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Gounod's Faust and Bulgakov's the Master and Margarita

Russian Review, 1996
M ikhail Bulgakov's love of the opera Faust verged on the fanatical. According to his sister Vera, the young Bulgakov attended no fewer than forty-one performances of Gounod's opera in Kiev. His first wife recalled that the writer often sang two arias from Faust: Mephistopheles' "Le veau d'or" [calf of gold] (in Russian: "Na zemle ves' mir liudskoi ...
David Lowe, null Gounod, null Bulgakov
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Margarita's Orgasms: Reading the Erotic in Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita

The Russian Review, 2018
This article explores The Master and Margarita’s orientation to erotic themes, asking why do readers not think of this novel as erotic. Margarita is “nagaia i nevidimaia” (naked and invisible) during her flight in chapter 21, “Polet.” This description invites a potentially erotic visualization of Margarita, but this invitation is immediately withdrawn ...
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The Master and Margarita

NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction, 1971
Edgar H. Lehrman   +2 more
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MASTERING MARGARITA

Current Digest of the Russian Press, The, 2023
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The Master and Margarita

The Slavic and East European Journal, 1968
Victoria A. Babenko   +3 more
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M. Bulgakov's Novel the Master and Margarita

Soviet Studies in Literature, 1968
One strange and fantastic moonlit night, after the ball at Satan's, when Margarita is reunited with her lover by the power of magic charms, the omnipotent Woland asks the master to show him his novel about Pontius Pilate. The master is unable to do this, because he had burnt his novel in the stove. "That cannot be," Woland objects.
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Bulgakov’s Master and Margarita and the Devil’s Carnival

1996
The foregoing survey of some of the work of Soviet prose writers alerts us to the fact that a tendency to explore the grotesque features of medieval culture within a contemporary framework was well established as the 1930s began. Kharms and Vaginov in particular explored the literary past, both Russian and West European, finding symbols and ...
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The Master and Margarita-A Comedy of Victory

The Modern Language Journal, 1979
Margot K. Frank, Lesley Milne
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Children in "The Master and Margarita"

The Slavic and East European Journal, 2006
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Linguistic hermeneutics of the image of Margarita in M. A. Bulgakov’s novel "The Master and Margarita"

Russian language at school
The article presents an axiologically oriented linguistic hermeneutic interpretation of Margarita s image from M. A. Bulgakov s novel "The Master and Margarita". The relevance of the article is due to both the ethical and scientific vulnerability of the unconditionally positive interpretation of the image that dominates school textbooks. The study aims
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