Ivan Turgenev’s Rome (1840)
https://doi.org/10.30727/0235-1188-2018-7-124-142
Abstract
This article examines the siginifcant role that Romeplayed in the life of Ivan Sergeevich Turgenev (1818–1883). The author researches the “Roman” preferences of young Turgenev, who specialized in ancient literature and philosophy in Moscow, St. Petersburgand Berlin. Special attention is paid to the circumstances of 21-years-old Turgenev’s stay in the Eternal City in February–April 1840 and his relationship with members of Khovrins’ salon in Rome, espesially with the eldest daughter of Khovrin, Alexandra Nikolaevna, in marriage Bakhmeteva (1823–1903), whо became later a wellknown writer on religious and philosophical topics. The author substantiates the version that it was young “Sashenka” Khovrina who became the prototype of Lisa Kalitina in the novel Home of the Gentry, started in Rome at the end of 1857. The author studies the “Italian traces” in the literary work of Turgenev: in early romantic poem Steno (1834), poem Venus of Medicis (1837), novel On the Eve (1859), etc. The author notes that the “civilizational” contrasts between the “North” and the “South”, abundantly scattered in the works of young Turgenev, suggest that in his work has found a kind of continuation of the tradition of the “Russian Northernship,” deriving in Russian literature from G.R. Derzhavin, N.M. Karamzin, Prince P.A. Vyazemsky.
About the Author
Alexey Kara-MurzaRussian Federation
D.Sc. in Philosophy, Professor, Main Research Fellow, Head of Department of Philosophy of Russian History
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Review
For citations:
Kara-Murza A. Ivan Turgenev’s Rome (1840). Russian Journal of Philosophical Sciences. 2018;(7):124-142. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.30727/0235-1188-2018-7-124-142