gradually earned him a reputation as a satirical chronicler of Russian street life, and by 1882 he was writing for Oskolki (Fragments), owned by Nikolay Leykin, one of the leading publishers of the time.[29] Chekhov's tone at this stage was harsher than that familiar from his mature fiction.[30]

In 1884, Chekhov qualified as a physician, which he considered his principal profession though he made little money from it and treated the poor free.[31] In 1884 and 1885, Chekhov found himself coughing blood, and in 1886 the attacks worsened; but he would not admit tuberculosis to his family and friends,[15] confessing to Leikin, "I am afraid to submit myself to be sounded by my colleagues."[32] He continued writing for weekly periodicals, earning enough money to move the family into progressively better accommodation. Early in 1886 he was invited to write for one of the most popular papers in St. Petersburg, Novoye Vremya (New Times), owned and edited by the millionaire magnate Alexey Suvorin, who paid per line a rate double Leikin's and allowed him three times the space.[33] Suvorin was to become a lifelong friend, perhaps Chekhov's closest.[34][35]

Before long, Chekhov was attracting literary as well as popular attention. The sixty-four-year-old Dmitry Grigorovich, a celebrated Russian writer of the day, wrote to Chekhov after reading his short story The Huntsman,[36] "You have real talent—a talent which places you in the front rank among writers in the new generation." He went on to advise Chekhov to slow down, write less, and concentrate on literary quality.

Chekhov replied that the letter had struck him "like a thunderbolt" and confessed, "I have written my stories the way reporters write up their notes about fires—mechanically, half-consciously, caring nothing about either the reader or myself."[37] The admission may have done Chekhov a disservice, since early manuscripts reveal that he often wrote with extreme care, continually revising.[38] Grigorovich's advice nevertheless inspired a more serious, artistic ambition in the twenty-six-year-old. In 1887, with a little string-pulling by Grigorovich, the short story collection At Dusk (V Sumerkakh) won Chekhov the coveted Pushkin Prize "for the best literary production distinguished by high artistic worth."[39]

Turning points

That year, exhausted from overwork and ill health, Chekhov took a trip to Ukraine which reawakened him to the beauty of the steppe.[40] On his return, he began the novella-length short story The Steppe, "something rather odd and much too original," eventually published in Severny Vestnik (The Northern Herald).[41] In a narrative which drifts with the thought processes of the characters, Chekhov evokes a chaise journey across the steppe through the eyes of a young boy sent to live away from home, his companions a priest and a merchant. The Steppe, which has been called a "dictionary of Chekhov's poetics", represented a significant advance for Chekhov, exhibiting much of the quality of his mature fiction and winning him publication in a literary journal rather than a newspaper.[42]

In autumn 1887, a theater manager named Korsh commissioned Chekhov to write a play, the result being Ivanov, written in a fortnight and produced that November.[15] Though Chekhov found the experience "sickening", and painted a comic portrait of the chaotic production in a letter to his brother Alexander, the play was a hit and was praised, to Chekhov's bemusement, as a work of originality.[43] Mikhail Chekhov considered Ivanov a key moment in his brother's intellectual development and literary career.[15] From this period comes an observation of Chekhov's which has become known as "Chekhov's gun", noted by Ilia Gurliand from a conversation: "If in Act I you have a pistol hanging on the wall, then it must fire in the last act."[44][45]

The death of Chekhov's brother Nikolay from tuberculosis in 1889 influenced A Dreary Story, finished that September, about a man who confronts the end of a life which he realizes has been without purpose.[46][47] Mikhail Chekhov, who recorded his brother's depression and restlessness after Nikolay's death, was researching prisons at the time as part of his law studies, and Anton Chekhov, in a search for purpose in his own life, himself soon became obsessed with the issue of prison reform.[15]

Sakhalin

In 1890, Chekhov undertook an arduous journey by train, horse-drawn carriage, and river steamer to the far east of Russia and the katorga, or penal colony, on Sakhalin Island, north of Japan, where he spent three months interviewing thousands of convicts and settlers for a census. The letters Chekhov wrote during the two-and-a-half month journey to Sakhalin are considered to be among his best.[48] His remarks to his sister about Tomsk were to become notorious.[49][50]

"Tomsk is a very dull town. To judge from the drunkards whose acquaintance I have made, and from the intellectual people who have come to the hotel to pay their respects to me, the inhabitants are very dull, too."[51]

The inhabitants of Tomsk later retaliated by erecting a mocking statue of Chekhov.

What Chekhov witnessed on Sakhalin shocked and angered him, including floggings, embezzlement of supplies, and forced prostitution of women. He wrote, "There were times I felt that I saw before me the extreme limits of man's degradation."[52][53] He was particularly moved by the plight of the children living in the penal colony with their parents. For example:

"On the Amur steamer going to Sakhalin, there was a convict who had murdered his wife and wore fetters on his legs. His daughter, a little girl of six, was with him. I noticed wherever the convict moved the little girl scrambled after him, holding on to his fetters. At night the child slept with the convicts and soldiers all in a heap together."[54]

Chekhov later concluded that charity and subscription were not the answer, but that the government had a duty to finance humane treatment of the convicts. His findings were published in 1893 and 1894 as Ostrov Sakhalin (The Island of Sakhalin), a work of social science – not literature – worthy and informative rather than brilliant.[55][56] Chekhov found literary expression for the "Hell of Sakhalin" in his long short story The Murder,[57] the last section of which is set on Sakhalin, where the murderer Yakov loads coal in the night, longing for home.

Melikhovo

In 1892, Chekhov bought the small country estate of Melikhovo, about forty miles south of Moscow, where he lived until 1899 with his family. "It's nice to be a lord," he joked to his friend Ivan Leontyev (who wrote humorous pieces under the pseudonym Shcheglov),[19] but he took his responsibilities as a landlord seriously and soon made himself useful to the local peasants. As well as organising relief for victims of the famine and cholera outbreaks of 1892, he went on to build three schools, a fire station, and a clinic, and to donate his medical services to peasants for miles around, despite frequent recurrences of his tuberculosis.[12][31][58]

Mikhail Chekhov, a member of the household at Melikhovo, described the extent of his brother's medical commitments:

From the first day that Chekhov moved to Melikhovo, the sick began flocking to him from twenty miles around. They came on foot or were brought in carts, and often he was fetched to patients at a distance. Sometimes from early in the morning peasant women and children were standing before his door waiting.[15]

Chekhov's expenditure on drugs was considerable, but the greatest cost was making journeys of several hours to visit the sick, which reduced his time for writing.[15] Chekhov's work as a doctor, however, enriched his writing by bringing him into intimate contact with all sections of Russian society: for example, he witnessed at first hand the peasants' unhealthy and cramped living conditions, which he recalled in his short story Peasants. Chekhov visited the upper classes as well, recording in his notebook: "Aristocrats? The same ugly bodies and physical uncleanliness, the same toothless old age and disgusting death, as with market-women."[59]

Chekhov began writing his play The Seagull in 1894, in a lodge he had built in the orchard at Melikhovo. In the two years since moving to the estate, he had refurbished the house, taken up agriculture and horticulture, tended orchard and pond, and planted many trees, which, according to Mikhail, he "looked after… as though they were his children. Like Colonel Vershinin in his Three Sisters, as he looked at them he dreamed of what they would be like in three or four hundred years."[15]

The first night of The Seagull on 17 October 1896 at the Alexandrinsky Theatre in Petersburg was a fiasco, booed by the audience, and the play's reception stung Chekhov into renouncing the theatre.[60] But the play so impressed the theatre director Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko that he convinced his colleague Constantin Stanislavski to direct it for the innovative Moscow Art Theatre in 1898.[61] Stanislavski's attention to psychological realism and ensemble playing coaxed the buried subtleties from the text and restored Chekhov's interest in playwriting.[62] The Art Theatre commissioned more plays from Chekhov and the following year staged Uncle Vanya, which Chekhov had completed in 1896.[63]

Yalta

In March 1897 Chekhov suffered a major hemorrhage of the lungs while on a visit to Moscow. With great difficulty he was persuaded to enter a clinic, where the doctors diagnosed tuberculosis on the upper part of his lungs and ordered a change in his manner of life.[64]

After his father's death in 1898, Chekhov bought a plot of land on the outskirts of Yalta and built a villa there, into which he moved with his mother and sister the following year. Though he planted trees and flowers in Yalta, kept dogs and tame cranes, and received guests such as Leo Tolstoy and Maxim Gorky, Chekhov was always relieved to leave his "hot Siberia" for Moscow or travels abroad. He vowed to move to Taganrog as soon as a water supply was installed there.[65][66] In Yalta he completed two more plays for the Art Theatre, composing with greater difficulty than in the days when he "wrote serenely, the way I eat pancakes now"; he took a year each over Three Sisters and The Cherry Orchard.[67]

On 25 May 1901 Chekhov married Olga Knipper—quietly, owing to his horror of weddings—a former protegée and sometime lover of Nemirovich-Danchenko whom he had first met at rehearsals for The Seagull.[68][69][70] Up to that point, Chekhov, called "Russia's most elusive literary bachelor",[71] had preferred passing liaisons and visits to brothels over commitment;[72] he had once written to Suvorin:

By all means I will be married if you wish it. But on these conditions: everything must be as it has been hitherto—that is, she must live in Moscow while I live in the country, and I will come and see her ... give me a wife who, like the moon, won't appear in my sky every day.[73]

The letter proved prophetic of Chekhov's marital arrangements with Olga: he lived largely at Yalta, she in Moscow, pursuing her acting career. In 1902, Olga suffered a miscarriage; and Donald Rayfield has offered evidence, based on the couple's letters, that conception may have occurred when Chekhov and Olga were apart, although Russian scholars have conclusively refuted that claim.[74][75] The literary legacy of this long-distance marriage is a correspondence which preserves gems of theatre history, including shared complaints about Stanislavski's directing methods and Chekhov's advice to Olga about performing in his plays.[76]

In Yalta, Chekhov wrote one of his most famous stories, The Lady with the Dog[77] (also called Lady with Lapdog),[78] which depicts what at first seems a casual liaison between a married man and a married woman in Yalta. Neither expects anything lasting from the encounter, but they find themselves drawn back to each other, risking the security of their family lives.[79]

Death

By May 1904, Chekhov was terminally ill with tuberculosis. Mikhail Chekhov recalled that "everyone who saw him secretly thought the end was not far off, but the nearer [he] was to the end, the less he seemed to realise it."[15] On 3 June he set off with Olga for the German spa town of Badenweiler in the Black Forest, from where he wrote outwardly jovial letters to his sister Masha describing the food and surroundings and assuring her and his mother that he was getting better. In his last letter, he complained about the way the German women dressed.[80]

Chekhov's death has become one of "the great set pieces of literary history",[81] retold, embroidered, and fictionalised many times since, notably in the short story Errand by Raymond Carver. In 1908, Olga wrote this account of her husband's last moments:

Anton sat up unusually straight and said loudly and clearly (although he knew almost no German): Ich sterbe ("I'm dying"). The doctor calmed him, took a syringe, gave him an injection of camphor, and ordered champagne. Anton took a full glass, examined it, smiled at me and said: "It's a long time since I drank champagne." He drained it, lay quietly on his left side, and I just had time to run to him and lean across the bed and call to him, but he had stopped breathing and was sleeping peacefully as a child...[82]

Chekhov's body was transported to Moscow in a refrigerated railway car for fresh oysters, a detail which offended Gorky.[83] Some of the thousands of mourners followed the funeral procession of a General Keller by mistake, to the accompaniment of a military band.[84] Chekhov was buried next to his father at the Novodevichy Cemetery.[85]

Legacy

A few months before he died, Chekhov told the writer Ivan Bunin he thought people might go on reading him for seven years. "Why seven?" asked Bunin. "Well, seven and a half," Chekhov replied. "That's not bad. I've got six years to live."[86]

Always modest, Chekhov could hardly have imagined the extent of his posthumous reputation. The ovations for The Cherry Orchard in the year of his death showed him how high he had risen in the affection of the Russian public—by then he was second in literary celebrity only to Tolstoy,[87] who outlived him by six years—but after his death, Chekhov's fame soon spread further afield. Constance Garnett's translations won him an English-language readership and the admiration of writers such as James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and Katherine Mansfield. The issues surrounding the close similarities between Mansfield's 1910 story The Child Who Was Tired and Chekhov's Sleepy are summarised in William H. New's Reading Mansfield and Metaphors of Reform[88] The Russian critic D.S. Mirsky, who lived in England, explained Chekhov's popularity in that country by his "unusually complete rejection of what we may call the heroic values."[89] In Russia itself, Chekhov's drama fell out of fashion after the revolution but was later adapted to the Soviet agenda, with the character Lopakhin, for example, reinvented as a hero of the new order, taking an axe to the cherry orchard.[90][91]

One of the first non-Russians to praise Chekhov's plays was George Bernard Shaw, who subtitled his Heartbreak House "A Fantasia in the Russian Manner on English Themes" and noted similarities between the predicament of the British landed class and that of their Russian counterparts as depicted by Chekhov: "the same nice people, the same utter futility."[92]

In America, Chekhov's reputation began its rise slightly later, partly through the influence of Stanislavski's system of acting, with its notion of subtext: "Chekhov often expressed his thought not in speeches," wrote Stanislavski, "but in pauses or between the lines or in replies consisting of a single word… the characters often feel and think things not expressed in the lines they speak."[93][94] The Group Theatre, in particular, developed the subtextual approach to drama, influencing generations of American playwrights, screenwriters, and actors, including Clifford Odets, Elia Kazan and, in particular, Lee Strasberg. In turn, Strasberg's Actors Studio and the "Method" acting approach influenced many actors, including Marlon Brando and Robert De Niro, though by then the Chekhov tradition may have been distorted by a preoccupation with realism.[95] In 1981, the playwright Tennessee Williams adapted The Seagull as The Notebook of Trigorin.

Despite Chekhov's eminence as a playwright, some writers believe his short stories represent the greater achievement.[96] Raymond Carver, who wrote the short story Errand about Chekhov's death, believed Chekhov the greatest of all short-story writers:

Chekhov's stories are as wonderful (and necessary) now as when they first appeared. It is not only the immense number of stories he wrote—for few, if any, writers have ever done more—it is the awesome frequency with which he produced masterpieces, stories that shrive us as well as delight and move us, that lay bare our emotions in ways only true art can accomplish.[97]

Ernest Hemingway, another writer influenced by Chekhov, was more grudging: "Chekhov wrote about 6 good stories. But he was an amateur writer."[98] And Vladimir Nabokov once complained of Chekhov's "medley of dreadful prosaisms, ready-made epithets, repetitions."[99] But he also declared The Lady with the Dog "one of the greatest stories ever written" and described Chekhov as writing "the way one person relates to another the most important things in his life, slowly and yet without a break, in a slightly subdued voice."[100]

For the writer William Boyd, Chekhov's breakthrough was to abandon what William Gerhardie called the "event plot" for something more "blurred, interrupted, mauled or otherwise tampered with by life."[101]

Virginia Woolf mused on the unique quality of a Chekhov story in The Common Reader (1925):

But is it the end, we ask? We have rather the feeling that we have overrun our signals; or it is as if a tune had stopped short without the expected chords to close it. These stories are inconclusive, we say, and proceed to frame a criticism based upon the assumption that stories ought to conclude in a way that we recognise. In so doing we raise the question of our own fitness as readers. Where the tune is familiar and the end emphatic—lovers united, villains discomfited, intrigues exposed—as it is in most Victorian fiction, we can scarcely go wrong, but where the tune is unfamiliar and the end a note of interrogation or merely the information that they went on talking, as it is in Tchekov, we need a very daring and alert sense of literature to make us hear the tune, and in particular those last notes which complete the harmony.[102]

Bibliography

See also

Gallery

References

  1. ^ Old Style date 17 January.
  2. ^ Old Style date 2 July.
  3. ^ "Russian literature; Anton Chekhov". Encyclopedia Britannica. http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-29160/Russian-literature. Retrieved 14 June 2008. 
  4. ^ "Greatest short story writer who ever lived." Raymond Carver (in Rosamund Bartlett's introduction to About Love and Other Stories, XX); "Quite probably. the best short-story writer ever." A Chekhov Lexicon, by William Boyd, The Guardian, 3 July 2004. Retrieved 16 February 2007.
  5. ^ "Stories… which are among the supreme achievements in prose narrative." Vodka miniatures, belching and angry cats, George Steiner's review of The Undiscovered Chekhov, in The Observer, 13 May 2001. Retrieved 16 February 2007.
  6. ^ Letter to Alexei Suvorin, 11 September 1888. Letters of Anton Chekhov.
  7. ^ "Actors climb up Chekhov like a mountain, roped together, sharing the glory if they ever make it to the summit". Actor Ian McKellen, quoted in Miles, 9.
  8. ^ "Chekhov's art demands a theatre of mood." Vsevolod Meyerhold, quoted in Allen, 13; "A richer submerged life in the text is characteristic of a more profound drama of realism, one which depends less on the externals of presentation." Styan, 84.
  9. ^ "Chekhov is said to be the father of the modern short story". Malcolm, 87; "He brought something new into literature." James Joyce, in Arthur Power, Conversations with James Joyce, Usborne Publishing Ltd, 1974, ISBN 978-0-86000-006-8, 57; "Tchehov's breach with the classical tradition is the most significant event in modern literature", John Middleton Murry, in Athenaeum, 8 April 1922, cited in Bartlett's introduction to About Love, XX.
  10. ^ "This use of stream-of-consciousness would, in later years, become the basis of Chekhov's innovation in stagecraft; it is also his innovation in fiction." Wood, 81; "The artist must not be the judge of his characters and of their conversations, but merely an impartial witness." Letter to Suvorin, 30 May 1888; In reply to an objection that he wrote about horse-thieves (The Horse-Stealers, retrieved 16 February 2007) without condemning them, Chekhov said readers should add for themselves the subjective elements lacking in the story. Letter to Suvorin, 1 April 1890. Letters of Anton Chekhov.
  11. ^ "You are right in demanding that an artist should take an intelligent attitude to his work, but you confuse two things: solving a problem and stating a problem correctly. It is only the second that is obligatory for the artist." Letter to Suvorin, 27 October 1888. Letters of Anton Chekhov.
  12. ^ a b Wood, 78.
  13. ^ Payne, XVII.
  14. ^ Simmons, 18.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i From the biographical sketch, adapted from a memoir by Chekhov's brother Mihail, which prefaces Constance Garnett's translation of Chekhov's letters, 1920.
  16. ^ Letter to brother Alexander, 2 January 1889, in Malcolm, p. 102.
  17. ^ Another insight into Chekhov's childhood came in a letter to his publisher and friend Alexei Suvorin: "From my childhood I have believed in progress, and I could not help believing in it since the difference between the time when I used to be thrashed and when they gave up thrashing me was tremendous." Letter to Suvorin, 27 March 1894. Letters of Anton Chekhov.
  18. ^ Bartlett, 4–5.
  19. ^ a b Letter to I.L. Shcheglov, 9 March 1892. Letters of Anton Chekhov.
  20. ^ He had been cheated by a contractor called Mironov. Rayfield, 31.
  21. ^ Letter to cousin Mihail, 10 May 1877. Letters of Anton Chekhov.
  22. ^ Malcolm, 25.
  23. ^ a b c Payne, XX.
  24. ^ Letter to brother Mihail, 1 July 1876. Letters of Anton Chekhov.
  25. ^ Simmons, 26.
  26. ^ Simmons, 33.
  27. ^ Rayfield, 69.
  28. ^ Wood, 79.
  29. ^ Rayfield, 91.
  30. ^ "There is in these miniatures an arresting potion of cruelty… The wonderfully compassionate Chekhov was yet to mature." Vodka miniatures, belching and angry cats, George Steiner's review of The Undiscovered Chekhov in The Observer, 13 May 2001. Retrieved 16 February 2007.
  31. ^ a b Malcolm, 26.
  32. ^ Letter to N.A .Leikin, 6 April 1886. Letters of Anton Chekhov.
  33. ^ Rayfield, 128.
  34. ^ They only ever fell out once, when Chekhov objected to the anti-Semitic attacks in New Times against Dreyfus and Zola in 1898. Rayfield, 448–50.
  35. ^ In many ways, the right-wing Suvorin, whom Lenin later called "The running dog of the Tzar" (Payne, XXXV), was Chekhov's opposite; "Chekhov had to function like Suvorin's kidney, extracting the businessman's poisons." Wood, 79.
  36. ^ The Huntsman.. Retrieved 16 February 2007.
  37. ^ Malcolm, 32–3.
  38. ^ Payne, XXIV.
  39. ^ Simmons, 160.
  40. ^ "There is a scent of the steppe and one hears the birds sing. I see my old friends the ravens flying over the steppe." Letter to sister Masha, 2 April 1887. Letters of Anton Chekhov.
  41. ^ Letter to Grigorovich, 12 January 1888. Quoted by Malcolm, 137.
  42. ^ "The Steppe, as Michael Finke suggests, is 'a sort of dictionary of Chekhov's poetics,' a kind of sample case of the concealed literary weapons Chekhov would deploy in his work to come." Malcolm, 147.
  43. ^ Letter to brother Alexander, 20 November 1887. Letters of Anton Chekhov.
  44. ^ Rayfield, 203.
  45. ^ Simmons, 190.
  46. ^ A Dreary Story.. Retrieved 16 February 2007.
  47. ^ Simmons, 186–91.
  48. ^ Malcolm, 129.
  49. ^ Simmons, 223.
  50. ^ Rayfield, 224.
  51. ^ Letter to sister, Masha, 20 May 1890. Letters of Anton Chekhov.
  52. ^ Wood, 85.
  53. ^ Rayfield 230.
  54. ^ Letter to A.F.Koni, 16 January 1891. Letters of Anton Chekhov.
  55. ^ Malcolm, 125.
  56. ^ Such is the general critical view of the work, but Simmons calls it a "valuable and intensely human document." Simmons, 229.
  57. ^ The Murder.. Retrieved 16 February 2007.
  58. ^ Payne, XXXI.
  59. ^ Note-Book.. Retrieved 16 February 2007.
  60. ^ Rayfield, 394–8.
  61. ^ Benedetti, Stanislavski: An Introduction, 25.
  62. ^ Chekhov and the Art Theatre, in Stanislavski's words, were united in a common desire "to achieve artistic simplicity and truth on the stage." Allen, 11.
  63. ^ Rayfield, 390–1. Rayfield draws from his critical study Chekhov's "Uncle Vanya" and the "Wood Demon" (1995), which anatomised the evolution of the Wood Demon into Uncle Vanya—"one of Chekhov's most furtive achievements."
  64. ^ Letter to Suvorin, 1 April 1897. Letters of Anton Chekhov.
  65. ^ Olga Knipper, Memoir, in Benedetti, Dear Writer, Dear Actress, 37, 270.
  66. ^ Bartlett, 2.
  67. ^ Malcolm, 170–71.
  68. ^ "I have a horror of weddings, the congratulations and the champagne, standing around, glass in hand with an endless grin on your face." Letter to Olga Knipper, 19 April 1901.
  69. ^ Benedetti, Dear Writer, Dear Actress, 125.
  70. ^ "Olga's relations with Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko were more than professional." Rayfield, 500.
  71. ^ Harvey Pitcher in Chekhov's Leading Lady, quoted in Malcolm, 59.
  72. ^ "Chekhov had the temperament of a philanderer. Sexually, he preferred brothels or swift liaisons." Wood, 78.
  73. ^ Letter to Suvorin, 23 March 1895. Letters of Anton Chekhov.
  74. ^ Rayfield also tentatively suggests, drawing on obstetric clues, that Olga suffered an ectopic pregnancy rather than a miscarriage. Rayfield, 556–57.
  75. ^ There was certainly tension between the couple after the miscarriage, though Simmons, 569, and Benedetti, Dear Writer, Dear Actress, 241, put this down to Chekhov's mother and sister blaming the miscarriage on Olga's late-night lifestyle of socialising with her actor friends.
  76. ^ Benedetti, Dear Writer, Dear Actress: The Love Letters of Olga Knipper and Anton Chekhov.
  77. ^ Rosamund, Bartlett. "THE HOUSE THAT CHEKHOV BUILT." Evening Standard 02 Feb. 2010: 31. Newspaper Source Plus. Web. 3 Nov. 2011.
  78. ^ Greenberg, Yael. "The Presentation Of The Unconscious In Chekhov's Lady With Lapdog." Modern Language Review 86.1 (1991): 126-130. Academic Search Premier. Web. 3 Nov. 2011.
  79. ^ "Overview: “The Lady with the Dog”." Characters in 20th-Century Literature. Laurie Lanzen Harris. Detroit: Gale Research, 1990. Literature Resource Center. Web. 3 Nov. 2011.
  80. ^ Letter to sister Masha, 28 June 1904. Letters of Anton Chekhov.
  81. ^ Malcolm, 62.
  82. ^ Olga Knipper, Memoir, in Benedetti, Dear Writer, Dear Actress, 284.
  83. ^ "Banality revenged itself upon him by a nasty prank, for it saw that his corpse, the corpse of a poet, was put into a railway truck 'For the Conveyance of Oysters'." Maxim Gorky in Reminiscences of Anton Chekhov.. Retrieved 16 February 2007.
  84. ^ Chekhov's Funeral. M. Marcus.The Antioch Review, 1995
  85. ^ Malcolm, 91; Alexander Kuprin in Reminiscences of Anton Chekhov. Retrieved 16 February 2007
  86. ^ Payne, XXXVI.
  87. ^ Tolstoy, a great admirer of Chekhov's short stories, divided them into two groups of "first quality" and "second quality." In the first category were: Children, The Chorus Girl, A Play, Home, Misery, The Runaway, In Court, Vanka, Ladies, The Malefactors, The Boys, Darkness, Sleepy, The Helpmate, The Darling; in the second: A Transgression, Sorrow, The Witch, Verochka, In a Strange Land, The Cook's Wedding, A Tedious Business, An Upheaval, Oh! The Public!, The Mask, A Woman's Luck, Nerves, The Wedding, A Defenseless Creature, Peasant Wives. He had these stories bound into a book which he read repeatedly with great satisfaction. – Simmons, p. 595.
  88. ^ Reading Mansfield and Metaphors of Reform, McGill-Queen's Press, 1999, ISBN 978-0-7735-1791-2, 15–17.
  89. ^ Wood, 77.
  90. ^ Allen, 88.
  91. ^ "They won't allow a play which is seen to lament the lost estates of the gentry." Letter of Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko, quoted by Anatoly Smeliansky in Chekhov at the Moscow Art Theatre, from The Cambridge Companion to Chekhov, 31–2.
  92. ^ Anna Obraztsova, Bernard Shaw's Dialogue with Chekhov, in Miles, 43–4.
  93. ^ Reynolds, Elizabeth (ed), Stanislavski's Legacy, Theatre Arts Books, 1987, ISBN 978-0-87830-127-0, 81, 83.
  94. ^ "It was Chekhov who first deliberately wrote dialogue in which the mainstream of emotional action ran underneath the surface. It was he who articulated the notion that human beings hardly ever speak in explicit terms among each other about their deepest emotions, that the great, tragic, climactic moments are often happening beneath outwardly trivial conversation." Martin Esslin, from Text and Subtext in Shavian Drama, in 1922: Shaw and the last Hundred Years, ed. Bernard. F. Dukore, Penn State Press, 1994, ISBN 978-0-271-01324-4, 200.
  95. ^ "Lee Strasberg became in my opinion a victim of the traditional idea of Chekhovian theatre… [he left] no room for Chekhov's imagery." Georgii Tostonogov on Strasberg's production of Three Sisters in The Drama Review (winter 1968), quoted by Styan, 121.
  96. ^ "The plays lack the seamless authority of the fiction: there are great characters, wonderful scenes, tremendous passages, moments of acute melancholy and sagacity, but the parts appear greater than the whole." A Chekhov Lexicon, by William Boyd, The Guardian, 3 July 2004. Retrieved 16 February 2007.
  97. ^ Bartlett, From Russia, with Love, The Guardian, 15 July 2004. Retrieved 17 February 2007.
  98. ^ Letter from Ernest Hemingway to Archibald MacLeish, 1925 (from Selected Letters, p. 179), in Ernest Hemingway on Writing, Ed Larry W. Phillips, Touchstone, (1984) 1999, ISBN 978-0-684-18119-6, 101.
  99. ^ Wood, 82.
  100. ^ From Vladimir Nabokov's Lectures on Russian Literature, quoted by Francine Prose in Learning from Chekhov, 231.
  101. ^ "For the first time in literature the fluidity and randomness of life was made the form of the fiction. Before Chekhov, the event-plot drove all fictions." William Boyd, referring to the novelist William Gerhardie's analysis in Anton Chekhov: A Critical Study, 1923. A Chekhov Lexicon, by William Boyd, The Guardian, 3 July 2004. Retrieved 16 February 2007.
  102. ^ Woolf, Virginia, The Common Reader: First Series, Annotated Edition, Harvest/HBJ Book, 2002, ISBN 0-15-602778-X, 172.
  103. ^ Print issues, Siberia.

Sources

  • Allen, David, Performing Chekhov, Routledge (UK), 2001, ISBN 978-0-415-18934-7
  • Bartlett, Rosamund, and Anthony Phillips (translators), Chekhov: A Life in Letters, Penguin Books, 2004, ISBN 978-0-14-044922-8
  • Bartlett, Rosamund, Chekhov: Scenes from a Life, Free Press, 2004, ISBN 978-0-7432-3074-2
  • Benedetti, Jean (editor and translator), Dear Writer, Dear Actress: The Love Letters of Olga Knipper and Anton Chekhov, Methuen Publishing Ltd, 1998 edition, ISBN 978-0-413-72390-1
  • Benedetti, Jean, Stanislavski: An Introduction, Methuen Drama, 1989 edition, ISBN 978-0-413-50030-4
  • Chekhov, Anton, About Love and Other Stories, translated by Rosamund Bartlett, Oxford University Press, 2004, ISBN 978-0-19-280260-6
  • Chekhov, Anton, The Undiscovered Chekhov: Fifty New Stories, translated by Peter Constantine, Duck Editions, 2001, ISBN 978-0-7156-3106-5
  • Chekhov, Anton, Easter Week, translated by Michael Henry Heim, engravings by Barry Moser, Shackman Press, 2010
  • Chekhov, Anton, Forty Stories, translated and with an introduction by Robert Payne, New York, Vintage, 1991 edition, ISBN 978-0-679-73375-1
  • Chekhov, Anton, Letters of Anton Chekhov to His Family and Friends with Biographical Sketch, translated by Constance Garnett, Macmillan, 1920. Full text at Gutenberg. Retrieved 16 February 2007.
  • Chekhov, Anton, Note-Book of Anton Chekhov, translated by S. S. Koteliansky and Leonard Woolf, B.W. Huebsch, 1921. Full text at Gutenberg. Retrieved 16 February 2007.
  • Chekhov, Anton, The Other Chekhov, edited by Okla Elliott and Kyle Minor, with story introductions by Pinckney Benedict, Fred Chappell, Christopher Coake, Paul Crenshaw, Dorothy Gambrell, Steven Gillis, Michelle Herman, Jeff Parker, Benjamin Percy, and David R. Slavitt. New American Press, 2008 edition, ISBN 978-0-9729679-8-3
  • Chekhov, Anton, Seven Short Novels, translated by Barbara Makanowitzky, W.W.Norton & Company, 2003 edition, ISBN 978-0-393-00552-3
  • Finke, Michael C., Chekhov's 'Steppe': A Metapoetic Journey, an essay in Anton Chekhov Rediscovered, ed Savely Senderovich and Munir Sendich, Michigan Russian Language Journal, 1988, ISBN 9999838855
  • Finke, Michael C., Seeing Chekhov: Life and Art, Cornell UP, 2005, ISBN 978-0-8014-4315-2
  • Gerhardie, William, Anton Chekhov, Macdonald, (1923) 1974 edition, ISBN 978-0-356-04609-9
  • Gorky, Maksim, Alexander Kuprin, and I.A. Bunin, Reminiscences of Anton Chekhov, translated by S. S. Koteliansky and Leonard Woolf, B.W.Huebsch, 1921. Read at eldritchpress. Retrieved 16 February 2007.
  • Gottlieb, Vera, and Paul Allain (eds), The Cambridge Companion to Chekhov, Cambridge University Press, 2000, ISBN 978-0-521-58917-8
  • Jackson, Robert Louis, Dostoevsky in Chekhov's Garden of Eden—'Because of Little Apples', in Dialogues with Dostoevsky, Stanford University Press, 1993, ISBN 978-0-8047-2120-2
  • Klawans, Harold L., Chekhov's Lie, 1997, ISBN 1-888799-12-9. About the challenges of combining writing with the medical life.
  • Malcolm, Janet, Reading Chekhov, a Critical Journey, Granta Publications, 2004 edition, ISBN 978-1-86207-635-8
  • Miles, Patrick (ed), Chekhov on the British Stage, Cambridge University Press, 1993, ISBN 978-0-521-38467-4
  • Nabokov, Vladimir, Anton Chekhov, in Lectures on Russian Literature, Harvest/HBJ Books, [1981] 2002 edition, ISBN 978-0-15-602776-2.
  • Pitcher, Harvey, Chekhov's Leading Lady: Portrait of the Actress Olga Knipper, J Murray, 1979, ISBN 978-0-7195-3681-6
  • Prose, Francine, Learning from Chekhov, in Writers on Writing, ed. Robert Pack and Jay Parini, UPNE, 1991, ISBN 978-0-87451-560-2
  • Rayfield, Donald, Anton Chekhov: A Life, Henry Holt & Co, 1998, ISBN 978-0-8050-5747-8
  • Simmons, Ernest J., Chekhov: A Biography, University of Chicago Press, (1962) 1970 edition, ISBN 978-0-226-75805-3
  • Stanislavski, Constantin, My Life in Art, Methuen Drama, 1980 edition, ISBN 978-0-413-46200-8
  • Styan, John Louis, Modern Drama in Theory and Practice, Cambridge University Press, 1981, ISBN 978-0-521-29628-1
  • Wood, James, What Chekhov Meant by Life, in The Broken Estate: Essays in Literature and Belief, Pimlico, 2000 edition, ISBN 978-0-7126-6557-5
  • Zeiger, Arthur, The Plays of Anton Chekov, Claxton House, Inc., New York, NY, 1945.
  • Tufarulo,G,M.- La Luna è morta e lo specchio infranto. Miti letterari del Novecento, vol.1- G. Laterza, Bari, 2009- ISBN 978-88-8231-491-0.

External links

Biographical

Misc

Works

Источник: Anton Chekhov

Henry Lawson

Infobox Person
name = Henry Lawson


caption = Henry Lawson, circa 1902
birth_date = birth date|df=yes|1867|6|17
birth_place = [Grenfell, New South Wales|Grenfell Goldfields] [New South Wales] , [Australia]
death_date = death date and age|df=yes|1922|9|2|1867|6|17
death_place = Sydney, Australia
occupation = Author,
Poet
Ballardist
spouse = Bertha Marie Louise Bredt
children = Joseph
Bertha

Henry Lawson (17 June 1867 – 2 September 1922) was an Australian writer and poet. Along with his contemporary Banjo Paterson, Lawson is among the best-known Australian poets and fiction writers of the colonial period, and is often called Australia's "greatest short story writer". [Elder (2008) p. 115]

Early life

Lawson was born in a town on the Grenfell goldfields of New South Wales. His mother was Louisa Lawson (née Albury), a prominent suffragist and owner/editor of "The Dawn" journal which was partly responsible for Australia becoming one of the first countries to introduce adult female suffrage. His father was Niels Herzberg Larsen, a Norwegian-born miner who went to sea at 21, arrived in Melbourne in 1855 and joined the gold rush.cite web
url=http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A100016b.htm.htm
title=Lawson, Henry (1867 - 1922)
accessdate=2007-07-15
author=Brian Matthews
work=Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 10
publisher=MUP
year=1986
pages=18-22
] Larsen travelled to different goldfields, and at Pipeclay (now Eurunderee, New South Wales) met Louisa and married her on 7 July 1866; he was 32 and she, 18. On Henry's birth, the family surname was anglicised and Niels became Peter Lawson. The newly-married couple were to have an unhappy marriage.

Henry Lawson attended school at Eurunderee from 2 October 1876 but suffered an ear infection at around this time that left him with partial deafness and by the age of fourteen he had lost his hearing entirely. He later attended a Catholic school at Mudgee, New South Wales around 8 km away; the master there, Mr. Kevan, would talk to Lawson about poetry. He was a keen reader of Dickens and Marryat and serialised novels such as "Robbery under Arms" and "For the Term of his Natural Life"; an aunt had also given him a volume by Bret Harte. Reading became a major source of his education because, due to his deafness, he had trouble learning in the classroom.

In 1883, after working on building jobs with his father and in the Blue Mountains, Lawson joined his mother in Sydney at her request. Louisa was then living with Henry's sister and brother. Lawson studied for his matriculation, but failed.

In 1896, he married Bertha Bredt Jr., daughter of Bertha Bredt, the prominent socialist. They had two children, son Jim (Joseph) and daughter Bertha. However, the marriage ended unhappily. [Falkiner (1992), p. 64]

Poetry and prose writing

Lawson's first published poem was 'A Song of the Republic' which appeared in The Bulletin, 1 October 1887; his mother's radical friends were an influence. This was followed by 'The Wreck of the Derry Castle' and then 'Golden Gully.'

In 1890-1891 Lawson worked in Albany. [Falkiner (1992), p. 62] He then received an offer to write for the Brisbane "Boomerang" in 1891, but he lasted only around 7-8 months as the "Boomerang" was soon in trouble. He returned to Sydney and continued to write for the "Bulletin" which, in 1892, paid for an inland trip where he experienced the harsh realities of drought-affected New South Wales.Elder (2008) p. 113] This resulted in his contributions to the Bulletin Debate and became a source for many of his stories in subsequent years. Elder writes of the trek Lawson took between Hungerford and Bourke as "the most important trek in Australian literary history" and says that "it confirmed all his prejudices about the Australian bush. Lawson had no romantic illusions about a 'rural idyll'."Falkiner (1992), p. 63] In it he "continued his assault on Paterson and the romantics, and in the process, virtually reinvented Australian realism". Elder writes that "he used short, sharp sentences, with language as raw as Ernest Hemingway or Raymond Carver. With sparse adjectives and honed-to-the-bone description, Lawson created a style and defined Australians: dryly laconic, passionately egalitarian and deeply humane." Most of his work focuses on the Australian bush, such as the desolate "Past Carin'", and is considered by some to be among the first accurate descriptions of Australian life as it was at the time.Fact|date=February 2007 "The Drover's Wife" with its "heart-breaking depiction of bleakness and loneliness" is regarded as one of his finest short stories. It is regularly studied in schools and has often been adapted for film and theatre. [ [http://www.artsbird.com/newweben/artsnews.php?db=43&thisid=3037 "Multi-media Theatre: "The Drover's Wife", Australia] ] [ [http://www.theage.com.au/news/Arts/Keeping-bush-ballads/2005/05/16/1116095902715.html "Keeping bush ballads alive and well"] ] [ [http://archives.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/events/a/australian_icons_films "The Drover's Wife": Australian film icon"] ]

Lawson was a firm believer in the merits of the sketch story, commonly known simply as 'the sketch,' claiming that "the sketch story is best of all." ['Three or Four Archibalds and the Writer'] "The Penguin Henry Lawson Short Stories" (First published 1986) Edited with an introduction by John Barnes - Introduction] Lawson's Jack Mitchell story, "On The Edge Of A Plain", is often cited as one of the most accomplished examples of the sketch."The Penguin Henry Lawson Short Stories" (First published 1986) Edited with an introduction by John Barnes - Introduction]

Like the majority of Australians, Lawson lived in a city, but had had plenty of experience in outback life, in fact, many of his stories reflected his experiences in real life. In Sydney in 1898 he was a prominent member of the Dawn and Dusk Club, a bohemian club of writer friends who met for drinks and conversation.

Later years

During his later life, the alcohol-addicted writer was probably Australia's best-known celebrity. At the same time, he was also a frequent beggar on the streets of Sydney, notably at the Circular Quay ferry turnstiles. He was gaoled at Darlinghurst Gaol for drunkenness and non-payment of alimony, and recorded his experience in the haunting poem "One Hundred and Three" - his prison number - which was published in 1908. He refers to the prison as "Starvinghurst Gaol" because of the meagre rations given to the inmates.

On his death, of cerebral haemorrhage, in Abbotsford, Sydney in 1922, he was given a state funeral. It was attended by the Prime Minister W. M. Hughes and the Premier of New South Wales Jack Lang (who was the husband of Lawson's sister-in-law Hilda Bredt), as well as thousands of citizens. He is interred at Waverley Cemetery. Lawson was the first person to be granted a state funeral.Fact|date=May 2008

Henry Lawson was featured on the first (paper) Australian ten dollar note issued in 1966 when decimal currency was first introduced into Australia. This note was replaced by a polymer note in 1993. Lawson was pictured against scenes from the town of Gulgong in NSW. [ [http://www.rba.gov.au/Museum/Displays/1960_1988_rba_and_reform_of_the_currency/australias_first_decimal_currency_notes.html Museum of Australian Currency Notes] Accessed on June 7, 2007]

Collections of Poetry and/or Prose

*"Short Stories in Prose and Verse (1894)
*"In the Days When the World was Wide and Other Verses (1896)
*"While the Billy Boils" (1896)
*"On the Track" (1900)
*"Over The Sliprails" (1900)
*"" (1900)
*"The Country I Come From" (1901)
*"Joe Wilson and His Mates" (1901)
*"Children of the Bush" (1902)
*"When I was King and Other Verses (1905)
*"The Elder Son (1905)
*"The Romance of the Swag" (1907)
*"Send Round the Hat" (1907)
*"The Rising Of The Court, and Other Sketches in Prose and Verse" (1910)
*"The Skyline Riders and Other Verses (1910)
*"Triangles of Life and Other Stories" (1913)

Posthumous Collections

*"A Camp-Fire Yarn: Henry Lawson Complete Works 1885-1900" (1984)
*"A Fantasy of Man: Henry Lawson Complete Works 1901-1922" (1984)
*"The Penguin Henry Lawson Short Stories" (1986)
*"The Songs of Henry Lawson" (1989)
*"The Roaring Days" (1994) (aka "The Henry Lawson Collection Vol. 1")
*"On the Wallaby Track" (1994) (aka "The Henry Lawson Collection Vol. 2")

Popular Poems, Short Stories and Sketches

*"" (poem)
*"Freedom on the Wallaby" (poem, 1891)
*" (poem, 1891)
*"" (poem, 1893)
*"Scots of the Riverina" (poem, 1917)
*"" (poem, 1896)
*"Up The Country" (poem, 1892)
*"The City Bushman" (poem, 1892)
*"" (short story, 1892)
*"The Bush Undertaker" (short story, 1892)
*"The Loaded Dog" (short story, 1901)
*"" (short story,1900)
*"" (short story)
*"" (short story, 1896)
*"A Child in the Dark, and a Foreign Father" (short story, 1902)
*"The Union Buries Its Dead" (short story, 1893)
*"" (essay)
*"" (essay, 1887)
*"" (essay, 1888)

Recurring Characters

*Joe Wilson
**""
**"A Double Buggy at Lahey Creek"
**""
**""

*Jack Mitchell
**""
**"On The Edge Of A Plain"
**""
**""
**""
**"Bill, the Ventriloquial Rooster"
**""
**""
**""

*Steelman and Smith
**""
**""
**""
**""
**""

*Dave Regan, Jim Bently and/or Andy Page
**"The Loaded Dog"
**""
**""
**""
**""

Recurring Themes of Lawson's Stories

Many of Henry Lawson's short stories explore similar themes:
* Roles of women
* Roles of men
* Roles of children
* Loneliness / Isolation
* Hardship
* Importance of Humour
* The Emotional Impact of Bush Life
* Mateship

ee also

* Bulletin Debate

Notes

References

*Elder, Bruce (2008) "In Lawson's Tracks" in "Griffith Review" (19): 93-95, 113-115, Autumn 2008
*Falkiner, Suzanne (1992) "Wilderness" (The Writers' Landscape), Sydney, Simon and Schuster
*Dictionary of Australian Biography|First=Henry|Last=Lawson|Link=http://gutenberg.net.au/dictbiog/0-dict-biogL.html#lawson2

External links

* [http://www.geocities.com/henrylawsononline/ Henry Lawson Online - Poems, Stories, Books, Photos, People, Places, Facts, etc...]
* [http://www.geocities.com/kenbenbooks/Lawson.html Henry Lawson Books - Has details of all known books by Henry Lawson published and for sale]
*
* [http://gutenberg.net.au/plusfifty-a-m.html#lawson1 Works by Henry Lawson] at [http://gutenberg.net.au Project Gutenberg Australia]
* [http://www.sanjeev.net/poetry/lawson-henry/index.html Poetry Archive: 125 poems of Henry Lawson]
* [http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/lawsons/lawson_chronology.html Henry Lawson and Louisa Lawson Online Chronology]
* [http://ghostwolf.dyndns.org/words/authors/L/LawsonHenry/index.html Henry Lawson - Essays, Short Stories and Verse Collections]
* [http://chriskempster.net/ The Songs of Henry Lawson Compiled by Chris Kempster - Second enlarged Edition March 2008]

Источник: Henry Lawson

Anita Desai

Infobox Writer


imagesize = 150px
name = Anita Desai
caption =
pseudonym =
birthname =Anita Mazumdar
birthdate = birth date and age|1937|6|24|mf=y
birthplace = Mussoorie, India
occupation = Author
nationality = Indian
period = 1970s—present
genre =Fiction
subject =
movement =
notableworks =
influences ="Fire on the Mountain,"Clear Light of Day, In Custody, and Fasting, Feasting"
influenced = Kiran Desai
website =

Anita Mazumdar Desai (born June 24, 1937) is an Indian novelist and Emeritus John E. Burchard Professor of Humanities at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She has been shortlisted for the Booker prize three times. Her daughter, the author Kiran Desai, won the 2006 Booker prize.

Background

Born as Anita Mazumdar to a German mother, Toni Nime, and a Bengali businessman, D. N. Mazumdar [ [http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/desai.htm Anita Desai ] ] in Mussoorie, India. She grew up speaking German at home and Bengali, Urdu, Hindi and English outside the house. She first learned to read and write in English at school and as a result it became her "literary language" [ [http://www.scholars.nus.edu.sg/post/india/desai/desaibio.html A Brief Biography of Anita Desai ] ] . Despite German being her first language she did not visit Germany until later in life as an adult.

She was a student at Queen Mary's Higher Secondary School in Delhi and received her B.A. in English literature in 1957 from the University of Delhi Miranda House. The following year she married Ashvin Desai, a businessman. They raised four children. Her daughter Kiran was born in Chandigarh and spent her childhood years in Bombay, on Alatamont Road. Kiran Desai is also the author of quite a few books including her first one "Hullabaloo in the Guava Orchard" She recalls that as children they were taken to Thal (near Alibaug) for weekends, and this is where Anita Desai set her novel "Village by the Sea" [ [http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/desai.htm Anita Desai ] ] .

Career

She published her first novel in 1963, "Cry The Peacock". She considers "Clear Light Of Day" (1980) her most autobiographical work as it is set during her coming of age and also in the same neighborhood in which she grew up [ [http://www.haverford.edu/engl/engl277b/Contexts/anita_desai.htm Anita Desai-A Critical Biography ] ] . In 1984 she published "In Custody" - about an Urdu poet in his declining days - which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. In 1993 she became a creative writing teacher at Massachusetts Institute of Technology [ [http://www.litweb.net/biogs/desai_anita.html LitWeb.net ] ] ). Her latest novel published in 2004, "The Zigzag Way", is set in 20th-century Mexico.

Desai has taught at Mount Holyoke College and Smith College. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and of Girton College, Cambridge University. In addition, she writes for the New York Review of Books.

Film

In 1993 Merchant Ivory Productions released "In Custody", directed by Ismail Merchant, with a screenplay by Shahrukh Husain. It won the 1994 President of India Gold Medal for Best Picture and stars the noted actors Shashi Kapoor, Shabana Azmi and Om Puri.

Awards

* 1978 - National Academy of Letters Award - "Fire on the Mountain"
* 1978 - Winifred Holtby Memorial Prize - "Fire on the Mountain"
* 1980 - Shortlisted, Booker Prize for Fiction - "Clear Light of Day"
* 1983 - Guardian Children's Fiction Prize - "The Village By The Sea"
* 1984 - Shortlisted, Booker Prize for Fiction - "In Custody"
* 1993 - Neil Gunn Prize
* 1999 - Shortlisted, Booker Prize for Fiction: "Fasting, Feasting"
* 2000 -Alberto Moravia Prize for Literature (Italy)

Selected works

* "The Zigzag Way" (2004)
* "Diamond Dust and Other Stories" (2000)
* "Fasting, Feasting" (1999)
* "Journey to Ithaca" (1995)
* "Baumgartner's Bombay" (1988)
* "In Custody" (1984)
* "The Village By The Sea" (1982)
* "Clear Light of Day" (1980)
* "Games at Twilight" (1978)
* "Fire on the Mountain" (1977)
* "Cry, The Peacock" (1963)

ee also

* Indian English literature
* List of winners and shortlisted authors of the Booker Prize for Fiction

References

* Abrams, M. H and Stephen Greenblatt. "Anita Desai." "The Norton Anthology of English Literature," Vol. 2C, 7th Edition. New York: W.W. Norton, 2000: 2768 - 2785.
* Alter, Stephen and Wimal Dissanayake. "A Devoted Son by Anita Desai." "The Penguin Book of Modern Indian Short Stories." New Delhi, Middlesex, New York: Penguin Books, 1991: 92-101.
* Gupta, Indra. "India’s 50 Most Illustrious Women". (ISBN 81-88086-19-3)
* Selvadurai, Shyam (ed.). "Anita Desai:Winterscape." "Story-Wallah: A Celebration of South Asian Fiction." New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2005:69-90.

External links

* [http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/?p=auth124 Bio]
* [http://voices.cla.umn.edu/vg/Bios/entries/desai_anita.html Voices from the Gaps]
* [http://www.sawnet.org/books/authors.php?Desai+Anita SAWNET bio]
* [http://www.mit.edu/~humanistic/faculty/desai.html MIT page]
* [http://jaiarjun.blogspot.com/2007/12/conversation-with-anita-desai-and-some.html Jabberwock: a conversation with Anita Desai]
*

Papers

* [http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/research/fa/desai.html Anita Desai Collection] at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin

Источник: Anita Desai

Horacio Quiroga

Infobox Person
name = Horacio Quiroga



caption = Horacio Quiroga
birth_date = birth date|1878|12|31|mf=y
birth_place = Salto, Uruguay
dead = dead
death_date = death date and age|1937|2|19|1878|12|31|mf=y
death_place = Buenos Aires, Argentina

Horacio Silvestre Quiroga Forteza (b. Salto-Uruguay, December 31, 1878Buenos Aires-Argentina, February 19, 1937) was an Uruguayan author and writer. He wrote stories which, in their jungle settings, use of the supernatural and the bizarre show the influence of modernismo, Edgar Allan Poe, and Rudyard Kipling, among others. Quiroga's influence can be seen in the magic realism of Gabriel García Márquez and the postmodern surrealism of Julio Cortázar.

Biography

His most well known works are "Cuentos de amor de locura y de muerte" (1917) and "Los desterrados" (1926). These deal with anthropomorphic, intelligent animals, fate, a jungle that seems to be alive and bizarre coincidences, all against a backdrop of complete despair. Quiroga is now seen as one of the greatest of all Uruguayan writers.

Selected works translated into English

* Horacio Quiroga "The Decapitated Chicken and Other Stories" (University of Wisconsin Press, 2004, ISBN 0-299-19834-0)
* Horacio Quiroga "The Exiles and other Stories" (University of Texas Press, 1987, ISBN 0-292-72050-5)

External links

*
* [http://www.litweb.net/biography/308/Horacio_Quiroga.html Horacio Quiroga Biography at LitWeb.net]
* Review: Peter Beardsell http://www.amazon.co.uk/Quiroga-Cuentos-Locura-Critical-Spanish/dp/0729302474

Источник: Horacio Quiroga

Leila Aboulela

Infobox musical artist 2
Name = Leila Aboulela
Background = blue



Img_capt = Sudanese writer
Birth_name = Leila Aboulela
Born = 1964
Died =
Origin = Khartoum Sudan
Occupation =
Years_active =
Label =
Associated_acts =
URL =

Leila Aboulela (1964 -) ,Arabic 'ليلى ابوالعلا' is a Sudanese writer and playwright.

Career

Born in Cairo, Egypt, Leila Aboulela grew up in Khartoum, Sudan where she attended the Khartoum American School and Sister School. She graduated from Khartoum University in 1985 with a degree in Economics and was awarded her Masters degree in statistics from the London School of Economics. She lived for many years in Aberdeen where she wrote most of her works while looking after her family; she currently (2008) lives and lectures in Abu Dhabi.

She was awarded the Caine Prize for African Writing in 2000 for her short story "The Museum" and her novel The Translator was nominated for the Orange Prize in 2002, and was chosen as a "Notable Book of the Year" by the New York Times in 2006.

Bibliography

* 1999 "The Translator", Grove Press, Black Cat (2006), ISBN 0802170269 - translated to Arabic by Elkhatim Adl'an
* 2001 "Coloured Lights" (a collection of short stories)
* "The Museum
* 2005 "Minaret", Grove Press, Black Cat (2005), ISBN 0802170145

Prizes/Awards

* 2000 "Caine Prize for African Writing", "The Museum"
* 2000 "Saltire Society Scottish First Book of the Year Award" (shortlist), "The Translator"
* 2002 "PEN Macmillan Silver Pen Award" (shortlist), "Coloured Lights"
* 2003 "Race and Media Award (shortlist - radio drama serialisation)", "The Translator"

External links

*http://www.nytimes.com/ref/books/review/20061203notable-books.html
*http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07/20/AR2007072002147.html
*http://www.sudanese.net/index.php?showforum=753

Источник: Leila Aboulela

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