Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Red Cavalry, Isaak Babel - Milton Ehre (essay date 1986)
Red Cavalry, Isaak Babel - Milton Ehre (essay date 1986)
Milton Ehre (essay date 1986)
SOURCE: Ehre, Milton. “Red Cavalry.” In Isaac Babel, pp. 63-86. Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1986.
[In the following essay, Ehre categorizes the major thematic concerns of Red Cavalry and views the collection as Babel's attempt “to create an epic of a decisive historical moment.”]
For all their charm, Odessa Tales still smack of the provincialism of the genre sketch. Red Cavalry is a work of sophisticated maturity. The most important fiction to come out of the Russian Revolution—its only real competitor is a poem, Blok's The Twelve—it can advance a claim to stand as the national epic of that momentous event. Red Cavalry is to the Russian Revolution what Tolstoy's War and Peace is to the Napoleonic invasion, an attempt of the literary imagination to grasp a climactic historical experience in the life of a people. Of course Tolstoy's novel is broader in...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- David A. Lowe (essay date spring 1982)
- Gareth Williams (essay date April 1984)
- Jan van der Eng (essay date 1984)
- Milton Ehre (essay date 1986)
- Marc Schreurs (essay date 1988)
- Joe Andrew (essay date September 1989)
- Zsuzsa Hetenyi (essay date 1990)
- Allan Reid (essay date June 1991)
- Judith Deutsch Kornblatt (essay date 1992)
- David K. Danow (essay date March-June 1994)
- Yuri K. Shcheglov (essay date fall 1994)
- Carol J. Avins (essay date fall 1994)
- Cynthia Ozick (essay date 8 May 1995)
- Efraim Sicher (essay date 1995)
- Charles Rougle (essay date 1996)
- Stephen Brown (essay date 1996-1997)
- Janet Tucker (essay date summer 2000)
- Robert A. Maguire (essay date 2000)
- Igor' Sukhikh (essay date winter 2000-2001)
- Further Reading
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