Something went wrong
Please try again
Overwriting Chaos
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
- Format:
-
28 July 2020

Biography: writers, Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000, Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
“[A] massive and provocative book by the Slavist Richard Tempest has appeared, that aims to come to terms with the entirety of Solzhenitsyn’s ‘fictive worlds.’ With clarity and erudition, Tempest attempts to demonstrate how Solzhenitsyn used numerous experimental and modernist techniques to defend and revivify the realist tradition in literature, a tradition where good and evil are real and utterly palpable, where authentic heroes exist, and where an author committed to truth, responsibility, and the integrity of art manfully resists the chaos and nihilism of the age. Tempest… fully appreciates why Solzhenitsyn rejected ‘the howl of existentialism’ and fashionable but morally and culturally corrosive doctrines about ‘the death of the author.’ Solzhenitsyn refused to fiddle while Rome burned.”
— Daniel J. Mahoney, Perspectives on Political Science
“Richard Tempest’s Overwriting Chaos is a systematic up-to-date study of the structures of Solzhenitsyn’s artistic imagination. It places Solzhenitsyn in three widening frames: as a writer dealing with the Gulag and its pre-history, as an integral part of the Russian literary tradition, and, importantly and innovatively, as a major presence in world literature. It combines intratextual insight with discussions of intertextuality, connections with real-life phenomena, and effect on audiences. … The language of the book is rich, vivid, accessible, and methodologically and multilingually precise. … The book should be taken into account in all further research on Solzhenitsyn’s fiction, as a theory of Solzhenitsyn’s poetics, a source of local insights, a pilot, or a springboard.”
—Leona Toker, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Russian Review
Acknowledgments
A Note on Translations and
Transliterations
Preface
Timeline of Solzhenitsyn’s
Life and Works
Part One: The Writer In Situ
1. The Quilted Jerkin:
Solzhenitsyn’s Life and Art
2. Ice, Squared: “One Day in
the Life of Ivan Denisovich”
3. “Turgenev Never Knew”: The
Shorter Fictions of the 1950s and 1960s
4. Meteor Man: Love the Revolution
5. Helots and Heroes: In the First Circle
6. Rebel versus Rabble: Cancer Ward
Part Two: The Writer Ex Situ
7. Twilight of All the
Russias: The Red Wheel
8. Return: The Shorter
Fictions of the 1990s
9: Modernist?
Appendix. Three Interviews with Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (2003–7)
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index