Abstract

The article discusses the issue of theatricality arising from the reception of Dostoevsky’s novel Uncle’s Dream. Until now, researchers have dwelled on the external scenic elements of the story and have not paid much attention to the nature of the monologues of the main heroine of the story, where the orientation to directing and acting is obvious. Moskaleva’s monologues are not only built “in a theatrical manner” and foreshow the emergence of a complex dialogical structure characteristic of Dostoevsky’s main novels, but at the same time they reveal features characteristic of the future hero – the ideologist of Dostoevsky. And the identification of the Shakespearean leitmotif of the story supports the idea of it as a work in which theatrical elements are intertwined with the prosaic, and at the same time, it reveals the most important topics that are typical in the writer’s further work.

Highlights

  • The article discusses the issue of theatricality arising from the reception of Dostoevsky's novel Uncle's Dream

  • researchers have dwelled on the external scenic elements of the story

  • it as a work in which theatrical elements are intertwined with the prosaic

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Summary

Introduction

Не все авторы, указывающие на комедийный характер повести, обращают внимание на то, что с начала замысла произведения до его публикации прошло несколько лет, и вместо комедии Достоевский опубликовал текст, написанный в привычном для него к тому времени жанре малой прозы, о чем он упомянул в письме от 1858 года: «Величиной он («Дядюшкин сон» – Д.Б.) тоже с “Бедных людей”» (Достоевский 1996, 186). Как и вообще никаких других произведений для сцены, Достоевский так и не написал.

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