The Stony Dance: Unity and Gesture in Andrey Bely's Petersburg

Front Cover
Northwestern University Press, 2005 M07 22 - 191 pages
Widely considered the greatest Russian modernist novel, Andrei Bely's Petersburg has until now eluded the critical attention that a book of its caliber merits. In The Stony Dance, Timothy Langen offers readers a study of Bely's masterpiece unparalleled in its comprehensiveness, clarity, and inclusion of detail--a critical study that is at the same time a meditation on the nature of literary art.

Thoroughly versed in Russian and European modernism, in Bely's biography and writings, and in twentieth-century literary theory, Langen constructs an original analytic scheme for reading Petersburg. Guided by Bely's fertile but challenging notions of art and philosophy, he analyzes the novel first as an object embodying intentions and essences, then as a pattern of signification and events, and finally as a dance of gestures that coordinate body and meaning, regularity and surprise, self and other, and author, novel, and reader. The terms are derived from Bely's own writings, but they are nuanced with reference to Russian and European contexts and clarified with reference to philosophy and literary theory. Langen shows how Bely invariably challenges his own concepts and patterns, thereby creating an unusually demanding and dynamic text. In finding an approach to these enriching difficulties, this book at long last shows readers a welcoming way into Bely's thought, and his masterwork, and their place in the complex world of early twentieth-century literature.
 

Contents

Part IThing
3
Shadowy Worlds
7
Poetic Genius
24
Throwing Together
37
Beautiful Clarity and Gray Days
53
Part IIPattern
67
Five Grid
71
Flow
80
Part IIIGesture
111
Dance with Meaning
115
Seven Gestures
128
Pulsations of the Elemental Body
148
Notes
161
Bibliography
175
Index
185
Copyright

Outsides
96

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2005)

Timothy Langen is assistant professor in the Department of German and Russian Studies at the University of Missouri-Columbia.

Bibliographic information