英国期刊上的俄国虚无主义者,1880-1900

Meri-Jane Rochelson
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摘要

19世纪末俄国虚无主义运动以屠格涅夫的《父与子》中巴扎罗夫的形象而流行起来。但是,尽管屠格涅夫的描写微妙而尖锐,虚无主义还是与俄国革命活动,尤其是恐怖主义联系在一起。对虚无主义思潮的讨论不仅限于俄罗斯,而且遍及西欧的印刷文化。英国新闻的东方化修辞将俄罗斯牢牢地置于东方阵营,因此它既提供了异国情调的、倒退的君主制,也提供了同样迷人或威胁的欧洲革命愿景。俄国的革命活动成为英国小说“炸药主题”的一部分,当时恐怖主义也伴随着欧洲大陆的无政府主义运动和支持爱尔兰独立的芬尼亚爆炸事件。此外,俄罗斯人通过犹太人的移民成为伦敦人口的一部分,这一运动在1880年左右之后显著增加。1870年《引渡法》颁布后,俄国持不同政见者在英国受到欢迎。本文考察了19世纪最后20年的一系列报告文学和小说的期刊作品。在维多利亚时代晚期的英国出版物中,期刊文章和故事反映了俄国革命运动和思想的普遍性和多样性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Russian Nihilists in British Periodicals, 1880–1900
Abstract The late-nineteenth-century Russian nihilist movement was popularized by the portrait of Bazarov in Ivan Turgenev’s Fathers and Sons. But despite Turgenev’s nuanced and poignant portrayal, nihilism became associated with Russian revolutionary activities and especially terrorism. Discussions of the nihilist ethos were not limited to Russia but pervaded print culture in Western Europe. The orientalizing rhetoric of British journalism placed Russia firmly in the Eastern camp, so that it offered both the spectacle of exotic, retrograde monarchy and the equally fascinating or threatening vision of revolution in Europe. Revolutionary activities in Russia became part of the “dynamite theme” in British fiction of the fin de siècle, when terrorism also accompanied anarchist movements in continental Europe and Fenian bombings in support of Irish independence. Additionally, Russians became part of the London population through the immigration of Jews, a movement that increased significantly after around 1880. Russian dissidents themselves were welcomed in Britain after the Extradition Act of 1870. This article surveys a range of periodical writings, both reportage and fiction, in the last two decades of the nineteenth century. Periodical articles and stories reflect the pervasiveness and varied presentation of Russian revolutionary movements and ideas in late Victorian British publications.
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