Художественная литература в пространстве политического спора
Abstract
The present study explores the ways of utilizing literature in political dispute, as defined by
Bakhtin’s concept of speech genres exploited in secondary genres. The material includes Turgenev’s
and Dostoyevsky’s novels and Yevgeny Chirikov’s family chronicle. The writers in question present
politics in the anthropological sense of the term: as man’s relation to his social reality. The author
attempts to determine which literary works were viewed as politically motivated and what functions
they fulfilled in political disputes. The analysis reveals the following: literary works often served
as a pretext to start a dispute, and in the dispute itself – as a means of defining the protagonists’
cultural and generational identity and values, as a rhetorical trick, as a source of social concepts
and behaviours, as a catalyst for a revolutionary paradigm and, finally, as a means of discriminating
against political opponents. On these grounds, the author is inclined to argue that Russian literature
of the 19th century constituted a strong social communication component and provided ideological
material for political discourse.
Collections