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Thread: Communist attitudes to Anna Karenina

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    Registered User kev67's Avatar
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    Communist attitudes to Anna Karenina

    I finished part 3 yesterday. It is interesting about Levin's attempts to improve farming practices and his experiments in profit sharing with his peasant farmers. He is frustrated because his hired workers will not buy into his ideas, such as using iron ploughs, etc. Whatever his instructions, his labourers will circumvent them if they can, because they are used to their old ways. His brother, Nikolai criticized him for stripping off Communist ideas but not going far enough. It was quite interesting to read that Communist ideas had already taken root. Then there are these zemstvo local councils that had recently been introduced. Serfs had only been emancipated about 20 years earlier.

    I wondered what Lenin and the other Communist revolutionaries would have made of Anna Karenina. What would they think of Levin?
    According to Aldous Huxley, D.H. Lawrence once said that Balzac was 'a gigantic dwarf', and in a sense the same is true of Dickens.
    Charles Dickens, by George Orwell

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    On the road, but not! Danik 2016's Avatar
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    What is interesting is that the communist in this case is the land owner, while the workers, who would be the great beneficiaries, mistrust the arrangement. One doubt, does the book already use the term communism ? It is so long ago that I read the book (but there was a film one or two years ago that focused on this part of the story).
    In Faust II finished in 1831, there is also a suggestion of an agrarious community, with donation of the land to the workers. But the episode is ironic. It is the last dream of an old and blind Faust. He issues his orders and dies thinking that his project was executed but Mephistofeles takes care that it isn´t. Anyway the ideals of communism seem to go back to the 19C and maybe earlier.
    "I seemed to have sensed also from an early age that some of my experiences as a reader would change me more as a person than would many an event in the world where I sat and read. "
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    Registered User kev67's Avatar
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    I am not sure Levin was a communist though. As he explains to his brother, he hopes everyone will be better off by adopting his methods, including himself. There will be some profit sharing, but he still hopes to be rich, at least enough to have the capital to run his estate.

    This is what makes me wonder whether Lenin, Trotsky et al. would have had Tolstoy put against a wall and shot. I suspect not.
    According to Aldous Huxley, D.H. Lawrence once said that Balzac was 'a gigantic dwarf', and in a sense the same is true of Dickens.
    Charles Dickens, by George Orwell

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    On the road, but not! Danik 2016's Avatar
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    I am not so sure about that. After all Tolstoy was a nobleman.
    "I seemed to have sensed also from an early age that some of my experiences as a reader would change me more as a person than would many an event in the world where I sat and read. "
    Gerald Murnane, Tamarisk Row

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    Registered User mona amon's Avatar
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    I think they liked him, at least Lenin did. He was a cultural icon, and he was against private property, though from a Christian perspective. Lenin wrote an article about him - "Leo Tolstoy as the Mirror of the Russian Revolution," which sounds quite positive but I'm not sure what he says in it. If he'd actually lived during the worst part of the Soviet era, who knows, he may have been lined up and shot along with all the other writers.
    Last edited by mona amon; 11-18-2016 at 10:40 AM.
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    On the road, but not! Danik 2016's Avatar
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    Thanks for the indication, Mona. The article,as one would expect, reflects Lenin´s political concerns: "Tolstoy is original, because the sum total of his views, taken as a whole, happens to express the specific features of our revolution as a peasant bourgeois revolution."
    https://www.marxists.org/archive/len...908/sep/11.htm
    "I seemed to have sensed also from an early age that some of my experiences as a reader would change me more as a person than would many an event in the world where I sat and read. "
    Gerald Murnane, Tamarisk Row

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