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Author Patyk, Lynn Ellen, author

Title Written in blood : revolutionary terrorism and Russian literary culture, 1861-1881 / Lynn Ellen Patyk
Published Madison, Wisconsin : The University of Wisconsin Press, [2017]
©2017

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Description 1 online resource
Contents Prologue: "Just You Wait! (Uzho tebe!)" -- Part 1: Enigmas of A-synchrony. What do Nihilists do? ; "Very dangerous!" ; Extraordinary men and gloomy monsters ; "Daring and original things" (Assez causé!) ; "Vous trouvez que l'assassinat est grandeur d'âme?" ; Spoiling one idea to save another ; A gloomier catechism -- Part 2: Apparitional terrorism in demons. "Again, like before" ; "The only possible explanation of all these wonders" ; Tarantulas with a heart? ; Dostoevsky's counterterrorism : "The first step" ; Dostoevsky's counterterrorism (Continued) : Laughter through fear ; The unity of all terrorism(s) -- Part 3: "The little devil sitting in your heart". A change of heart ; An original pan ; Emotions on trial : witness testimony and the prosecution ; Emotions on trial II : the defense ; Whose rebellion? ; False Christs and little devils ; "That is the whole answer" ; The Khokhlakova Principle : Russian society in the mirror of revolutionary terrorism ; Again, like before (again) -- Part 4: The beautiful dead (Deed). Writing in blood ; An icon with death ; Celebrity icons ; Terror in search of a face -- Epilogue: "All of Europe thrills to the horror."
Summary Written in Blood offers a fundamentally new interpretation of the emergence of modern terrorism, arguing that it formed in the Russian literary imagination well before any shot was fired or bomb exploded. In March 1881, Russia stunned the world when a small band of revolutionaries calling themselves "terrorists" assassinated the Tsar-Liberator, Alexander II. Horrified Russians blamed the influence of European political and social ideas, while shocked Europeans perceived something new and distinctly Russian in a strategy of political violence that became known the world over as "terrorism" or "the Russian method." Lynn Ellen Patyk contends that the prototype for the terrorist was the Russian writer, whose seditious word was interpreted as an audacious deed - and a violent assault on autocratic authority. The interplay and interchangeability of word and deed, Patyk argues, laid the semiotic groundwork for the symbolic act of violence at the center of revolutionary terrorism. While demonstrating how literary culture fostered the ethos, pathos, and image of the revolutionary terrorist and terrorism, she spotlights Fyodor Dostoevsky and his "terrorism trilogy"--Crime and Punishment (1866), Demons (1870-73), and The Brothers Karamazov (1878-80) - as novels that uniquely illuminate terrorism's methods and trajectory. Deftly combining riveting historical narrative with penetrating literary analysis of major and minor works, Patyk's groundbreaking book reveals the power of the word to spawn deeds and the power of literature to usher new realities into the world. -- Provided by publisher
Notes Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on February 28, 2020)
Subject Alexander II, Emperor of Russia, 1818-1881 -- Assassination
Dostoyevsky, Fyodor, 1821-1881 -- Political and social views
SUBJECT Alexander II, Emperor of Russia, 1818-1881 fast
Dostoyevsky, Fyodor, 1821-1881 fast
Die Stadt ohne Juden gnd
Subject Russian literature -- Political aspects
Terrorism -- Russia -- History -- 19th century
Terrorism in literature.
Terrorism -- Russia (Federation) -- History -- 19th century
LITERARY CRITICISM -- Russian & Former Soviet Union.
Assassination
Political and social views
Russian literature -- Political aspects
Terrorism
Terrorism in literature
Terrorismus
Entstehung
Literatur
Nihilismus Motiv
Terrorismus Motiv
Russia
Russland
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780299312237
0299312232