Dec 30, 2009

Short Story Criticism | Red Cavalry, Isaak Babel - Igor' Sukhikh (essay date winter 2000-2001)

Igor' Sukhikh (essay date winter 2000-2001)

SOURCE: Sukhikh, Igor'. “About Stars, Blood, People, and Horses.” Russian Studies in Literature 37, no. 1 (winter 2000-2001): 6-26.

[In the following essay, Sukhikh offers a thematic and stylistic examination of Red Cavalry and chronicles the writing of the book, which he asserts happened in “three steps, over three stages of transformation of the raw material of life into a work of art.”]

In the seventh year of the new era (a.d. 1924), Army Commander Budennyi, “having rode into literature on horseback, and criticizing it from the height of his horse” (Gorky), discovered that serving under his command was a slanderer, sadist, and literary degenerate: citizen Babel'.

Under the fine-sounding, patently speculative title, “Iz knigi Konarmiia” [from the book Red Cavalry], the hapless author has attempted to depict the life, mores, and traditions...

[The entire page is 9927 words long]

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