Notes: |
Introduction: Chekhov's Letters: An Integral Body of Work, Carol Apollonio and Radislav Lapushin; Part I: Publication History, Reception, and Textual Issues; Chapter 1: Reader Reception of Chekhov's Letters at the Beginning of the Twentieth Century, Liya Bushkanets; Chapter 2: Some Like It Hot: The Censored Letters, Vladimir Kataev; Chapter 3: On Editing and Translating Chekhov's Letters, Rosamund Bartlett; Chapter 4: Imaginary Chekhov? Yet Another Fabrication by Boris Sadovskoy, Igor Sukhikh; Part II: Approaches to a Body of Work; Chapter 5: Chekhov's "Postal Prose," Vladimir Lakshin; Chapter 6: Letters Not about Chekhov: On How We Read Chekhov's Letters, Michael Finke; Chapter 7: Chekhov's Letters: Slow Reading, Alevtina Kuzicheva; Chapter 8: The Writer's Correspondence as a Narrative Genre: Aspects of Chekhov's Epistolary Prose, Irina Gitovich; Part III: Genre; Chapter 9: A Unity of Vision: Chekhov's Letters,-
Alexander Chudakov; Chapter 10: "I Listen to My Irtysh Beating against Coffins": The Existential and Dreamlike in Chekhov's Letters, Radislav Lapushin; Chapter 11: A Playwright's Letters, Emma Polotskaya; Part IV: From Life to Art: Readings; Chapter 12: Homo Sachaliensis: Chekhov as a Family Man, Galina Rylkova; Chapter 13: Russian Binaries and the Question of Culture: Chekhov's True Intelligent, Svetlana Evdokimova; Chapter 14: Burned Letters: Reconstructing the Chekhov-Levitan Friendship, Serge Gregory; Chapter 15: Verbal Games and Animal Metaphors in Chekhov's Correspondence with Olga Knipper, John Douglas Clayton; Chatper 16: The Withered Tree, Zinovy Paperny; Chapter 17: Anton Chekhov and D. H.-
Lawrence: The Art of Letters and the Discourse of Mortality, Katherine Tiernan O'Connor; Part V: My Favorite Chekhov Letter; Chapter 18: Preface: Chekhov's Blotter, Dina Rubina; Chapter 19: Chekhov's First Dissertation Proposal (to Alexander Chekhov, from Moscow, 17/18 April 1883), Michael Finke; Chapter 20: Letters, Dreams and Their Environments (to Dmitry Grigorovich, from Moscow, 12 February 1887), Matthew Mangold; Chapter 21: Chekhov's Letter to Lermontov (to Mikhail Chekhov, from the ship "Dir," 28 July 1888), Katherine Tiernan O'Connor; Chapter 22: A Favorite Chekhov Letter: Mission Impossible (Letters from 1888-89), Robin Feuer Miller; Chapter 23: Chekhov's "Holy of Holies": The Poetics of Corporeity (to Alexander Pleshcheev, from Moscow, 4 October 1888), Svetlana Evdokimova; Chapter 24: Winged Things (to Alexei Suvorin, from Moscow, 17 October 1889),-
Elizabeth Geballe; Chapter 25: A Fragment from the Aggregate: Sinai and Sakhalin in Chekhov's Letters to Suvorin ; (to Alexei Suvorin, 9 March 1890; 9 December 1890; 17 December 1890), Robert Louis Jackson; Chapter 26: Why Not Stay Here, so Long as It's not Boring? (to family, from Siberia, 23-26 June 1890), Carol Apollonio; Chapter 27: A Prescription to Keep Love at Bay (to Lika Mizinova, from Bogimovo, 20 June 1891), Serge Gregory; Chapter 28: Sympathy for the Devil (to Alexei Suvorin from Melikhovo, 8 April 1892), Cathy Popkin; Chapter 29: Doctor Chekhov Comes to Terms with Tolstoy (to Alexei Suvorin, from Melikhovo, 1 August 1892), Caryl Emerson; Chapter 30: In the Hospital (to Rimma Vashchuk, from Moscow, 27 March 1897), Rosamund Bartlett; Chapter 31: The Power of Memory (to Fyodor Batyushkov, from Nice, 15 December 1897), Elena Gorokhova; Chapter 32: I Have no Faith in Our Intelligentsia (to Ivan Orlov, from Yalta, 22 February 1899), Andrei Stepanov; Chapter 33: Forgive,-
Forget, and Write (to Ivan Leontyev (Shcheglov), from Yalta, 2 February 1900), Sharon M. Carnicke; Chapter 34: In Place of a Conclusion (to Grigory Rossolimo and to Maria Chekhova, from Badenweiler, 28 June 1904), Radislav Lapushin
|