Sixteen critical essays are organized around several themes: the issue of translation; politics, including Turgenev's liberalism, view of revolution, and attitude toward nihilism: and various Litcrary aspects, including Turgenev's use of imagery, the role of women, the conflict of generations, and the impact of science.
Michael R. Katz presents Turgenev's greatest and uhimately most important novel in an acclaimed new translation. It captures a world on the brink of change, subtle psychological confrontations among powerful fictional characters, and the gracefulness of' the author's poetic imagination. This new version of Fathers and So·zs will be welcomed by general readers and scholars alike.
The novel is accompanied by a rich selection of Turgenev's letters,illustrating his involvement in the critical storm that surrounded thers and Sons upon its publication in 1862. Four of the most significant critiques of the day further enhance the reader's understanding of this public controversy. Sixteen critical essays are organized around several themes: the issue of translation; politics, including Turgenev's liberalism, view of revolution, and attitude toward nihilism: and various Litcrary aspects, including Turgenev's use of imagery, the role of women, the conflict of generations, and the impact of science.
A Chronology and Selected Bibliography are included.ABOUT THE SERIES: Each Norton Critical Edition includes an authoritative text, contextual and source materials, and a wide range of interpretations--from contemporary perspectives to the most current critical theory--as well as a bibliography and, in many cases, a chronology of the author's life and work.
Preface
The Text of Fathers and Sons
The Author on the Novel
Ivan Turgenev·Apropos of Fathers and Sons
From Turgenev's Letters
P. V. Annenkov to Turgenev, September 26
(October 9), 1861
To P. V. Annenkov, October 1 (13), 1861
To M. N. Katkov, October 1 (13), 1861
To M. N. Katkov, October 27 (November 8), 1861
To M. N. Katkov, October 30 (November 11), 1861
To F. M. Dostoevsky, Mareh 18 (30), 1862
To A. N. Maykov, March 18 (30), 1862
To A. A. Fet, March 19 (31), 1862
To A. A. Fet, April 6 (18), 1862
To K. K. Sluchevsky, April 14 (26), 1862
A. I. Herzen to Turgenev, April 9 (21), 1862
To A. I. Herzen, April 16 (28), 1862
To Ludwig Pietsch, January 22 (February 3), 1869
To Ludwig Pietsch, May 22 (June 3), 1869
To P. V. Annenkov, December 20, 1869 (January 1, 1870)
To Ya. P. Polonsky, December 24, 1869 (January 5, 1870)
To I. P. Borisov, December 24, 1869 (January 5, 1870)
To A. F. Onegin, December 27, 1869 (January 8, 1870)
To A. P. Filosofov, August 18 (30), 1874
To A. P. Filosofov, September 11 (23), 1874
To M. E. Saltykov, January 3 (15), 1876
To A. V. Topomv, November 26 (December 8), 1882
The Contemporary Reaction
Dmitry I. Pisarev·Bazarov
N. N. Strakhov·Fathers and Sons
Apollon Grigorev·[Nihilists]
Alexander Herzen·Bazarov Once Again
Criticism
Edmund Wilson·[On Translating Turgenevl
Sir Isaiah Berlin·Fathers and Children: Turgenev and the
Liberal Predicament
Ralph E. Matlaw·Fathers and Sons
Irving Howe·The Politics of Hesitation
Richard Freeborn·Turgenev and Revolution
Richard Stites·Nihilism and Women
Jane Cosflow·[Odintseva's Bath and Bazarov's Dogs]
Elizabeth Cheresh Allen·[Time in the Novel]
Michael R. Katz·Fathers and Sons (and Daughters)
Gary Saul Morson·Two Kinds of Love
Kathryn Feuer·Fathers and Sons: Fathers and Children
David A. Lowe·The Dialectics of Turgenev's Ottsy ideti
Mikhail Bakhtin·[On Characters' Language]
Michael Holquist·Bazarov and Se·enov: The Role of
Scientific Metaphor in Fathers and Sons
Donald Fanger·The Influence of Dostoevsky and
Chekhov on Turgenev's Fathers and Sons
Robert L. Jackson·The Turgenev Question
Ivan Turgenev: A Chronology
Selected Bibliography