Preview

Russian Journal of Philosophical Sciences

Advanced search

The Russian People as They Are. Turgenev’s View

https://doi.org/10.30727/0235-1188-2018-7-71-82

Abstract

The question of the Russian man – his past, present and future – is the central one in the philosophy of history. Unfortunately, at present this area of philosophy is not suffciently developed in Russia. Partly the reason for this situation is the lack of understanding by researchers of the role played by Russian classical literature and its philosophizing writers in historiosophy. The Hunting Sketches, a collection of short stories by I.S. Turgenev, is a work still undervalued, not fully considered not only in details but also in general meanings. And this is understandable because it is the frst systematic encyclopedia of Russian worldview, which is not envisaged by the literary genre. To a certain extent, Turgenev’s line is continued by I. Goncharov (the theme of the mind and heart), L. Tolstoy (the theme of the living and the dead, nature and society, the people and the lords), F. Dostoevsky (natural and rational rights), A. Chekhov (worthy and vulgar life). This article examines the philosophical nature of The Hunting Sketches, its structure and content. According to author’s opinion, stories can be divided into ten groups according to their dominant meanings. Thus, in The Hunting Sketches the main Russian types are depicted: “natural man,” rational, submissive, cunning, honest, sensitive, passionate, poetic, homeless, suffering, calmly accepting death, imbued with the immensity of the world. In the image and the comments of the wandering protagonist, Ivan Turgenev reveals his own philosophical credo, which he defnes as a moderate liberalism – freedom of thought and action, without prejudice to others.

About the Author

Sergey Nickolsky
Institute of Philosophy, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow
Russian Federation
D.Sc. in Philosophy, Main Research Fellow at the Department of Philosophy of Culture



References

1. Berdyaev N.A. (2000) Russian Idea. The Fate of Russia. Moscow: V. Shevchuk Publ. (in Russian).

2. Frank S.L. (1996) Russisan Worldview. Saint-Petersburg.: Nauka Publ. (in Russian).

3. Nikolsky S.A., Filimonov V.P. (2009) Russian Worldview. Vol. II. How Is Possible a Positive Cause in Russia: A Quest for the Answer in the National Philosophy and Classical Literature of 1840s–1860s. Moscow: ProgressTraditsiya Publ. (in Russian).

4. Turgenev I.S. (1975) Works in Twelve Volumes. Vol. 1. Moscow: Khudozhestvennaya Literatura (in Russian).


Review

For citations:


Nickolsky S. The Russian People as They Are. Turgenev’s View. Russian Journal of Philosophical Sciences. 2018;(7):71-82. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.30727/0235-1188-2018-7-71-82



Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 0235-1188 (Print)
ISSN 2618-8961 (Online)