Nikolai Karamzin, Letters of a Russian traveller
著者
書誌事項
Nikolai Karamzin, Letters of a Russian traveller
(SVEC, 2003:04)
Voltaire Foundation, 2003
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Karamzin, Letters of a Russian traveller
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注記
Bibliography: p. 553-568
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
The Letters of a Russian traveller (1797) are the most important expression of Enlightenment thought from the pen of a Russian writer. In 1789 Nikolai Karamzin (1765-1826), a leading historian and author of sentimental fiction, embarked on an unprecedented intellectual Grand Tour. His itinerary, which took him from St Petersburg through Germany to Revolutionary France and finally to England, served as the basis for this semi-fictional narrative. The narrator visits among others Kant, Herder and Wieland, makes pilgrimage to the resting places of Voltaire and Rousseau, and observes both the revolutionary Assemblée and the English Parliament at first hand. The resulting work is one in which fiction, philosophy, literary and art criticism, historical and biographical writing coalesce, producing nothing less than a wholesale anthropology and evaluation of the Enlightenment from the unfamiliar perspective of a Russian intellectual writing after the outbreak of the French Revolution.
This is the first ever complete translation of Karamzin’s work into English. The introduction and concluding study explore the intersection of Russian and European intellectual and literary movements, and illuminate questions about travel literature; history of the book and the growth of readership; the self as a philosophical subject; the growth of perceptions of the public sphere; the pre-Romantic fascination with funerary monuments and theories of sociability. This book is aimed at both Russian specialists and Enlightenment scholars who do not read Russian.
目次
Introduction: Karamzin and the creation of a readership
Nikolai Karamzin, Letters of a Russian traveller
Part I
Part II
Part III
Part IV
Karamzin’s discourses of Enlightenment
i. Literary identity
ii. The self as philosophical subject
iii. The visual subject: social order and the aesthetic imagination
iv. The visual subject: deconstructing the neoclassical
v. Narratives of feeling: imagination and disorder
vi. Going public: Karamzin’s cultural spaces
vii. Conversation
viii. Mediating private and national histories
ix. Sociability and mourning
x. Towards the public sphere: monuments and national celebration
Bibliography
Index
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