Russian 330

The Forbidden: Eroticism, Passion and Death in Russian Culture

GEN ED/EUC

 

Monday and Wednesday 2:50-4:40


 

Professor: Kristin Bidoshi                                          Office Hours: MWF 9:30-10:30

Office: Humanities 114B                                            Phone: 388-7105

E-Mail: bidoshik@union.edu

 

 

Course Description: In this course we will investigate the forbidden in 19th and 20th century Russian culture. Specifically, we will focus on eroticism, passion and death in the context of Russian literature and culture. We will discuss problems of passion, desire, pain and torment, and issues of death and rebirth. The course will be conducted as a combination of lectures and class discussion. One film will be shown. Through analysis of literature, music, and painting we will ask questions such as: Is there a necessary link between the erotic and the forbidden? What does a portrayal of passion tell us about a society's value system? Is death in Russian culture celebrated or condemned and is it a way of self-knowledge?

 

Course Requirements and Evaluation: Students will be expected to have completed the reading for each class as outlined below and to actively contribute to class discussion. Students are strongly encouraged to attend classes regularly. In addition, students will be responsible for the presentation of one short story. You must sign up for a presentation slot and have your topic approved no later than the end of the third week of class. Students will also write two one-page response papers due the third and fifth week of class. The final 8-page paper will be submitted first as a draft and then as a final version. Detailed instructions on writing assignments will be provided. The final grade for the course will be determined based on the following:

 

Attendance and Participation     40%

Two Response Papers              10% (5% each)

Presentation                              10%

Final Paper  (8 pgs)                  40%

 

Required Reading: (Works marked with an asterisk are short stories in a course packet that you must purchase from Livia in the Modern Languages office. You will need to do this as soon as possible. The packet costs $15.  You will purchase Anna Karenina and It’s Me Edichoka later in the term.)

 

*Pushkin, “Bronze Horseman”

*Lermontov, “Tamara”, “The Angel” and “Demon”

*Gogol, “Vii” and "The Tale of How Ivan Ivanovich Quarreled with Ivan Nikiforovich"

*Turgenev, “First Love”

*Dostoevsky, "White Nights"

*Leskov, “Lady McBeth of the Mtsensk District”

Tolstoy, Anna Karenina (must be the Norton Critical Edition)

*Gorky, “26 Men and a Girl”

Limonov, It's Me Edichoka

 

 

The Forbidden:

Eroticism, Passion and Death in Russian Culture

Weekly Schedule

 

 

Week One                                St. Petersburg as Symbol of Russia’s Cultural Schizophrenia

Monday, September 8                Introduction to Class/Class Policies

 

Wednesday, September 10         Pushkin, “Bronze Horseman”

 

 

Week Two                                Love and Passion in Russian Culture

Monday, September 15              Lermontov, “Tamara”, “The Angel”, “Demon” and Gogol, "Vii" and

"The Tale of How Ivan Ivanovich Quarreled with Ivan Nikiforovich" 

 

Wednesday, September 17         Romanticism in Art: Brullov, "Last Day of Pompeii"; Ivanov, "Appearance of the Messiah"

 

 

Week Three                             Abusing the Erotic: Pain and Torment in Russian Literature

Monday, September 22              Turgenev, "First Love"

 

Wednesday, September 24         Dostoevsky, "White Nights"                 * 1st Response Paper Due

 

 

 

Week Four                               Death in Russian Realistic Art and Literature

Monday, September 29              Realism in Art: Perov, "Village Burial"; Kramskoy, "Inconsolable Grief"

and "Christ in the Wilderness"; Repin, "Mussorgsky" and "Volga

Boatmen"

 

Wednesday, October 1              Leskov, “Lady McBeth of the Mtsensk District”

 

 

 

Week Five                               Passion

Monday, October 6                    Tolstoy, Anna Karenina Book 1, Parts 1, 2 (1-216)

 

Wednesday, October 8              Tolstoy, Anna Karenina Book 1, Part 3 (216-321)

                                                                                                            * 2nd Response Paper Due

 

 

Week Six                                 Seduction

Monday, October 13                  Tolstoy, Anna Karenina Books 1 & 2, Parts 4 & 5 (321-500)

 

Wednesday, October 15             Tolstoy, Anna Karenina Book 2, Part 6 (500-606)

 

 

 

Week Seven                             Adultery

Monday, October 20                  Tolstoy, Anna Karenina Book 2, Part 7 (606-695)

 

 

 

Week Seven    

Wednesday, October 22             Tolstoy, Anna Karenina Book 2, Part 8 (695-740)

 

 

Week Eight                              Romance and Sex in the Silver Age
Monday, October 27                  Chaikovsky Ballets: Romeo and Juliet, Swan Lake, and The Nutcracker,

Sex and the Silver Age: Assorted Symbolist Poetry ("The Puppet Show")

 

Wednesday, October 29             Gorky, "26 Men and a Girl" and Discussion of Passion in Art:

Vasnetsov, "The Warrior at the Crossroads", "A Song of Joy and Sorrow", "The Baptism of Rus", "Bogatyrs"; Vrubel, "The Demon Downcast", "The Demon Seated", "The Swan Princess", "Tamara's Dance"; Petrov-Vodkin, "Morning", "Bathing the Red Horse" and "Boys".

 

 

Week Nine                               The Erotic

Monday, November 3                Discussion of Draft of Final Paper

 

Wednesday, November 5           Limonov, It’s Me, Eddie (1-264)

 

 

Week Ten                                The Forbidden

Monday, November 10              Film: Lolita

 

Wednesday, November 12         Final Comments

 

 

                       

 

Final Paper due day of Final Exam.