Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr - Andrej Kodjak (essay date 1978)
Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr - Andrej Kodjak (essay date 1978)
Andrej Kodjak (essay date 1978)
SOURCE: "Short Stories," Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Twayne Publishers, 1978, pp. 104-22.
[In the following excerpt, Kodjak offers a survey of theme and plot in Solzhenitsyn's short fiction.]
Solzhenitsyn's short stories and novels written roughly over the same years are closely linked with one another philosophically. There is, however, a significant difference between the three novels and the short stories. At least two of the novels deal directly with prison life, and the third, The Cancer Ward, alludes to it through the figure of Oleg Kostoglotov; in his short stories Solzhenitsyn does not concern himself with this feature of society. There he seems rather to be attempting to break out of the context of forced confinement in order to project his ideas and philosophy in a more familiar setting. And yet even Solzhenitsyn's short stories do not omit the experience of the zek altogether....
[The entire page is 7705 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)
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- Stephen S. Lottridge (essay date 1973)
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- 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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