Nikolai Gogol and the Baroque Cultural Heritage

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Pennsylvania State University Press, 1993 - Biography & Autobiography - 259 pages

Nikolai Gogol occupies an unassailable position in Russian and world literature as one of the nineteenth-century's greatest writers. Nikolai Gogol and the Baroque Cultural Heritage considers Gogol's entire oeuvre, including his letters, notebooks, and drawings, as well as all relevant secondary literature, and exhaustively examines sources of Baroque influence on him, tracing them back to the oeuvre itself. This study draws on the most recent achievements of interdisciplinary scholarship, paying special attention to the interaction of the visual and the verbal and of high and popular cultural strata, so characteristic of the Baroque and at the same time so important to the understanding of Gogol's poetics.

In spite of an enormous corpus of already existing Gogol scholarship, this book sheds new light on our understanding of this writer's poetics and opens new vistas in the study of cultural continuity.

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Contents

Gogol and the Baroque Milieu
11
Forms
25
Topoi
129
Copyright

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About the author (1993)

Gavriel Shapiro is Assistant Professor of Russian Literature at Cornell University.

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