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Figes, Orlando : Natasha's Dance - A Cultural History of Russia
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Natasha’s Dance is Orlando Figes’s epic, richly evocative and unparalleled exploration of Russia, its culture and people. Vast in scale and woven through with extraordinary stories and characters, it ranges from the splendor of eighteenth-century St. Petersburg to the power of Stalinist propaganda, from folk art to the magic rituals of Asiatic shamans, from the poetry of Pushkin to the music of Musorgsky and the films of Eisenstein, bringing to life an extraordinary cast of serf artists and aristocrats, revolutionaries and exiles, priests and libertines. Figes’s book takes its title from a famous scene in War and Peace, where the young and beautiful Countess Natasha hears a popular melody and, instinctively aware of the peasant rhythm and steps, beings to dance to it. Tolstoy shows that however grand and foreign-educated they might be, at heart the Russians are Russians. Here Orlando Figes explores the meaning of Natasha’s dance: the often contradictory impulses and shared sensibilities that have given rise to one of the world’s most dazzling cultures. He shows how, perhaps more than any othehr country, Russia’s sense of identity is embodied in its culture: not only its great poetry, music, books and paintings, but also in its common ideas, customs, habits and beliefs.
condition: | |
category: | Books > Foreign Language Books > Books in English > |
category: | Books > History > > |
publisher: | Allen Lane - Penguin, 2002. London, |
item number / ISBN: | 9780713995176 |
binding: | hardcover (in original dust jacket) |
pages: | 728 p. |
language: | Hungarian |