The Woman in the Window: Commerce, Consensual Fantasy, and the Quest for Masculine Virtue in the Russian Novel

The Woman in the Window: Commerce, Consensual Fantasy, and the Quest for Masculine Virtue in the Russian Novel

by Russell Scott Valentino
The Woman in the Window: Commerce, Consensual Fantasy, and the Quest for Masculine Virtue in the Russian Novel

The Woman in the Window: Commerce, Consensual Fantasy, and the Quest for Masculine Virtue in the Russian Novel

by Russell Scott Valentino

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Overview

In The Woman in the Window: Commerce, Consensual Fantasy, and the Quest for Masculine Virtue in the Russian Novel, Russell Scott Valentino offers pioneering new insights into the historical construction of virtue and its relation to the rapidly shifting economic context in modern Russia. This study illustrates how the traditional virtue ethic, grounded in property-based conceptions of masculine heroism, was eventually displaced by a new commercial ethic that rested upon consensual fantasy. The new economic world destabilized traditional Russian notions of virtue and posed a central question that Russian authors have struggled to answer since the early nineteenth century: How could a self-interested commercial man be incorporated into the Russian context as a socially valuable masculine character?
 
With chapters on Gogol, Tolstoy, and Dostoevsky as well as Pasternak and Nabokov, The Woman in the Window argues that Russian authors worked through this question via their depictions of “mixed-up men.” Such characters, according to Valentino, reveal that in a world where social reality and personal identity depend on consensual fantasies, the old masculine figure loses its grounding and can easily drift away. Valentino charts a range of masculine character types thrown off stride by the new commercially inflected world: those who embrace blind confidence, those who are split with doubt or guilt, and those who look for an ideal of steadfastness and purity to keep afloat—a woman in a window.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814252871
Publisher: Ohio State University Press
Publication date: 06/01/2016
Edition description: 1
Pages: 186
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Russell Scott Valentino is professor and chair in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at Indiana University, Bloomington.

Table of Contents

Introduction • In Search of (Russian) Virtue
-Virtue Unearthed
-The Very Word
-Two Visions of (American) Virtue
-After Virtual
-American Property, Russian Earth
-Virtue as One and as Many
Chapter One • Three Modern Characters: The Double, the Con Man, and the Woman in the Window
-The Speaker’s Ethos
-Characters
-The Amazing Mr. Golyadkin (Junior)
-Gogol’s Man of Confidence
-The Woman in the Window
Chapter Two • The Commercial Ethic in Gogol’s Dead Souls
-Order in the Gallery
-A Commercial Catalogue
-The Advent of Refined Avarice
-Le doux Chichikov and the Worth of a Man
Chapter Three • In Search of the Virtuous Man: Minor Readings
-Divided Man
-Whole Man
Chapter Four • Lara, Lolita, and Other Things that Start with L
-
Two Books, Four Movies
-Women in Windows
-Doubles and Heroes
Conclusion • DeLillo’s Cosmopolis and the End of an Idiom
-World City
-Body, Mind, Body
-Property, the Road, and the Confidence Man
-Doubt, the Double, and the Sick Cosmopolitan
-Behind the Kitchen Door

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