Nadezhda Khvoshchinskaya
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Nadezhda Dmitryevna Khvoshchinskaya (russian: Надежда Дмитриевна Хвощинская; May 20, 1821Stroganova, E. N. “K 200-letiiu Nadezhdy Dmitrievny Khvoshchinskoi: O date rozhdeniia pisatel’nitsy.” ''Kul’tura i tekst'' 45.2 (2021): 113–20. doi: 10.37386/2305–4077–2021–2–113-120. – June 8, 1889), was a Russian novelist, poet, literary critic and translator. Her married name was Zayonchkovskaya., ''The Great Soviet Encyclopedia'', 3rd Edition, The Gale Group, Inc, 1970-1979. She published much of her work under the pseudonym V. Krestovsky. She later added "alias" to her pseudonym to avoid being confused with the writer
Vsevolod Krestovsky Vsevolod Vladimirovich Krestovsky (russian: Все́волод Влади́мирович Кресто́вский; February 23, 1840 – January 30, 1895) was a Russian writer who worked in the city mysteries genre. Biography Krestovsky came ...
.


Early life

Khvoshchinskaya was born into a gentry family in the Ryazan Governorate, where her father held a civil service post until being dismissed due to accusations of embezzlement of government funds. The legal proceedings that followed deprived him of a large sum of money, and forced him to sell off his property. It took him ten years to prove his innocence, while the family sank into poverty. Because of poor health and lack of money, Khvoshchinskaya received most of her education at home from private tutors, attending a boarding school only for a short time between the ages of eleven and twelve., ''A History of Russian Literature'', Victor Terras, Yale University Press, 1991. Khvoshchinskaya was the oldest of four children. Documents suggest she was born in 1821, or possibly 1820, though nineteenth-century sources gave her year of birth as 1824 or 1825. Two of her younger sisters, Sofia and Praskovia, also became writers. Praskovia (1828–1916), the youngest sister, was the least significant. Sofia (1824–1865) published novels and stories in several popular journals, including ''The Reader's Library'' and '' Notes of the Fatherland''. Nadezhda and Sofia established a close relationship as children; as adults they formed a productive literary partnership, sharing ideas for present and future work.


Career

Khvoshchinskaya began writing for intellectual and artistic satisfaction and as a way to relieve the family's impoverished condition. She published her first poems in 1842, when she was eighteen years old. She wrote over one hundred poems in her lifetime, most of which were never published. Her first novel, ''Anna Mikhailovna (1850)'' was published in ''Notes of the Fatherland'', under the pen name V. Krestovsky. She was a prolific writer, publishing many novels and stories in ''Notes of the Fatherland'', ''
The Contemporary ''Sovremennik'' ( rus, «Современник», p=səvrʲɪˈmʲenʲːɪk, a=Ru-современник.ogg, "The Contemporary") was a Russian literary, social and political magazine, published in Saint Petersburg in 1836–1866. It came out f ...
'' and other journals. After the death of her father in 1856, Khvoshchinskaya provided a majority of the financial support for her mother, her sisters and eventually her late brother's children. She was often stressed and overworked, and suffered from various health problems which were made worse by progressive scoliosis, and by the early death of her sister Sofia, with whom she was especially close. Soon after Sofia's death Khvoshchinskaya married a young doctor and former political exile named Zayonchkovsky, who was fourteen years younger than her. The marriage wasn't a happy one due to significant differences in their social views. Her husband died in 1872 from tuberculosis that had been worsened by his time in exile.Women's Glasnost vs. Naglost: Stopping Russian Backlash, Tatyana Mamonova, Chandra Niles Folsom, Greenwood Publishing, 1994. She went on to write many successful and well regarded novels, including ''The Boarding School Girl (1861)'', which has been translated into English, and ''Ursa Major (1871)''. ''The Boarding School Girl'' was immediately popular, especially with girls and women. She was also known for her critical work, publishing articles on popular writers such as Ivan Goncharov, Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin and Aleksey Konstantinovich Tolstoy, and for her translations of the works of French writers, including several of George Sand's novels. Her fictional works often show the influence of democratic writers like Nikolay Chernyshevsky and his circle.


Later life

She spent most of her life in Ryazan, only visiting her friends in St. Petersburg once or twice a year. Among these friends were writers and poets like Ivan Turgenev and
Nikolay Sherbina Nikolay Fyodorovich Shcherbina (; – ) was a 19th-century Russian poet. Nikolay Shcherbina was born in the Mius district of the Don Cossack Host in the mansion of his mother. His father was of Ukrainian descent, and his mother of Greek and Don ...
. After her mother's death in 1884, she moved to St. Petersburg. She died at a summer cottage in Petergof, outside St. Petersburg, in 1889.


English translations

*"On the Way: A Sketch," trans. Joe Andrew, in ''Russian Women's Shorter Fiction: An Anthology, 1835–1860'', Clarendon Press, 1996. *"After the Flood" (short story), trans. Karla Thomas Solomon, in ''Russian Women Writers'', vol. 1, ed. Christine D. Tomei, Garland, 1999. *''The Boarding School Girl'' (novel), trans. Karen Rosneck, Northwestern University Press, 2000.


References


External links


Khvoshchinskaya Sisters Digital Collection
{{DEFAULTSORT:Khvoshchinskaya, Nadezhda 1821 births 1889 deaths People from Pronsky District People from Pronsky Uyezd Novelists from the Russian Empire Journalists from the Russian Empire Russian literary critics Russian women literary critics Translators from the Russian Empire Women writers from the Russian Empire Russian women short story writers Pseudonymous women writers Women poets from the Russian Empire Russian women poets Russian women novelists 19th-century women writers from the Russian Empire 19th-century writers from the Russian Empire 19th-century translators from the Russian Empire 19th-century novelists from the Russian Empire 19th-century poets from the Russian Empire 19th-century journalists from the Russian Empire 19th-century short story writers from the Russian Empire 19th-century pseudonymous writers