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Nikolai Gogol

Gogol, Nikolai Vasilyevich


Nikolai Vasilyevich Gogol (nyĬkəlī´ vəsē´lyəvĬch gô´gəl), 1809–52, Russian short-story writer, novelist, and playwright, sometimes considered the father of Russian realism. Of Ukrainian origin, he first won literary success with fanciful and romantic tales of his native Ukraine in Evenings on a Farm near Dikanka (1831–32). His next stories, in Mirgorod (1835), contained elements of romance, humor, and the supernatural. "Taras Bulba," part of the collection, is a vigorous description of the adventures of a 17th-century Cossack. Gogol then wrote several tales set in St. Petersburg. The most famous of these is The Overcoat (1842), about a downtrodden clerk who sacrifices much to buy a new overcoat that is stolen the first time he wears it. As a dramatist Gogol's fame rests on The Inspector-General (1836), a satire on provincial officials. Petty vice and human folly are caricatured in this as in all his mature work. His picaresque novel Dead Souls (1842) concerns the rogue Chichikov who buys the names of dead serfs from landowners in order to mortgage them as property. This work is the culmination of Gogol's gift for caricature, imagery, and invention. Haunted throughout his life by moral and religious problems, and adverse criticism from his contemporaries, his powers declined as he attempted to write a second part to his novel, embodying positive spiritual values. In a frenzy he destroyed the manuscript; greatly depressed, his health ruined by fanatical fasting, he died shortly thereafter. Gogol's work is realistic in its concern for rich detail, but he is famed primarily for creating a fantastic world of the imagination. Most of his works have been translated into English.



See his letters, ed. by C. R. Proffer (1968); his Selected Passages from Correspondence with Friends (tr. 1969); biographies by J. Lavrin (1926, repr. 1973) and H. Troyat (tr. 1973); studies by V. Erlich (1969), T. S. Lindstrom (1974), and D. Fanger (1979).

The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright© 2012, The Columbia University Press.

Selected full-text books and articles on this topic at Questia

Exploring Gogol
Robert A. Maguire. Stanford University, 1994
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Masterpieces of the Russian Drama
George Rapall Noyes. Dover Publications, vol.1, 1960
Librarian’s tip: "The Inspector" by Nikolay Gogol begins on p. 157
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Gogol's Afterlife: The Evolution of a Classic in Imperial and Soviet Russia
Stephen Moeller-Sally. Northwestern University Press, 2002
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Russian Writers: Their Lives and Literature
Janko Lavrin. D. Van Nostrand, 1954
Librarian’s tip: Chap. Five "Nikolai Gogol"
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Essays on Russian Novelists
William Lyon Phelps. Macmillan, 1916
Librarian’s tip: Chap. II "Gogol"
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Russia Discovered: Nineteenth-Century Fiction from Pushkin to Chekhov
Angus Calder. Heinemann, 1976
Librarian’s tip: Chap. 2 "Literature and Serfdom: Gogol, Lermontov and Goncharov"
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The Mirror in the Roadway a Study of the Modern Novel
Frank O'Connor. Alfred A. Knopf, 1956
Librarian’s tip: Chap. 7 "Gogol's Shoe"
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Narrative Oscillation in Gogol's 'Nevsky Prospect.'
Hart, Pierre R. Studies in Short Fiction, Vol. 31, No. 4, Fall 1994
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