Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr - Abraham Rothberg (essay date 1971)
Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr - Abraham Rothberg (essay date 1971)
Abraham Rothberg (essay date 1971)
SOURCE: "One Day, Four Decades," Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: The Major Novels, Cornell University Press, 1971, pp. 19-59.
[In the following excerpt, Rothberg focuses on the naturalness of language and "sober, documentary tone" in One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich.]
Solzhenitsyn not only staked out new territory for contemporary Soviet writers by dealing directly and candidly with the [prison labor] camps in One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich; he also explored new terrain in the use of language, exploiting a combination of prison, peasant, and pornographic slang unusual in the idiom of Soviet books. Especially objectionable to such conservatives as Kochetov, for example, was his use of the four-letter words and the "mother-oath" words for which Russian is notorious. Yet his use of colloquial speech is both apt and powerful, and he never uses vulgar language for show or...
[The entire page is 1689 words long]
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Criticism
- Gleb Zekulin (essay date 1964)
- Ludmila Koehler (essay date 1967)
- John Clardy (essay date 1970)
- Vladimir J. Rus (essay date 1971)
- Abraham Rothberg (essay date 1971)
- John B. Dunlop (essay date 1972)
- Leonid Rzhevsky (essay date 1972)
- Stephen S. Lottridge (essay date 1973)
- Christopher Moody (essay date 1973)
- Robert Louis Jackson (essay date 1976)
- Sheryl A. Spitz (essay date 1977)
- Andrej Kodjak (essay date 1978)
- Edward E. Ericson, Jr. (essay date 1980)
- Robert L. Yarup (essay date 1982)
- Paul N. Siegel (essay date 1984)
- Hugh Ragsdale (essay date 1995)
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