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Leo Tolstoy | |
War and Peace and Anna KareninaWar and Peace, considered one of the greatest novels ever
written, is an epic of Russian society between 1805 and 1815, just before and
after the Napoleonic invasion. It contains 559 characters, commemorates
important military battles, and portrays famous historical personalities, but
its main theme is the chronicle of the lives of five aristocratic families.
The work is a masterpiece of realism. The characters are brilliantly realized
by the descriptions of significant physical details, and by Tolstoy's
penetrating psychological analysis that illumines their inner worlds, showing
how they seem to themselves and to others at different moments of their lives.
Spontaneous, unaffected Natasha Rostova, one of the most famous heroines in
Russian literature, who matures from an exuberant adolescent into a solid
matron, embodies Tolstoy's ideal of womanhood. Natasha remains abundantly
herself, engrossed in private concerns of love, marriage, and children in the
midst of the national holocaust. She confirms Tolstoy's iconoclastic views,
expounded in separate philosophical chapters in the novel, of the historical
process; history, for him, was the result of anonymous motivations and
personal happenings rather than great public events instigated by national
leaders. A profoundly optimistic philosophy emanates from the vast novel.
Despite the revelations of the horrors of war and acknowledgment of human
failings, the general message of War and Peace, inspired by Tolstoy's personal
happiness during these creative years, is a zestful love of life in all its
manifestations. Tolstoy's Moral PhilosophyIn the uniquely candid, powerful Confession (1882), Tolstoy described his growing spiritual turmoil, castigated himself and his class for leading a selfish, empty existence, and started his long quest for moral and social certitudes. He found them in two principles of the Christian Gospels: love for all human beings and nonresistance to the forces of evil. He expanded upon and illustrated his new radical faith in eloquent essays and tracts, including The Kingdom of God is Within You (1894). From within autocratic Russia, Tolstoy fearlessly attacked social inequality and coercive forms of government and church authority, urging freedom from hatreds and a purer life dictated by one's own moral conscience. In What Is Art? (1898), an indictment of almost all classical and modern art-including his own masterpieces, which he claimed were produced for the cultured elite-he advocated a morally inspired art, accessible to everyone. His didactic essays, translated into numerous languages, won adherents in many countries and from all walks of life. Many of them visited Yasnaya Polyana seeking instruction and advice. Last WorksReturning to imaginative fiction, Tolstoy wrote a number of
brief, edifying tales (Stories for the People, early to mid-1880s) with
peasant settings; they are models of economy in construction. Other works,
intended for the educated reader, are also morally purposeful in subject
matter but give fuller rein to his immense creative powers. The best known of
these are the short stories "The Death of Ivan Ilych" (1886) and
"Master and Man" (1895), both depicting the spiritual conversion of
a man facing death; the short story The
Kreutzer Sonata (1889), about a loveless marriage; the play The Power of
Darkness (1888), a naturalistic peasant tragedy of cupidity and lust leading
to violence; and the novel Resurrection (1899), the story of the moral
regeneration of a conscience-stricken nobleman. Contributed by:
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