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Who’s holding up the sky? On Rymba, a novel by A. Bushkovsky

https://doi.org/10.31425/0042-8795-2020-1-150-158

Abstract

The article deals with A. Bushkovsky’s novel Rymba that goes beyond the topics typical of Russian North prose. Rather than limiting himself to admiring nature and Russian character, the author portrays the northern Russian village of Rymba in the larger context of the country’s mentality, history, mythology, and gender politics. In the novel, myth clashes with reality, history with the present day, and an individual with the state. The critic draws a comparison between the novel and the traditions of village prose and Russian North prose. In particular, Bushkovsky’s Rymba is discussed alongside V. Rasputin’s Farewell to Matyora [ Proshchanie s Matyoroy ] and R. Senchin’s The Flood Zone [ Zona zatopleniya ]. The novel’s central question is: what keeps the Russian world afloat? Depicting the Christian faith as such a bulwark, Bushkovsky links atheism with the social and spiritual roles played by contemporary men and women. The critic argues, however, that the reliance on Christianity in the novel verges on an affectation. The book’s main symbol is a drowning hawk: it perishes despite people’s efforts to save it.

About the Author

A. V. Zhuchkova
Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia
Russian Federation

Candidate of Philology 

6 Miklukho-Maklay St., Moscow, 117198



References

1. Pustovaya V. (2018). Literary year of 2018 in review. Tekstura, [online] 26 Dec. Available at: http://textura.club/literaturnye-itogi-2018-goda-chast-i/ [Accessed 11 Nov. 2019]. (In Russ.)


Review

For citations:


Zhuchkova A.V. Who’s holding up the sky? On Rymba, a novel by A. Bushkovsky. Voprosy literatury. 2020;1(1):150-158. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.31425/0042-8795-2020-1-150-158

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ISSN 0042-8795 (Print)