Man in a Landscape, a central tale of The Monkey Link: A Pilgrimage Novel, is a poetic, medi- tative piece, concentrated on human life and its reasons, and on the figure of the Creator in a double sense: religious and artistic. Its structure is based on various dichotomies, such as ‘landscape’ and ‘view’, ‘genius’ and ‘mediocre’, ‘arts’ and ‘nature’, the boundaries of which become a focal point in the long conversations between the icon restorer, Pavel Petrovič, and the first-person narrator, a painter who eventually turns out to be a novelist. This paper focuses on the revelation of the author’s self- knowledge process. On the one hand, the process manifests in the characters representing Bitov’s alter-ego, and on the other, through the journey that evokes both Dante’s descent into the under- world and the drunken journey of Venička from Moscow to Petuški. By offering a reading of the text that considers the postmodern theory of narcissistic literature and a photographic approach, the analysis discloses how the ‘layer-theory’ of the main character Pavel Petrovič is transforming into an attempt at self-literary criticism by Bitov.
La formula dell’esistenza. I confini della metanarrativa in Čelovek v pejzaže di Andrej Bitov / Trukhanova, Olga. - In: STUDI SLAVISTICI. - ISSN 1824-7601. - XVIII:(2021), pp. 115-130. [10.36253/Studi_Slavis-10889]
La formula dell’esistenza. I confini della metanarrativa in Čelovek v pejzaže di Andrej Bitov
Olga Trukhanova
2021
Abstract
Man in a Landscape, a central tale of The Monkey Link: A Pilgrimage Novel, is a poetic, medi- tative piece, concentrated on human life and its reasons, and on the figure of the Creator in a double sense: religious and artistic. Its structure is based on various dichotomies, such as ‘landscape’ and ‘view’, ‘genius’ and ‘mediocre’, ‘arts’ and ‘nature’, the boundaries of which become a focal point in the long conversations between the icon restorer, Pavel Petrovič, and the first-person narrator, a painter who eventually turns out to be a novelist. This paper focuses on the revelation of the author’s self- knowledge process. On the one hand, the process manifests in the characters representing Bitov’s alter-ego, and on the other, through the journey that evokes both Dante’s descent into the under- world and the drunken journey of Venička from Moscow to Petuški. By offering a reading of the text that considers the postmodern theory of narcissistic literature and a photographic approach, the analysis discloses how the ‘layer-theory’ of the main character Pavel Petrovič is transforming into an attempt at self-literary criticism by Bitov.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.