About

Known credits:
9
Birthday:
1812-06-18
Place of birth:
Simbirsk, Russian Empire [now Ulyanovsk, Russian Federation]
Website:
N/A

Ivan Goncharov

Overview

Ivan Alexandrovich Goncharov (1812–1891) was a Russian novelist best known for his novels 'The Same Old Story' (1847), 'Oblomov' (1859), and 'The Precipice' (1869, also translated as 'Malinovka Heights'). He also worked as a literary and theatre critic. Towards the end of his life Goncharov wrote a memoir called An Uncommon Story, in which he accused his literary rivals, first and foremost Ivan Turgenev, of having plagiarized his works and prevented him from achieving European fame.

His novel 'Oblomov' caused much discussion in the Russian press, introduced another new term, oblomovshchina, to the literary lexicon and is regarded as a Russian classic. In his essay 'What Is Oblomovshchina?' Nikolay Dobrolyubov provided an ideological background for the type of Russia's "new man" exposed by Goncharov. The critic argued that, while several famous classic Russian literary characters – Onegin, Pechorin, and Rudin – bore symptoms of the "Oblomov malaise", for the first time one single feature, that of social apathy, a self-destructive kind of laziness and unwillingness to even try and lift the burden of all-pervading inertia, had been brought to the fore and subjected to a thorough analysis.

Known for

Writing

2016 Gogol Online: An Ordinary Story Writing Novel N/A
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2002 Oblomov Writing Original Story N/A
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1988 Dream Writing Novel 59
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1984 The Precipice Writing Novel N/A
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1979 Oblomov Writing Novel 59
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1970 Ordinary story Writing Writer 58
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1965 Oblomov Writing Author N/A
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1964 Oblomov Writing Novel 59
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1913 The Precipice Writing Novel N/A
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