ANDREI PLATONOV AND ROMANTIC YEARNING

Along with utopian orientation, Platonov has an unconscious melancholic creative motive which can be defined with the help of the word yearning. The semantic volume of this key word of Russian culture is much broader in Platonov’s philosophy than in the literary tradition, and specifically in the li...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Günther Hans
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Ural State Pedagogical University 2019-02-01
Series:Филологический класс
Subjects:
Online Access:https://filclass.ru/en/archive/2019/4-58/andrei-platonov-and-romantic-yearning
id doaj-651a49a20a804ae3bdba25398dc2d3d2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-651a49a20a804ae3bdba25398dc2d3d22020-11-25T04:06:44ZrusUral State Pedagogical UniversityФилологический класс2071-24052658-52352019-02-014 (58)666910.26170/FK19-04-08ANDREI PLATONOV AND ROMANTIC YEARNINGGünther Hans0University of BielefeldAlong with utopian orientation, Platonov has an unconscious melancholic creative motive which can be defined with the help of the word yearning. The semantic volume of this key word of Russian culture is much broader in Platonov’s philosophy than in the literary tradition, and specifically in the literature of the epoch of Romanticism. Irrespective of the fact that the romantic interpretation of yearning radically differs from that of Platonov, the comparison of the two conceptions can throw new light on Platonov’s creative activity. A comparative study can be based on the plot of a travel lying at the basis of both numerous works of romantic fiction and Platonov’s novel “Chevengur”. Estranged from society, the romantic protagonist is characterized by his “asocial” nature. His yearning is an expression of individual mood, whereas in Platonov’s creative activity the word yearning often includes a salient “prosocial” meaning and orientation towards collective future. Thus, for instance, “yearning for the end of history” plays an outstanding role in “Chevengur”. In various Platonov’s texts of the early 1920s, we come across the expression “yearning for the impossible”, which undoubtedly originates from the “Eros of the Impossible” by the symbolist Vyacheslav Ivanov. As long as Ivanov opposes the striving for the “impossible” to the romantic “yearning for the impossible, it was not difficult for Platonov to support this criticism of romantic yearning. The “yearning for the impossible” is used by him for some years in connection with the idea of transformation of the universe. After the crash of the “Chevengur” utopia, nevertheless, the “hope for a better future” gives place to the “yearning for the past”.https://filclass.ru/en/archive/2019/4-58/andrei-platonov-and-romantic-yearningyearningbyronismromanticismegocentric herotravel plotliterary subjectsrussian literaturerussian writers
collection DOAJ
language Russian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Günther Hans
spellingShingle Günther Hans
ANDREI PLATONOV AND ROMANTIC YEARNING
Филологический класс
yearning
byronism
romanticism
egocentric hero
travel plot
literary subjects
russian literature
russian writers
author_facet Günther Hans
author_sort Günther Hans
title ANDREI PLATONOV AND ROMANTIC YEARNING
title_short ANDREI PLATONOV AND ROMANTIC YEARNING
title_full ANDREI PLATONOV AND ROMANTIC YEARNING
title_fullStr ANDREI PLATONOV AND ROMANTIC YEARNING
title_full_unstemmed ANDREI PLATONOV AND ROMANTIC YEARNING
title_sort andrei platonov and romantic yearning
publisher Ural State Pedagogical University
series Филологический класс
issn 2071-2405
2658-5235
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Along with utopian orientation, Platonov has an unconscious melancholic creative motive which can be defined with the help of the word yearning. The semantic volume of this key word of Russian culture is much broader in Platonov’s philosophy than in the literary tradition, and specifically in the literature of the epoch of Romanticism. Irrespective of the fact that the romantic interpretation of yearning radically differs from that of Platonov, the comparison of the two conceptions can throw new light on Platonov’s creative activity. A comparative study can be based on the plot of a travel lying at the basis of both numerous works of romantic fiction and Platonov’s novel “Chevengur”. Estranged from society, the romantic protagonist is characterized by his “asocial” nature. His yearning is an expression of individual mood, whereas in Platonov’s creative activity the word yearning often includes a salient “prosocial” meaning and orientation towards collective future. Thus, for instance, “yearning for the end of history” plays an outstanding role in “Chevengur”. In various Platonov’s texts of the early 1920s, we come across the expression “yearning for the impossible”, which undoubtedly originates from the “Eros of the Impossible” by the symbolist Vyacheslav Ivanov. As long as Ivanov opposes the striving for the “impossible” to the romantic “yearning for the impossible, it was not difficult for Platonov to support this criticism of romantic yearning. The “yearning for the impossible” is used by him for some years in connection with the idea of transformation of the universe. After the crash of the “Chevengur” utopia, nevertheless, the “hope for a better future” gives place to the “yearning for the past”.
topic yearning
byronism
romanticism
egocentric hero
travel plot
literary subjects
russian literature
russian writers
url https://filclass.ru/en/archive/2019/4-58/andrei-platonov-and-romantic-yearning
work_keys_str_mv AT guntherhans andreiplatonovandromanticyearning
_version_ 1724430880897761280