The Village (Grigorovich Novel)
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''The Village'' (russian: Деревня, translit=Derevnya) was the debut novel of
Dmitry Grigorovich Dmitry Vasilyevich Grigorovich (russian: Дми́трий Васи́льевич Григоро́вич) ( – ) was a Russian writer, best known for his first two novels, '' The Village'' and '' Anton Goremyka'', and lauded as the first author ...
, first published by '' Otechestvennye Zapiski'' (Vol. XLIX, book 12) in 1846. It had strong impact upon the Russian literary society and was praised for being "the first work in the Russian literature to face the real peasants life" by Ivan Turgenev.Lotman, L.M. Commentaries and Biography. The Selected Works by D.V.Grigiorovich. Moscow, 1955, Khudozhestvennaye Literatura, Pp. 690-691.


Background

1845-1846 were the years when Grigorovich was very close to authors of ''Otechestvennye Zapiski'', its leading critic Vissarion Belinsky in particular. According to
Fyodor Dostoyevsky Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky (, ; rus, Фёдор Михайлович Достоевский, Fyódor Mikháylovich Dostoyévskiy, p=ˈfʲɵdər mʲɪˈxajləvʲɪdʑ dəstɐˈjefskʲɪj, a=ru-Dostoevsky.ogg, links=yes; 11 November 18219 ...
, having published the ''Saint Petersburg Organ-Grinders'' in the spring of 1945, the young writer was planning to spend that summer in his village but before the departure stayed at the house of Nikolai Nekrasov. Not long before that Belinsky published the Works by
Alexey Koltsov Aleksey Vasilievich Koltsov (russian: link=no, Алексе́й Васи́льевич Кольцо́в; October 15, 1809 – October 29, 1842) was a Russian poet who has been called a Russian Burns. His poems, frequently placed in the mouth of wom ...
, providing the foreword to it, which featured profound analysis of the poet's legacy. Grigoroivich took the book to the country with him and read it several times, enchanted by both Koltsov's verse and Belinsky's article. All of ''The Village'' chapters are provided with epigraphs, three of them (to Chapters 3, 4 and 8), come from poems by Koltsov.


History

The story of Akulina told in ''The Village'' was based on the real life tragedy. In the village owned by Grigorovich's mother a young woman was forcefully married and subsequently beaten to death by her husband. "I worked over the text - especially of the first chapters - diligently, re-writing it many times. After four years of continuous writing I finally went with it to Petersburg," the author remembered. There he brought the manuscript to ''
Sovremennik ''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 ...
'', but Nekrasov for some reason overlooked it and the novel was published by
Andrey Krayevsky Andrey Alexandrovich Krayevsky (russian: Андре́й Алекса́ндрович Крае́вский; February 17 .S. 5 1810 – August 20 .S. 8 1889) was a Russian publisher and journalist, best known for his work as an editor-in-chief of ...
's ''Otechestvennye Zapiski''. "Its success surpassed all my expectations, probably due to its subject matter's originality: nobody had ever written a novel about every day Russian peasantry life before," Grigorovich wrote later. The novel was strongly supported by Vissarion Belinsky, first in his essay "The 1846 Russian Literature Review", then the article "The Answer to Moskvityanin".The Works by V.G. Belinsky. Vol.III. Goslitizdat. Moscow, 1948, pp. 675, 676, 746 Choosing for an example the caricature by M.L. Nevakhovich in ''Yeralash'' magazine (1847, book I, page 5) where Grogorovich was shown as someone searching in a garbage can, he lashed against the critics for whom the novel was too realistic and, by default, 'dirty'. According to modern critic and biographer A. Meshcheryakov, in ''The Village'' Grigorovich's attempt to make a move from a set-of-sketches kind of documentary collage to a novel genre was not entirely successful. The sketch-like quality here prevailed, especially in that the inner world of his heroine was obviously of a lesser interest to the author than myriads of details of the Russian rural life. Still, those were the years when the Natural School movement in Russia was getting closer to the very bottom of a real life and Grigorovich's debut has played a decisive role, according to the critic. ''The Village'' proved to be a healthy antidote to the officially approved "peasant literature" propagated by journals like ''Mayak'' (Lighthouse), praising good-natured, God-loving Russian
muzhik Agriculture in the Russian Empire throughout the 19th-20th centuries Russia represented a major world force, yet it lagged technologically behind other developed countries. Imperial Russia (officially founded in 1721 and abolished in 1917) was am ...
and his benevolent, caring master. The novel was regarded as the strongest statement against the system of serfdom of its time. Characteristically, the original version where Akulina's landlord was shown as a tyrant, has been changed to a more neutral portrait, a clear sign of the author's seeing the system, not its particular proponents, as the real evil, according to A. Meshcheryakov.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Village, The 1846 Russian novels Novels by Dmitry Grigorovich 1846 debut novels