Preview

Orthodoxia

Advanced search

“Nravstvenniki” or “Derevenshiki” (Village Prose Writers) as Phenomenon of the Russian Spiritual Revival

https://doi.org/10.53822/2712-9276-2022-4-165-197

Abstract

The article researches the legacy of the “nravstvenniki” (village prose writers) as an important phenomenon of the Russian spiritual revival in the second half of the twentieth century. It examines the original view based on the millennia-long experience of peasant life, taken by the “village prose” on the fate of a person facing the destruction of the Russian Orthodox civilization. This experience uniquely combines the Christian soul and the “cosmic” (sobornost’-people-nature) conscience, which allows to immediately and unerringly feel and deeply understand any untruth of the existence. This truly is the latest word of the great Russian literature, not in the chronological sense, since another era is already upon us, but in the sense of revealing the last foundations of the “Russian point of view” (V. Woolf) to the world. The main storyline of the “village prose” was the death of the great Orthodox civilization and the perpetuation of the images of its living members surviving into the second half of the twentieth century. This prompted Viktor Astafyev to call it a unique “global phenomenon born out of the suffering and misfortunes of the people”. The experience of the literature of “nravstvenniki” (Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn), however, also showed the reality of the Orthodox revival of the Russian people, prophesying on this moral basis a new revival of Russia. The article off ers several representative examples of works that enable the reader to understand the spiritual meaning and significance of this literary phenomenon and to appreciate the worldwide historical task it tried to solve: to comprehend both the greatness of the Orthodox peasant civilization and the tragedy of its destruction. The most prominent critique and literary reviews on the “village prose” are also considered. The article ends with substantiating the conclusion of this literary phenomenon becoming the newest Russian classics, corresponding to the most important and urgent tasks of the spiritual revival of Russia and creating a new “canon” of Russian Christian literature of the twenty-first century.

About the Author

V. Yu. Darenski
Lugansk State Pedagogical University
Russian Federation

Doctor of Philosophical Sciences, Professor of the Department of Philosophy

 2, Oboronnaya str., Lugansk, 91031



References

1. Astafyev, V. P. (1990). Sozidat’ miloserdie i bratstvo [To Create Mercy and Brotherhood]. Literaturnaia gazeta, 26th of September, 4. [In Russian].

2. Astafyev, V. P. (1997). Sobr. soch. v 15 t. [Complete Works in 15 Vol.] (Vol. 6). Krasnoyarsk: PIK Ofset. [In Russian].

3. Astafyev, V. P. (1998). Sobr. soch. v 15 t. [Complete Works in 15 Vol.] (Vol. 12). Krasnoyarsk: PIK Ofset. [In Russian].

4. Astafyev, V. P. (1998). Sobr. soch. v 15 t. [Complete Works in 15 Vol.] (Vol. 13). Krasnoyarsk: PIK Ofset. [In Russian].

5. Astafyev, V. P. (2009). Net mne otveta... Epistoliarnyi dnevnik 1952– 2001 [There is No Answer for Me ... Epistolary Diary 1952–2001]. Irkutsk: Izd. Sapronov. [In Russian].

6. Belov, V. I. (1976). Utrom v subbotu. Povesti i rasskazy [Saturday Morning. Tales and Stories]. Vologda: Severo-Zapadnoe knizhnoe izd-vo. [In Russian].

7. Belov, V. I. (1983). Bobrishnyi ugor [Bobrishnyi Hill]. In Selected works in 3 volumes (Vol. 1, pp. 524–536). Moscow: Sovremennik. [In Russian].

8. Belov, V. I. (1989). Kanuny: Khronika kontsa 20-kh gg [Eves: Chronicle of the End of 1920th ]. Moscow: Sovremennik. [In Russian].

9. Belov, V. I. (1993). Predislovie [Foreword]. In Ilyin I. A. Odinokii khudozhnik [Lonely Artist] (pp. 6–16). Moscow: Iskusstvo. [In Russian].

10. Belov, V. I. (2011). Complete works in 7 volumes (Vol. 4). Moscow: Klassika. [In Russian].

11. Belov, V. I. (2013). Kogda voskresnet Rossiia? [When Will Russia Be Resurrected?]. Moscow: Algoritm. [In Russian].

12. Bondarenko, V. G. (2006). Pominal’naia molitva Valentina Rasputina [Memorial Prayer of Valentin Rasputin]. In Rasputin V. G. Povesti. Rasskazy: v 2 t. [Tales and Stories in 2 volumes] (Vol. 1, pp. 392–397). Moscow: Drofa. [In Russian].

13. Darenskiy, V. Iu. (2019). Russkaia pravda Viktora Astaf’eva [Russian Truth of Viktor Astafiev]. Posev. Obshchestvenno-politicheskii zhurnal, 1699(5), 44–53. [In Russian].

14. Iz perepiski N. Ia. Eidel’mana s V. P. Astaf’evym [From the Correspondence of N. Ya. Eidelman with V. P. Astafyev] (1990). Daugava, 6, 62–67. [In Russian].

15. Kormilov, S. (1999). “My zabyli, chto takie liudi byvaiut”: Akhmatova i Solzhenitsyn [“We Forgot That Such People Exist”: Akhmatova and Solzhenitsyn]. Literaturnoe obozrenie, 1, 23–29. [In Russian].

16. Korotaev, V. (1976). Gorit ego zvezda [His Star Is Burning]. In Rubtsov N. Podorozhniki [Plantains] (pp. 5–10). Moscow: Molodaia gvardiia. [In Russian].

17. Krest beskonechnyi. V. Astaf’ev — V. Kurbatov: Pis’ma iz glubiny Rossii [The Cross Is Endless. V. Astafiev — V. Kurbatov: Letters from the Depths of Russia]. (2003). Irkutsk : Izd. Sapronov. [In Russian].

18. Krupin, V. (2009). Skoro utro, no eshche noch’ [Morning is Soon, But It’s Still Night]. Moscow: Pareto-Print. [In Russian].

19. Kurbatov, V. (1979). Kniga odnoi zhizni [The Book of One Life]. In Astaf’ev V. P. Complete works in 4 volumes (Vol. 1, pp. 5–36). Moscow: Molodaia gvardiia. [In Russian].

20. Kurbatov, V. (2004). Diagnoz. Posleslovie [Diagnosis. Afterword]. In Rasputin V. G. Doch’ Ivana, mat’ Ivana [Daughter of Ivan, Mother of Ivan] (pp. 456–464). Irkutsk: Izd. Sapronov. [In Russian].

21. Lobanov, M. P. (1982). Razmyshleniia o literature i zhizni [Reflections on Literature and Life]. Moscow: Sov. Rossiia. [In Russian].

22. Mialo, K. (1988). Oborvannaia nit’. Krest’ianskaia kul’tura i kul’turnaia revoliutsiia [Broken Thread. Peasant Culture and Cultural Revolution]. Novyi mir, 8, 245–257. [In Russian].

23. Nedvetsky, V. A., Filippov V. V. (2002). Russkaia “derevenskaia” proza: V pomoshch’ prepodavateliam, starsheklassnikam i abiturientam [Russian “Village” Prose: In Aid of the Teachers, High School Students and Applicants]. Moscow: Izd-vo Mosk. un-ta. [In Russian].

24. Parte, K. (2004). Russkaia derevenskaia proza: svetloe proshloe [Russian Village Prose: A Light Past]. Tomsk: Tomsk. gos. unt. [In Russian].

25. Rasputin, V. G. (2006). Povesti. Rasskazy: v 2 t. [Tales. Stories. In 2 volumes] (Vol. 1). Moscow: Drofa. [In Russian].

26. Razuvalova, A. I. (2015). Pisateli-“derevenshchiki”: literatura i konservativnaia ideologiia 1970-kh godov [Writers-“Villagers”: Literature and Conservative Ideology of the 1970s.]. Moscow: Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie. [In Russian].

27. Rodnianskaia, I. B. (1989). Khudozhnik v poiskakh istiny [The Artist in Search of Truth]. Moscow: Sovremennik. [In Russian].

28. Seleznev, Iu. I. (2014). V mire Dostoevskogo. Slovo zhivoe i mertvoe [In the World of Dostoevsky. The Word is Alive and Dead]. Moscow: Algoritm. [In Russian].

29. Slavnikova, O. (1999). Derevenskaia proza lednikovogo perioda [Rural Prose of the Ice Age]. Novyi mir, 2, 198–207. [In Russian].

30. Soloukhin, V. A. (1977). Sedina [Gray]. Moscow: Sov. pisatel’. [In Russian].

31. Soloukhin, V. A. (1989). Smekh za levym plechom [Laughter Behind the Left Shoulder]. Moscow: Sovremennik. [In Russian].

32. Solzhenitsyn, A. I. (2007). Complete works in 30 volumes (Vol. 1). Moscow: Vremia. [In Russian].

33. Zalygin, S. P. (1991). Predislovie [Foreword]. In Krupin V. Selected works in 2 volumes (Vol. 1, pp. 5–6). Moscow: Molodaia gvardiia. [In Russian].

34. Zinoviev, A. A. (2020). Russkaia sud’ba, ispoved’ otshchepentsa [Russian Fate, Confession of a Renegade]. Moscow: Rodina. [In Russian].


Review

For citations:


Darenski V.Yu. “Nravstvenniki” or “Derevenshiki” (Village Prose Writers) as Phenomenon of the Russian Spiritual Revival. Orthodoxia. 2022;(4):165-197. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.53822/2712-9276-2022-4-165-197

Views: 277


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


ISSN 2712-9276 (Print)
ISSN 2949-2424 (Online)