Eugene Onegin

Eugene Onegin

by (russia) Pushkin

Length:
105Kwords47chapters
Latest:
Ch. 47校改后记
Activity:
Updated 5y agoScraped 12d ago
34Favorites
0QD Score

About This Novel

Translated classics of Russian and Soviet literature (38 volumes in total), this series also includes "The Insulted and Injured", "The Night Before", "Red Love", "How Steel Was Tempered", "The Insulted and Injured", etc. "Eugene Onegin" is Pushkin's masterpiece. This poetic novel broadly reflects the social life of Russia in the 1820s, truly expresses the anguish, exploration and awakening of Russian youth of that era, and raises many important social issues. Therefore, Belinsky called it "an encyclopedia of Russian life and the most popular work." The central protagonist of the work is the aristocratic young man Onegin. Onegin had a luxurious life similar to that of ordinary aristocratic youths, but the atmosphere of the times and progressive Enlightenment ideas, Adam Smith's "The Wealth of Nations" and Rousseau's "Social Contract", and Byron's poems praising freedom and individual liberation all had an impact on him, causing his attitude towards reality to change. He began to be tired of the empty and boring life in the upper class, and came to the countryside with a desire for a new life, and tried to engage in agricultural reform. However, the flashy aristocratic education did not give him any practical ability to work, and the bad habits of leisure and indolence left a deep mark on him. Coupled with the criticism and opposition from the surrounding landowners, Onegin was still in a state of idleness, depression and hesitation in the end, and contracted the typical disease of the times-melancholy.

What Readers Think

Rating

Good0%Neutral0%Bad0%

Community(0)

You Might Also Like