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Alexander Pushkin and his True Ideal
1988Both before and since Dostoevsky uttered these ringing, rhetorical words, the character of Tatyana has taken on quasi-mythical proportions as the exemplar of true Russian womanhood, a symbol, indeed, of the positive feminine. It is equally held as a commonplace in Russian literary criticism that she became the model for later generations of strong ...
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The Other Pushkin: A Study of Alexander Pushkin's Prose Fiction
The Slavic and East European Journal, 1984David Bethea, Paul Debreczeny
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Alexander Pushkin: A Critical Study
Russian Review, 1983Alexis Klimoff, A. D. P. Briggs
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Alexander Pushkin: A Critical Study
The Modern Language Review, 1984T. A. Greenan, A. D. P. Briggs
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The Critical Prose of Alexander Pushkin
Russian Review, 1971Robert P. Hughes +2 more
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Alexander Pushkin: 'Eugene Onegin'
The Modern Language Review, 1994Stephanie Sandler, A. D. P. Briggs
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The myth of the poet in Russian literature: Alexander Pushkin
Sibirskiy filologicheskiy zhurnalThe myth of the poet holds great significance in Russian culture. Mythopoetic discourse views time as cyclical, with past events recurring in the present and future. The myth of the poet carries a socio-biographical subtext. For example, it can be seen in the famous poem by Wilhelm Küchelbecker “The fate of Russian poets.” The premature, tragic ...
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