During my aimless, miscellaneous reading today I stumbled across a commentary on Chekhov that had something that fits almost perfectly with what I was arguing before. Earlier, I was trying to prove that the story is, in fact, optimistic, but I never finished that thought. I said three qualities of the story made me believe that: the author's comments on the story, Ivan's conclusion at the end, and the psychological state of the student. This commentary has an excellent explanation of that last point. This is from Anton Chekhov, A Study of the Short Fiction:
That's a great explanation of Ivan's psychological change at the end of the story. He moves toward "self-unity" and "psychological health" which is quite uplifting. In other stories, the protagonist descends into mental unbalance and delusion. Part of what makes this story different--and more optimistic--is that the character's mental alteration is for the better, and not the worse.In "The Student" the protagonist's inner, subjective view of the world manifests itself in the objective, social reality of the two peasant women. More common in Chekhov's stories is the opposite pattern, whereby the subjective views of the protagonists conflict with the social reality. The pattern in these stories is a variation on such stories as "Ward Number Six" and "Rothschild's Fiddle," wherein the characters question the meaning of their lives; the key difference is that these protagonists do not undergo a moral conversion toward self-unity and psychological health, but instead experience a mental breakdown, the protagonist's state of mind becomes altered
The change in mood also makes the story optimistic. The gloom of the opening is replaced with "strange, mysterious hapiness," and the feeling that life is "enchanting, miraculous, imbued with exalted significance."
Last, Chekhov's own statements cast this story in an optimistic light. He wrote to his brother that he considered this story a rebuttal to those who thought his work was only gloom and sadness.


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