Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Nos, Nikolai Gogol - Donald Fanger (essay date 1979)
Nos, Nikolai Gogol - Donald Fanger (essay date 1979)
Donald Fanger (essay date 1979)
SOURCE: Fanger, Donald. “Beginnings: Fiction.” In The Creation of Nikolai Gogol, pp. 85–124. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1979.
[In the following excerpt, Fanger asserts that “The Nose” is a meta-narrative that explores the creative act of fiction writing.]
[Gogol's “The Nose” begins]: “On March 25 an unusually strange occurrence took place in Petersburg.” The occurrence in question is the unaccountable disappearance of the nose of another ambitious civil servant, its metamorphic adventures while independent, and his frantic pursuit of it until it reappears mysteriously in place—a happy ending for a character who doesn't deserve one. The narration is by Gogol's elusive skaz narrator—ostensibly omniscient, but full of gaps, irrelevancies and non-sequiturs—ready to acknowledge oddity but only with a disconcerting fitfulness. The first draft of the story had ended by...
[The entire page is 1917 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- A. L. Bem (essay date 1928)
- Herbert E. Bowman (essay date 1953)
- Peter C. Spycher (essay date 1963)
- Ivan Yermakov (essay date 1974)
- Thaïs S. Lindstrom (essay date 1974)
- Simon Karlinsky (essay date 1976)
- William Woodin Rowe (essay date 1976)
- Donald Fanger (essay date 1979)
- Richard Peace (essay date 1981)
- James B. Woodward (essay date 1981)
- William Edward Brown (essay date 1986)
- Ann Shukman (essay date 1989)
- Reed Merrill (essay date 1990)
- Sergei Bocharov (essay date 1992)
- Thomas Seifrid (essay date 1993)
- Amos Oz (essay date 1996)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
