Ivan Turgenev(1818-1883)
- Writer
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Ivan Turgenev was born into a wealthy landowning family with many
serfs, in the city of Oryol in Southern Russia. His father, a cavalry
colonel, died when he was 15, and he was raised by his abusive mother,
who ruled her 5000 serfs ruthlessly with a whip. He never married, but
fathered a daughter with one of their family serfs. Turgenev studied at
Universities of Moscow, St. Petersburg, and Berlin, and later in his
life received a Doctorate degree from Oxford. Turgenev lived in Western
Europe for most of his life and admired the advancements of the Western
civilization. He advocated modernization of Russia and liberation of
serfs. In "A Sportsman's Sketches" (1852) he bitterly criticized
serfdom, and in "A Nest of Nobles" (1859), and "On the Eve" he focused
on the social and political troubles brewing in Russia. In his
masterpiece "Fathers and Sons" (1862) Turgenev presented a man of the
new generation, an educated and open-minded medical student Basarov, in
a conflict with the old generation of 'fathers', who are standing for
the ultra-conservative Russia. After being wildly attacked by Russian
critics, Turgenev retired in Europe, living in Baden-Baden and Paris
where he had a life-long affair with the celebrated singer Pauline
Garcia-Viardot. His late stories "First Love", "Asya", "Torrents of
Spring", and a collection of "Poetry in Prose" are among the finest in
all of the Russian literature. He died in Bougival, near Paris, and was
buried in St. Petersburg, Russia. Turgenev's influence may be found in
Western literature; in the works of
Gustave Flaubert, and also
Ernest Hemingway, who regarded "A
Sportsman's Sketches" as his favorite book. .