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Gooseberries | Understanding Gooseberries and Chekhov

In the following essay, Mays examines Chekhov’s ‘‘Gooseberries’’ and the Chekhovian ‘‘irritated man.’’

The readings of Chekhov’s ‘‘Gooseberries’’ all seem to run one way: Ivan Ivanych, who tells the ‘‘story within a story,’’ and who points its moral, speaks for the author. ‘‘‘Man needs not six feet of earth, not a farm, but the whole globe, all of Nature, where unhindered he can display all the capacities and peculiarities of his free spirit,’’’ says Ivan, passing judgment on the sordid life of his brother Nikolay, who has sacrificed everything for the country estate with the symbolic gooseberry bush. Professor Ernest J. Simmons, in his study of...

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