Moscow as the main heroine in Pasternak´s novel Doctor Zhivago?
Journal article, Peer reviewed
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Date
2016Metadata
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Vaagan RWV. Moscow as the main heroine in Pasternak´s novel Doctor Zhivago?. Intercultural Communication Studies. 2016;25(1):176-188Abstract
In 2008, Robert N. St. Clair and Wei Song published a book entitled
The
Many Layers of Culture Within Each City,
applying their analytical framework to
case studies of Harbin, Rio de Janeiro, Venice and Lisbon
(St. Clair & Song, 2008).
Invited to write a preface to their book, it struck me that a number of other cities could
have been included. This influenced me to revisit an earlier text I had written in 1995
on the Russian writer Boris Pasternak (1890-1960) and his novel
Doctor Zhivago,
which won him the Nobel Prize in literature in 1958.
My text was concerned with
Pasternak’s literary prowess, especially his stylistic use of anthropomorphisms which
are so typical of his style, and which infuse life into the prose and poetry parts of this
great novel (Vaagan, 1996). But there were also many other ideas I had to set aside,
including the role of the capital Moscow as a possible main character or heroine in the
novel. Few would question the existence of many layers of culture in Moscow with
its complex history, but is there enough justification to consider the city as the main
heroine of the novel?