REFLECTIONS ON SOVIET NOVELS
In: World politics: a quarterly journal of international relations, Band 12, Heft 2, S. 165-185
ISSN: 0043-8871
The Soviet novel has considerable anthrop'al value. Leonid Leonov's RUSSIAN FOREST, for instance, has as apparent theme, Soviet forestry politics, but the real one is the vicissitudes of Soviet man, human biography in Soviet Russia. The attitude towards human biography is revelatory of diff soc patterns. A `migratory' industrial society does not value unity of life, does not favor inquiry into a man's past. But in the RUSSIAN FOREST the problem of a perfect biography is a crucial one. What is paradoxical about Soviet industrialization is that it attempts to preserve the basic features of a settled society. Relations between the sexes present an obvious field in perfect biography. In Galina Nikolayeva's BITVA V PUTI (Battle on the Road), the real innovation is the central theme of the novel: adultery. There is human truth in the irresistibility of the attraction which the hero & heroine feel for each other. More important is the glance afforded into the stable structure of the Soviet system, its provincialism & lack of respect for privacy, its bourgeois standard of values (it is the woman-lover who receives the indelible stain). Conformist novels, such as those of Vsevolod Kochetov can be also revelatory of the same institutionalized & internalized soc ideology. IPSA. Adapted from the source document.