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The little tragedies

Part of the Russian Literature and Thought Series series
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In a major burst of creativity, Russian poet Alexander Pushkin during just three months in 1830 completed Eugene Onegin, composed more than thirty lyric poems, wrote several short stories and folk tales, and penned the four short dramas in verse that comprise the little tragedies.

The little tragedies stand among the great masterpieces of Russian literature, yet they were last translated into English a quarter-century ago and have in recent years been out of print entirely.

In this outstanding new translation, Nancy K. Anderson preserves the cadence and intensity of Pushkins work while aligning it with todays poetic practices and freer approach to metrics.

In addition she provides critical essays examining each play in depth, a discussion of her approach to translating the plays, and a consideration of the genre of these dramatic pieces and their performability.The four little tragediesMozart and Salieri, The Miserly Knight, The Stone Guest, and A Feast During the Plagueare extremely compressed dialogues, each dealing with a dominant protagonist whose central internal conflict determines both the plot and structure of the play.

Pushkin focuses on human passions and the interplay between free will and fate: though each protagonist could avoid self-ruin, instead he freely chooses it.

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£22.50
Product Details
Yale University Press
0300130465 / 9780300130461
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
891.723
01/10/2008
English
225 pages
140 x 210 mm, 417 grams
Copy: 10%; print: 10%