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There are 6 critical essays on The Duel BookRags.
Critical Essays on The Duel BookRags

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Critical Essay by Beverly Hahn
9,416 words, approx. 31 pages
 In the following excerpt, Hahn describes “The Duel” as “novelistic” in form and method, explores its theme, and compares the work to the fiction of Tolstoy.
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Critical Essay by Willa Chamberlain Axelrod
9,296 words, approx. 31 pages
 In the following essay, Axelrod sees “the need for salvation and moral reform” as central to “The Duel,” and traces biblical references underlying this theme in the work.
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Critical Essay by John Tulloch
5,579 words, approx. 19 pages
 In the following excerpt, Tulloch interprets “The Duel” in light of evolutionary degeneration theory, and views the conflict between an “ambivalence of false choice” and the story's “epic vision of hope and suffering.”
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Critical Essay by Andrew R. Durkin
4,362 words, approx. 15 pages
 In the following essay, Durkin investigates allusions to the writing of N. S. Laskov in “The Duel,” and examines the opposition between science and the humanities in the story.
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Critical Essay by Irina Kirk
3,522 words, approx. 12 pages
 In the following excerpt, Kirk discusses plot, character, and theme in “The Duel.”
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Critical Essay by V. S. Pritchett
2,048 words, approx. 7 pages
 In the following excerpt, Pritchett analyzes “The Duel,” focusing on character and the work's “playlike architecture.”

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