A Nation Astray

Nomadism and National Identity in Russian Literature

Ingrid Anne Kleespies author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cornell University Press

Published:15th Nov '12

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

A Nation Astray cover

The metaphor of the nomad may at first seem surprising for Russia given its history of serfdom, travel restrictions, and strict social hierarchy. But as the imperial center struggled to tame a vast territory with ever-expanding borders, ideas of mobility, motion, travel, wandering, and homelessness came to constitute important elements in the discourse about national identity. For Russians of the nineteenth century national identity was anything but stable.

This rootlessness is at the core of A Nation Astray. Here, Ingrid Anne Kleespies traces the image of the nomad and its relationship to Russian national identity through the debates and discussion of literary works by seminal writers like Karamzin, Pushkin, Chaadaev, Goncharov, and Dostoevsky. Appealing to students of Russian Romanticism, nationhood, and identity, as well as general readers interested in exile and displacement as elements of the human condition, this interdisciplinary work illuminates the historical and philosophical underpinnings of a basic aspect of Russian self-determination: the nomadic constitution of the Russian nation.

This monograph makes an important contribution to scholarship on classical Russian literature and thought.

* Slavonic and East European Review *

A Nation Astray shows that normative ideas of civilization, originating in Western Europe, put Russia in a difficult situation, from which the road and the nomad offered one, sometimes elusive, escape.

* The Russian Revi

ISBN: 9780875804613

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 24mm

Weight: 907g

265 pages