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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Yuri Corrigan (Boston University)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.680kg ISBN: 9781108842358ISBN 10: 1108842356 Pages: 372 Publication Date: 23 February 2023 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsPreface: The Poet of Catastrophe Cornel West; Introduction Yuri Corrigan; Part I. Life: 1. Son, brother, husband (in Correspondence) Alevtina Kuzicheva; 2. Chekhov's friends Vladimir Kataev; 3. An 'Indeterminate Situation': Chekhov's illness and death Michael Finke; Part II. Society: 4. Class Anne Lounsbery; 5. Money Vadim Shneyder; 6. Politics Derek Offord; 7. Peasants Christine D. Worobec; 8. The woman question Jenny Kaminer; 9. Sex Melissa L. Miller; 10. Social activism Andrei Stepanov; 11. Environmentalism Jane Costlow; 12. Sakhalin Island Edyta M. Bojanowska; Part III. Culture: 13. Philosophy Michal Oklot; 14. Religion Denis Zhernokleyev; 15. Science Elena Fratto; 16. Medicine and the mind-body problem Matthew Mangold; 17. The arts Serge Gregory; 18. Fin de Siècle Mark D. Steinberg; 19. The harm that good ideas do Gary Saul Morson; 20. Chekhov's Intelligentsias Svetlana Evdokimova; Part IV. Literature: 21. Print culture Louise McReynolds; 22. Embarrassment Caryl Emerson; 23. Tolstoy Rosamund Bartlett; 24. French literature Sergei A. Kibalnik; 25. Modernism and symbolism Lindsay Ceballos; 26. Theatrical traditions Anna Muza; 27. Modern theatre: Resonances and intersections Julia Listengarten; 28. Chekhov's Moscow art theatre (1897-1904) Sharon Marie Carnicke; Part V. Afterlives: 29. Soviet contexts Radislav Lapushin; 30. Chekhov in England Olga Tabachnikova; 31. The American stage James N. Loehlin; 32. Chekhov in East Asia Heekyoung Cho; 33. Film Justin Wilmes; 34. In Translation: Chekhov's path into english Carol Apollonio; Afterword: Chekhov's endings Robin Feuer Miller; Further reading; Endnotes.Reviews'Chekhov (as Cornel West and Yuri Corrigan remind us) poses a problem for the academy: he is notoriously hard to expain or teach. Rather than attempting to pin this elusive author down, this volume provides many different frames and contexts in which Chekhov's works can be read and interpreted. An essential guide for all teachers, readers, and lovers of Chekhov.' Irina Paperno, University of California, Berkeley 'Chekhov in Context is an invaluable resource, the volume I wish I'd had on my shelf my entire career. But it's so much more than the reference work that implies. Exquisitely conceived by Yuri Corrigan and beautifully executed by its distinguished contributors, the book explores the network of personal circumstances, social structures, literary institutions, humanistic and scientific disciplines, environmental concerns, and ideological urgencies of Chekhov's world with extraordinary nuance. Moreover, it does so not to account for or even to interpret Chekhov's work, but (in Corrigan's felicitous formulation) to 'complicate' it. The resulting treatment of individual works is stunning, as is the analysis of the ways in which Chekhov irrevocably altered the status quo. The book makes a critical-and inspiring-contribution. Kudos to all concerned.' Cathy Popkin, Columbia University 'Chekhov (as Cornel West and Yuri Corrigan remind us) poses a problem for the academy: he is notoriously hard to explain or teach. Rather than attempting to pin this elusive author down, this volume provides many different frames and contexts in which Chekhov's works can be read and interpreted. An essential guide for all teachers, readers, and lovers of Chekhov.' Irina Paperno, University of California, Berkeley 'Chekhov in Context is an invaluable resource, the volume I wish I'd had on my shelf my entire career. But it's so much more than the reference work that implies. Exquisitely conceived by Yuri Corrigan and beautifully executed by its distinguished contributors, the book explores the network of personal circumstances, social structures, literary institutions, humanistic and scientific disciplines, environmental concerns, and ideological urgencies of Chekhov's world with extraordinary nuance. Moreover, it does so not to account for or even to interpret Chekhov's work, but (in Corrigan's felicitous formulation) to 'complicate' it. The resulting treatment of individual works is stunning, as is the analysis of the ways in which Chekhov irrevocably altered the status quo. The book makes a critical–and inspiring–contribution. Kudos to all concerned.' Cathy Popkin, Columbia University 'Recommended.' D. Hutchins, CHOICE Author InformationYuri Corrigan is Associate Professor of Russian and Comparative Literature at Boston University. He is the author of Dostoevsky and the Riddle of the Self (2017). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |