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Yury Olesha Critical Essay | Critical Essay by Elizabeth Klosty Beaujour

This literature criticism consists of approximately 16 pages of analysis & critique of Yury Olesha.
This section contains 4,786 words
(approx. 16 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Yuri Olesha - Critical Essay by Elizabeth Klosty Beaujour

Critical Essay by Elizabeth Klosty Beaujour

SOURCE: Beaujour, Elizabeth Klosty. “Proust-Envy: Fiction and Autobiography in the Works of Iurii Olesha.” Studies in Twentieth Century Literature 1 (1977): 123-34.

In the following essay, Beaujour portrays Olesha's No Day Without a Line as a pessimistic semi-autobiographical work and notes Olesha's attempts to compare himself with Marcel Proust.

The Soviet novelist, Iurii Olesha always said that his talent was essentially autobiographical.1 In his best known declaration, the speech to the First Congress of Soviet Writers in 1934, he stated: “People told me2 that Kavalerov [the hero of his novel Envy] had many of my traits, that it was an autobiographical portrait, that indeed Kavalerov was me. Yes, Kavalerov did look through my eyes. Kavalerov's colors, light, comparisons, metaphors and thoughts about things were mine.”3 To this admission that Kavalerov's sensibility, though not his activity, were Olesha's own, one may add the apparently autobiographical material of the childhood stories: “The...
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This section contains 4,786 words
(approx. 16 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Yuri Olesha - Critical Essay by Elizabeth Klosty Beaujour
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Yuri Olesha - Critical Essay by Elizabeth Klosty Beaujour from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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