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Russian 206 Schedule Priscilla Meyer

Spring 2010 X3127,

Office hours TuTh 2:40-4:00

Jan 21 Introduction to the course

A short history of Russian literature and "The Bronze Horseman"

Read: Pushkin, "The Bronze Horseman"

Bely, Petersburg, Prologue, Chapters 1, 2

26 Russian Cultural Myths, "The Bronze Horseman," Petersburg

Symbolism and Bely

Read: Petersburg, Chapters 3, 4

Prepare: pick a passage to explicate, preferably one related to classical themes

28 Apollo/Dionysus; Motifs and mythological doubles in Petersburg

Read: Petersburg, Chapters 5, 6, 7

Write: a chart of as many character doublings as you can find and what words/images establish them

Feb 2 Circles, spirals, mirrors

Read: Petersburg, Chapter 8, Epilogue; Bible: Revelation

Write: a chart of parallels between Revelation and Petersburg

4 Time, history, explosions and anthroposophy: Revelation and Petersburg

Read: "A Slap in the Face of Public Taste"

Blok, "The Twelve"

"On Party Policy"; "VAPP Platform"

9 Blok, Bely and the Russian Revolution

Read: Zoshchenko stories; Babel, Red Cavalry stories

11 Literary schools and politics of the 1920s; The Red Army, Cossaks, Jews, Intellectuals

Read: Zamyatin, We (1/2); start tracing one color motif

Poetry Reading: Elena Fanailova, 4:15 Downey House Lounge (in Russian with English translation)

16 The narrator of We; Motifs; the color system; the Crystal Palace

Presentation: Calculus in We

Read: We (finish); Bible: Genesis

Write: a chart of parallels between Genesis and We

18 Genesis and We; Utopias and anti-utopias

Presentation: Plato’s Republic and We

(Brave New World; 1984)

Read: Olesha, Envy, Part I

23 A close reading of Kavalerov's mind

Presentation: "Oedipus” and We

Read: Envy, Part II

25 Envy: Who wrote what letters? Why is Part II in the 3rd person?

Presentation: "Hamlet" and We

March2PAPER #1 DUE: Trace a motif from Petersburg (see guidelines for motif papers)

Read: Platonov, The Foundation Pit (1/2)

Pick a passage to explicate, focusing on Platonov’s language

4 Language: Soviet slogans vs. reality

Read: Platonov, The Foundation Pit (1/2)

Write: a paragraph formulating Platonov’s vision, using any of his images

VACATION

23 Platonov’s interpretation of the new Soviet state

Read: The Gospel According to Saint Matthew

The Master and Margarita, Chapters 1-13

Write: Compare the Moscow and the Jerusalem of Chapters 1 and 2:

Make a chart of points in common between Moscow and Jerusalem

25 STALIN/Moscow and Jerusalem

Read: The Master and Margarita, chapters 13-21

30 Compare "the Affair at Griboedov's" and the scene in the Variety Theater

Read: The Master and Margarita, chapters 22-end

April 1 The Gospel According to Saint Matthew:

Compare it to Bulgakov's treatment of the passion story

Presentation: Is there a new evangelist?

Presentation: Who wrote which manuscript?

Read: Nabokov, “The Return of Chorb,” “A Visit to the Museum”**

The Orpheus Myth

6 The Pain of Emigration

Read: A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich; "Matryona's Home"; Shalamov, three stories

8 Brick-laying, the camp artists, hierarchies; the mice behind the wallpaper; Raw materials

Read: Ginsburg, Into the Whirlwind (1/2)

13 The GuLag

Read: Ginsburg, Into the Whirlwind (1/2)

15Survival

Read: Aksenov, "The Victory"

Write one sentence to hand in: who won what game?

Read: Bitov, "Life in Windy Weather"

Write: a brief outline of the wind motif, numbering each major instance: with what is it associated?

20 The 1960s: Young Prose

PAPER #2 DUE : do a subtext study (see guidelines)

Read: Fazil Iskander, “Belshazzar’s Feasts”

Bible: the Book of Daniel

Write: outline points of contact between the two texts

22 Stalin and Sandro: Who plays the role of Daniel?

Read: Aleshkovsky, “The Song of Stalin,” “Nikolai Nikolaevich,” "From the Book of Final Statements,"

Meyer, “Skaz in the Work of Yuz Aleshkovsky”

Write: two questions for Aleshkovsky, about the tales, Aleshkovsky's career, Soviet

life/literature/politics, the effect of emigration on a Russian (or any) writer, Putin

27 YUZThe author will answer your questions

Read: Tolstaya, "Date With a Bird," "Sonya"

Zinovy Zinik, “A Chance Encounter”**

29 DUE BY E-MAIL: proposal for term paper

Emigration seen from both sides

Read: Petrushevskaya, The Time: Night

May 4 Petrushevskaya’s “Blackening”

Finale: the theme of writing in the semester's readings:

the distorting effect of enforced dialogue

Term papers due in the Russian department mailbox (212 Fisk Hall) on the second day of exam period