Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr - Christopher Moody (essay date 1973)
Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr - Christopher Moody (essay date 1973)
Christopher Moody (essay date 1973)
SOURCE: "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich and Matryona's Home" in Solzhenitsyn, Oliver & Boyd, 1973, pp. 28-49
[In the following excerpt, Moody analyzes One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, comparing it with "Matryona's Home. " He concludes that the works "together . . . provide a picture of goodness and truth at the mercy of evil and falsehood."]
Alexander Solzhenitsyn has been described by different critics as both an old-fashioned writer and a genuine innovator. Paradoxically, both of these views are correct. In the early 1930s, when his fame in the Soviet Union was at its height, the official aesthetic of socialist realism, with its emphasis on optimism and education, was beginning to give way to a more candid and exploratory approach to Soviet life. Writers were being admitted to those dark areas of social and political evil which they had hitherto been obliged to...
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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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