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peripeties of his lifelong devotion to being a
Russian writer, the singularity and depth of his achievement—without knowing something of that situation. ... Romantic theory exalted ethnography and folk poetry as expressions of the Volksgeist, and the Ukraine was particularly appealing to a Russian audience in this respect, being, as Gippius observes, a country both '"ours" and "not ours," neighboring, related, and yet lending itself to presentation in the light of a semi-realistic romanticism, a sort of Slavic Ausonia.' Gogol capitalized on this appeal as a mediator; by embracing his Ukrainian heritage, he became a Russian writer.
2103:[We must not divide Gogol. He belongs at the same time to two cultures, Russian and Ukrainian...Gogol perceived himself as Russian, mingled with the great Russian culture...Furthermore, in his era, the words "Ukraine" and "Ukrainian" had an administrative and territorial meaning, but not national. The term "Ukrainian" was almost never used. In the nineteenth century, the Russian Empire comprised Russia, Malorossia (Little Russia) and Byelorussia. The whole population of these regions called themselves, and perceived themselves as, Russian.]
581:. Initially, Gogol used the surname Gogol-Ianovskii, but it soon became inconvenient. At first he tried to shorten it to the Russian-sounding "Ianov", but in the second half of 1830 he abandoned the Polish part of his surname altogether. He even admonished his mother in a letter to address him only as "Gogol", as Poles had become "suspect" in St. Peteresburg. Tsarist authorities encouraged the Ukrainian intellectuals to sever ties with the Poles, promoting a limited, folkloric Ukrainian particularism as part of the heritage of the Russian empire.
1364:" as works of genius, proclaiming that "when, as in his immortal 'The Overcoat', Gogol really let himself go and pottered happily on the brink of his private abyss, he became the greatest artist that Russia has yet produced." Critics traditionally interpreted "The Overcoat" as a masterpiece of "humanitarian realism", but Nabokov and some other attentive readers argued that "holes in the language" make the story susceptible to interpretation as a supernatural tale about a ghostly double of a "small man". Of all Gogol's stories,
536:) and remained there until 1828. It was there that he began writing. He was not popular among his schoolmates, who called him their "mysterious dwarf", but with two or three of them he formed lasting friendships. Very early he developed a dark and secretive disposition, marked by a painful self-consciousness and boundless ambition. Equally early he developed a talent for mimicry, which later made him a matchless reader of his own works and induced him to toy with the idea of becoming an actor.
984:". His pictures of nature are strange mounds of detail heaped on detail, resulting in an unconnected chaos of things: "His people are caricatures, drawn with the method of the caricaturist – which is to exaggerate salient features and to reduce them to geometrical pattern. But these cartoons have a convincingness, a truthfulness, and inevitability – attained as a rule by slight but definitive strokes of unexpected reality – that seems to beggar the visible world itself." According to
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1429:"chose to model much of his writing, and even his appearance, on Gogol... What Sholem Aleichem was borrowing from Gogol was a rural East European landscape that may have been dangerous, but could unite readers through the power of collective memory. He also learned from Gogol to soften this danger through laughter, and he often rewrites Gogol's Jewish characters, correcting anti-Semitic stereotypes and narrating history from a Jewish perspective."
1275:. Gogol himself appeared skeptical about the existence of such a literary movement. Although he recognized "several young writers" who "have shown a particular desire to observe real life", he upbraided the deficient composition and style of their works. Nevertheless, subsequent generations of radical critics celebrated Gogol (the author in whose world a nose roams the streets of the Russian capital) as a great realist, a reputation decried by the
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1183:, according to Bojanowska, "presents Russian uniqueness as a catalog of faults and vices." The duality of Gogol’s national identity is frequently expressed as a view that "in the aesthetic, psychological, and existential senses Gogol is inscribed ... into Ukrainian culture", while "in historical and cultural terms he is part of Russian literature and culture". Slavicist
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907:. His body was discovered lying face down, which gave rise to the conspiracy theory that Gogol had been buried alive. The authorities moved the Golgotha stone to the new gravesite, but removed the cross; in 1952, the Soviets replaced the stone with a bust of Gogol. The stone was later reused for the tomb of Gogol's admirer
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before him, Gogol was a great destroyer of prohibitions and of romantic illusions. He undermined
Russian Romanticism by making vulgarity reign where only the sublime and the beautiful had before. "Characteristic of Gogol is a sense of boundless superfluity that is soon revealed as utter emptiness and
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He turned in a performance ludicrous enough to warrant satiric treatment in one of his own stories. After an introductory lecture made up of brilliant generalizations which the 'historian' had prudently prepared and memorized, he gave up all pretence at erudition and teaching, missed two lectures out
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In 1847 Gogol wrote that
Russian literature would call forth a truly 'Russian Russia.' The clarity of this image would unite the country 'in one voice' to proclaim its long-awaited homecoming. ' will call forth our Russia for us—our Russian Russia It will elicit from us and thus show that all of us
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published the most meticulous study of Gogol's literary techniques up to that date, in which he analyzed the colours prevalent in Gogol's work depending on the period, his impressionistic use of verbs, the expressive discontinuity of his syntax, the complicated rhythmical patterns of his sentences,
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Gogol's appreciation of
Ukraine grew during his discovery of Ukrainian history, and he concluded that "Ukraine possessed exactly the kind of cultural wholeness, proud tradition, and self-awareness that Russia lacked." He rejected or was critical of many of the postulates of official Russian history
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Professor of
Russian literature Kathleen Scollins notes the tendency to politicize Gogol's identity, and comments on the erasure of Gogol's Ukrainianness by the Russian literary establishment, which she argues "reveals the insecurity of many Russians about their own imperial identity". According to
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Il ne faut pas diviser Gogol. Il appartient en même temps à deux cultures, russe et ukrainienne...Gogol se percevait lui-même comme russe, mêlé à la grande culture russe...En outre, à son époque, les mots "Ukraine" et "ukrainien" avaient un sens administratif et territorial, mais pas national. Le
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or spiritual elder, Matvey
Konstantinovsky, whom he had known for several years. Konstantinovsky seems to have strengthened in Gogol the fear of perdition (damnation) by insisting on the sinfulness of all his imaginative work. Exaggerated ascetic practices undermined his health and he fell into a
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gentry of the early nineteenth century, the family was trilingual, speaking
Ukrainian as well as Russian, and using Polish mostly for reading. Mother was calling his son Nikola, which is a mixture of the Russian Nikolai and the Ukrainian Mykola. As a child, Gogol helped stage plays in his uncle's
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Ukrainian-born humorist, dramatist, and novelist whose works, written in
Russian, significantly influenced the direction of Russian literature. His novel Myortvye dushi (1842; Dead Souls) and his short story "Shinel" (1842; "The Overcoat") are considered the foundations of the great 19th-century
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Gogol left
Russian literature on the brink of that golden age of fiction which many deemed him to have originated, and to which he did, very clearly, open the way. The literary situation he entered, however, was very different, and one cannot understand the shape and sense of Gogol's career—the
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The strength of Gogol's commitment to
Ukraine before 1836 is also reflected in his plans to move to Kiev in order to devote himself to ethnographic and historic research on Ukraine. Only when these plans fell through did Gogol decide to become a Russian writer, a role that he understood as
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saw Gogol as a regional Ukrainian writer, and used his works to illustrate the specific of Ukrainian national characters. The themes and style of these early prose works by Gogol, as well as his later drama, were similar to the work of Ukrainian-language writers and dramatists who were his
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Meditations" presents Ukrainian history in a manner that justifies Ukraine’s "historic right to independence". Before 1836, Gogol had planned to move to Kyiv to study Ukrainian ethnography and history, and it was after these plans failed that he decided to become a Russian writer.
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represents a "strateg of resistance, self-assertion, and divergence"". Linguist Daniel Green notes "the complexities of an imperial culture in which Russian and Ukrainian literatures and identities informed and shaped each other, with Gogol´ playing a key role in these processes".
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has nothing to do with the description of Russian provincial life or of a few revolting landowners. It is for the time being a secret which must suddenly and to the amazement of everyone (for as yet none of my readers has guessed it) be revealed in the following
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of three, and when he did appear, muttered unintelligibly through his teeth. At the final examination, he sat in utter silence with a black handkerchief wrapped around his head, simulating a toothache, while another professor interrogated the students.
613:. However, Gogol's satire was much more sophisticated and unconventional. Although these works were written in Russian, they were nevertheless full of Ukrainianisms, which is why a glossary of Ukrainian words was included at the end of the volumes.
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Natasha Drubek-Meyer applies this reconstructive approach (mostly in its psychological version) to a widely known yet barely explained phenomenon of Russian culture -- the retreat of the main Russian writers (Gogol, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky) from
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indeed became the archetypal Jew in Russian literature. Gogol painted him as supremely exploitative, cowardly, and repulsive, albeit capable of gratitude. But it seems perfectly natural in the story that he and his cohorts be drowned in the
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to a man, no matter that we be of different minds, upbringing, and opinions, will say in one voice "This is our Russia; we are comfortable and warm here, and now we are truly at home , under our native roof, and not in a foreign land."'
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Between 1832 and 1836, Gogol worked with great energy, and had extensive contact with Pushkin, but he still had not yet decided that his ambitions were to be fulfilled by success in literature. During this time, the Russian critics
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terme "ukrainien" n'était presque pas employé. Au XIXe siècle, l'empire de Russie réunissait la Russie, la Malorossia (la petite Russie) et la Biélorussie. Toute la population de ses régions se nommait et se percevait comme russe.
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911:. In 2009, in connection with the bicentennial of Gogol's birth, the bust was moved to the museum at the Novodevichy Cemetery, and the original Golgotha stone was returned, along with a copy of the original Orthodox cross.
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as his first opera in 1928 – a peculiar choice of subject for what was meant to initiate the great tradition of Soviet opera. More recently, to celebrate the 200th anniversary of Gogol's birth in 1809, Vienna's renowned
3188:"The structure of the stories themselves seemed especially unskilful and clumsy to me; in one story I noted excess and verbosity, and an absence of simplicity in the style". Quoted by Vasily Gippius in his monograph
547:, and had it published at his own expense, under the pseudonym "V. Alov." The magazines he sent it to almost universally derided it. He bought all the copies and destroyed them, swearing never to write poetry again.
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features Nikolai Gogol as a lead character and presents a fictionalized version of his life that mixes his history with elements from his various stories. The episodes were also released theatrically starting with
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in St. Petersburg, on 19 April 1836, that he finally came to believe in his literary vocation. The comedy, a satire of Russian provincial bureaucracy, was staged thanks only to the intervention of the emperor,
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Despite his portrayal of Jewish characters, Gogol left a powerful impression even on Jewish writers who inherited his literary legacy. Amelia Glaser has noted the influence of Gogol's literary innovations on
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Gogol has been featured many times on Russian and Soviet postage stamps; he is also well represented on stamps worldwide. Several commemorative coins have been issued in the USSR and Russia. In 2009, the
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In April 1848, Gogol returned to Russia from a pilgrimage to Jerusalem and passed his last years in restless movement throughout the country. While visiting the capitals, he stayed with friends such as
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517:, a Cossack hetman in Polish service, received nobility from the Polish king. The family used the Polish surname "Janowski" (Ianovskii) and the family estate in Vasilevka was known as Ianovshchyna.
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condemned Russian Jews who participated in celebrations of Gogol's centenary. Later critics have also pointed to the apparent antisemitism in his writings, as well as in those of his contemporary,
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590:) was published under a pen name "Rudy Panko", was in line with this trend, and met with immediate success. A second volume was published in 1832, followed by two volumes of stories entitled
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724:. For much of the twelve years from 1836, Gogol was in Italy, where he developed an adoration for Rome. He studied art, read Italian literature and developed a passion for opera.
697:. The Tsar was personally present at the play's premiere, concluding that "there is nothing sinister in the comedy, as it is only a cheerful mockery of bad provincial officials."
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declared it "a piece of sheer play, almost sheer nonsense". In recent years, however, "The Nose" became the subject of several postmodernist and postcolonial interpretations.
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According to some critics, Gogol's grotesque is a "means of estranging, a comic hyperbole that unmasks the banality and inhumanity of ambient reality". See: Fusso, Susanne.
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when a writer presents common things in an unfamiliar or strange way so that the reader can gain new perspectives and see the world differently. His early works, such as
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In 2016, Gogol's short story "The Portrait" was announced to be adapted into a feature film of the same name, by Anastasia Elena Baranoff and Elena Vladimir Baranoff.
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827:; the second part would depict the gradual purification and transformation of the rogue Chichikov under the influence of virtuous publicans and governors –
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Gogol saw the outer world strangely metamorphosed, a singular gift particularly evident from the fantastic spatial transformations in his Gothic stories, "
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characterizes Gogol's universe as "one of the most marvellous, unexpected – in the strictest sense, original – worlds ever created by an artist of words".
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monument in 1952. It took enormous efforts to save Andreyev's original work from destruction; as of 2014 it stands in front of the house where Gogol died.
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by the Cossack lords. Above all, Yankel is ridiculous, and the image of the plucked chicken that Gogol used has made the rounds of great Russian authors."
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1009:, which means something similar to "triviality, banality, inferiority", moral and spiritual, widespread in a group of people or the entire society. Like
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638:, was the result of this phase in his interests. During this time, he also developed a close and lifelong friendship with the historian and naturalist
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Canadian Slavonic Papers: Special Issue, devoted to the 200th anniversary of Nikolai Gogol'’s birth (1809–1852) 51.2–3 (June–September 2009): 243–266.
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1646:" (literally the Russian title «Ночь перед Рождеством» translates as "The Night before Christmas") was adapted into operatic form by at least three
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3527:[Ukraine is preparing to celebrate the 200th anniversary of Nikolai Gogol's birth] (in Russian). otpusk.com. 28 August 2006. Archived from
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This does not mean that numerous influences cannot be discerned in his work. The principle of these are: the tradition of the Ukrainian folk and
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On leaving school in 1828, Gogol went to Saint Petersburg, full of vague but ambitious hopes. He desired literary fame, and brought with him a
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In 1931, with Russia now ruled by communists, Moscow authorities decided to demolish the monastery and had Gogol's remains transferred to the
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807:, Gogol's contemporaries came to regard him as a great satirist who lampooned the unseemly sides of Imperial Russia. They did not know that
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3814:, Ph.D. Dissertation, School of German and Russian Studies, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, University of New South Wales, May 2011.
678:, contradicting the earlier critics, reclassified Gogol from a Ukrainian to a Russian writer. It was only after the premiere of his comedy
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state of deep depression. On the night of 24 February 1852, he burned some of his manuscripts, which contained most of the second part of
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The latest edition of the Britannica labels Gogol "one of the finest comic authors of world literature and perhaps its most accomplished
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At this time, Gogol developed a passion for Ukrainian Cossack history and tried to obtain an appointment to the history department at
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His stay in St. Petersburg forced Gogol to make a certain decision regarding his self-identification. It was a period of turmoil; the
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730:'s death produced a strong impression on Gogol. His principal work during the years following Pushkin's death was the satirical epic
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as a "comedy of the absurd situation", revealing to his fascinated spectators a corrupt world of endless self-deception. In 1934,
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3439:[200 years since the birth of Nikolai Gogol (1809–1852), writer] (in Russian). marka-art.ru. 1 April 2009. Archived from
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His father wrote poetry in Ukrainian as well as Russian, and was an amateur playwright in his own theatre. As was typical of the
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The house in Moscow where Gogol died. The building contains the fireplace where he burned the manuscript of the second part of
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writes that Gogol, after arriving in St. Peterburg, was surprised to find that he was perceived as a Ukrainian, and even as a
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and the disestablishment of the Orthodox Church. Gogol saw his work as a critique that would change Russia for the better.
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From 1836 to 1848, Gogol lived abroad, travelling through Germany and Switzerland. Gogol spent the winter of 1836–37 in
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Bojanowska, Edyta (2012). "Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol (1809–1852)". In Norris, Stephen M.; Sunderland, Willard (eds.).
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tradition of Russian realism . . . member of the petty Ukrainian gentry and a subject of the Russian Empire
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a rich comedy that suddenly turns into metaphysical horror." His stories often interweave pathos and mockery, while "
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The Enigma of Gogol: An Examination of the Writings of N.V. Gogol and Their Place in the Russian Literary Tradition
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lacks this depth and is always based in the present, particularly focused on Russia's bureaucracy and corruption.
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Gogol was mourned in the Saint Tatiana church at the Moscow University before his burial and then buried at the
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2207:"Gogol's eloquentia corporis: Einverleibung, Identitaet und die Grenzen der Figuration by Natasha Drubek-Meyer"
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2799:Российское образование. Федеральный образовательный портал: учреждения, программы, стандарты, ВУЗы, тесты ЕГЭ.
2763:Российское образование. Федеральный образовательный портал: учреждения, программы, стандарты, ВУЗы, тесты ЕГЭ.
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commissioned music and libretto for a full-length opera on the life of Gogol from Russian composer and writer
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Gogol's impact on Russian literature has endured, yet various critics have appreciated his works differently.
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2748:Могиле Гоголя вернули первозданный вид: на нее поставили "Голгофу" с могилы Булгакова и восстановили крест.
2708:Могиле Гоголя вернули первозданный вид: на нее поставили "Голгофу" с могилы Булгакова и восстановили крест.
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saw a revival of interest in and a change of attitude towards Gogol's work. One of the pioneering works of
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Events by themes: NBU presented an anniversary coin «Nikolay Gogol» from series "Personages of Ukraine"
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dedicated to Gogol. Streets have been named after Gogol in various cities, including Moscow, Sofia,
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and broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on 24 December 2008 and subsequently rebroadcast on both Radio 4 and
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Gogol's oeuvre has also had an impact on Russia's non-literary culture, and his stories have been
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Literary Biographies in The Lives of Remarkable People Series in Russia: Biography for the Masses
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The original design of the gravesite was restored in 2009. Novodevichy Cemetery, Moscow, Russia.
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Ilnytzkyj, Oleh S. (2010–2011). "Is Gogol's 1842 Version of Taras Bul'ba really 'Russified'?".
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The portrayals of Jewish characters in his work have led to Gogol developing a reputation for
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926:'s idea of Gogol rather than the real man. Unveiled in 1909, the statue received praise from
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as an outstanding projection of Gogol's tortured personality. Everything changed after the
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Gogol's story "Viy" was adapted into film by Russian filmmakers four times: the original
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2443:“Allusions to Hoffmann in Gogol’s Ukrainian Horror Stories from the Dikan'ka Collection.”
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In 1963, an animated version of Gogol's classic surrealist story "The Nose" was made by
880:. His grave was marked by a large stone (Golgotha), topped by a Russian Orthodox cross.
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3499:[Coupling for the 200th anniversary of the birth of Mykola Hohol (1809–1852)].
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counted them among his most stylistically daring creations. Nabokov especially admired
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The aspect under which the mature Gogol sees reality is expressed by the Russian word
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Gogol is the one great Russian writer who has most puzzled English-speaking readers.
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354:
330:
83:
4860:
3906:
1396:
4731:
4607:
4526:
4518:
4502:
4088:
3910:
3714:
3695:
3676:
3272:
3271:", actually refers to those few who read "The Overcoat" as a ghost story (as did
3261:
Dostoevsky appears to have had such a reading of the story in mind when he wrote
3236:
3027:
2878:
2870:
2866:
2850:
2819:
2805:
2769:
2145:
2115:
1723:
1709:
1589:
1422:
1348:, for instance, berated his horror stories as "moribund, monstrous works", while
1010:
838:
823:
818:
775:
was ready, and Gogol took it to Russia to supervise its printing. It appeared in
748:
713:
601:
407:
3782:"Если бы речь шла только об отрицании, пароход современности далеко бы не уплыл"
2565:
A Concise History of Russian Literature Volume I from the Beginnings to Checkhov
2291:
Karpuk, Paul A. "Gogol's Research on Ukrainian Customs for the Dikan'ka Tales".
2177:
Noplace Like Home: The Literary Artist and Russia's Search for Cultural Identity
4450:
3728:"Сериал о Гоголе собрал за первые выходные в четыре раза больше своего бюджета"
3569:. BBC Radio 4. 24 December 2008. Archived from the original on 10 January 2009.
2882:
2834:
2722:
1974:
1675:
1651:
1461:
1256:
1252:
1198:
989:
850:
842:
503:
495:
491:
380:
3915:
3151:
1082:
despite Nicholas I's patronage of the play. Gogol himself, an adherent of the
845:. During this period, he also spent much time with his old Ukrainian friends,
5081:
4985:
4368:
3830:
3175:
3167:
3136:
3128:
3112:
2230:
1573:
1480:
1268:
1260:
1188:
1121:. The first Russian intellectual to publicly preach the economic theories of
939:
813:
796:
621:
300:
3595:
3467:[Stamps issued for the 200th anniversary of N.V. Gogol's birthday].
3218:
Nabokov, Vladimir (2017) . Nikolai Gogol. New York: New Directions. p. 140.
2984:"Очень нервный вечер. Как Николай I и Гоголь постановку «Ревизора» смотрели"
2627:"Очень нервный вечер. Как Николай I и Гоголь постановку «Ревизора» смотрели"
2306:"Очень нервный вечер. Как Николай I и Гоголь постановку «Ревизора» смотрели"
1193:(hick). Bojanowska argues that it was this experience that "made him into a
506:) and belonged to the 'petty gentry'. Gogol knew that his paternal ancestor
322:
21 February] 1852) was a Russian novelist, short story writer, and
4788:
4458:
4274:
4267:
2874:
2018:
1620:
1538:
1486:
More than 135 films have been based on Gogol's work, the most recent being
1376:
1361:
1064:
1005:
970:
763:
540:
467:
420:
342:
3549:
1739:(2004). Outside of Russia, the film loosely served as the inspiration for
287:
5058:
4718:
4711:
4486:
4335:
4225:
4063:
3996:
3847:
Russia's People of Empire: Life stories from Eurasia, 1500 to the present
3829:'s "A History of Russian Literature" (1926-27), a publication now in the
3826:
2894:
2839:
2646:"Le nom de Nikolaï Gogol est immortalisé à la place de la Bourse à Paris"
1680:
1600:
1578:
1530:
1369:
1349:
1319:
1235:
1217:
985:
931:
736:
630:
625:
447:
401:
338:
3954:
3313:
862:. He explained this as a mistake, a practical joke played on him by the
4969:
4580:
4056:
3939:
3354:
Amelia Glaser. "Sholem Aleichem, Gogol Show Two Views of Shtetl Jews."
1772:
1740:
1647:
1546:
1336:
1179:
1083:
1058:
927:
874:
829:
771:
705:
391:
323:
269:
48:
4286:
2854:
2238:
2206:
1125:, Belinsky accused Gogol of betraying his readership by defending the
624:, the Russian minister of education, the appointment was blocked by a
494:. His mother was descended from Leonty Kosyarovsky, an officer of the
4899:
3732:
3528:
3152:"Nikolai Gogol: Performing Hybrid Identity by Yuliya Ilchuk (review)"
3113:"Nikolai Gogol: Performing Hybrid Identity by Yuliya Ilchuk (review)"
2120:. Translated by Robert A. Maguire. Duke University Press. p. 7.
1562:
1522:
1285:
1122:
1106:
3812:
From Upyr' to Vampire: The Slavic Vampire Myth in Russian Literature
3928:
3472:
3206:
2222:
1518:
426:
Many writers and critics have recognized Gogol's huge influence on
379:. His later writing satirised political corruption in contemporary
3924:
811:
was but the first part of a planned modern-day counterpart to the
2162:
He was to remain the least educated of all great Russian writers.
1510:
1413:
1150:
1110:
1079:
1050:
1030:
The first Gogol memorial in Russia (an impressionistic statue by
854:
56:
2812:
2576:
2282:, Canadian Slavonic Papers Sep–Dec 2007. Retrieved 15 June 2008.
1692:. "Christmas Eve" was also adapted into a film in 1961 entitled
942:
did not like the statue, and it was replaced by a more orthodox
661:
4329:
4233:
The Tale of How Ivan Ivanovich Quarreled with Ivan Nikiforovich
3895:
3632:"Gogol's short story The Portrait to be made into feature film"
3464:К 200-летию со дня рождения Н.В. Гоголя выпущены почтовые блоки
1550:
1174:
1086:
movement, believed in a divinely inspired mission for both the
1026:
1016:
The Tale of How Ivan Ivanovich Quarreled with Ivan Nikiforovich
776:
628:
on the grounds that Gogol was unqualified. His fictional story
529:
413:
The Tale of How Ivan Ivanovich Quarreled with Ivan Nikiforovich
33:
1864:
1389:
The Russian Soul and the Jew: Essays in Literary Ethnocentrism
1330:
1255:, to which he also assigned such younger or lesser authors as
3553:
3496:Зчіпка 200-річчя від дня народження Миколи Гоголя (1809–1852)
3437:"ru:200 лет со дня рождения Н.В.Гоголя (1809–1852), писателя"
2845:
2482:
1882:
1534:
1514:
1308:– also admired Gogol and followed in his footsteps. In 1926,
954:
863:
709:
701:
645:
In 1834, Gogol was made Professor of Medieval History at the
4184:
The Lost Letter: A Tale Told by the Sexton of the N...Church
3524:Украина готовится достойно отметить 200-летие Николая Гоголя
3290:
Russian Intellectual Antisemitism in the Post-Communist Era.
2395:
2393:
2391:
2389:
2387:
2385:
2383:
2381:
1165:, Gogol pictures Ukraine as a "nation ... united by organic
434:
and world literature. Gogol's influence was acknowledged by
2421:. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 78–88.
1876:
1858:
1542:
1098:, Gogol sharply disagreed with those Russians who preached
721:
318:
20 March] 1809 – 4 March [
296:
2853:; the numerous and mixed traditions of comic writing from
1997:. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 1–13.
1387:. Felix Dreizin and David Guaspari, for example, in their
3870:"Stolen identity: how Nikolai Gogol usurped Mykola Hohol"
2660:
2494:
2378:
2280:"The Nationalism of Nikolai Gogol': Betwixt and Between?"
2086:[Gogol: Russian and Ukrainian at the same time].
1879:
1873:
1861:
1855:
1323:
and many other secrets of his craft. Based on this work,
596:
in 1835, and two volumes of miscellaneous prose entitled
528:
In 1820, Nikolai Gogol went to a school of higher art in
5163:
19th-century short story writers from the Russian Empire
3390:(in German). Archived from the original on 25 July 2011.
3029:
Nikolai Gogol: Between Ukrainian and Russian Nationalism
2419:
Nikolai Gogol: Between Ukrainian and Russian Nationalism
2326:. Brief Literary Encyclopedia in 9 Volumes. Moscow. 1968
1995:
Nikolai Gogol: Between Ukrainian and Russian Nationalism
584:
In 1831, the first volume of Gogol's Ukrainian stories (
3634:. russianartandculture.com. 4 July 2014. Archived from
3063:. University of Toronto Press. pp. 3–18, 167–172.
2265:. String: On the dissimilarity of the similar. Moscow:
1950:
1923:
1731:
released in 2018. It was also adapted into the Russian
1117:(1847), Gogol came under attack from his former patron
2147:
Writers and society during the rise of Russian realism
1379:. Due to these portrayals, the Russian Zionist writer
1115:
Selected Passages from Correspondence with his Friends
779:
in 1842, under a new title imposed by the censorship,
3288:
Vladim Joseph Rossman, Vadim Rossman, Vidal Sassoon.
1327:
published a summary account of Gogol's masterpieces.
3084:
Ueland, Carol; Trigos, Ludmilla A. (14 March 2022).
1885:
1368:
has stubbornly defied all abstruse interpretations:
600:. At this time, Russian editors and critics such as
2518:
The Anguish of Mykola Ghoghol, a.k.a. Nikolai Gogol
1870:
1852:
1838:
Some sources indicate he was born 19/31 March 1809.
1603:made a series of six Gogol short stories, entitled
1055:Gogol burning the manuscript of the second part of
5128:Dramatists and playwrights from the Russian Empire
1796:A definitive animated movie adaptation of Gogol's
1793:technique, for the National Film Board of Canada.
1684:. In 1894 (i.e., just after Tchaikovsky's death),
734:. Concurrently, he worked at other tasks – recast
2520:. Toronto: Canadian Scholars' Press. p. 67.
1132:
5079:
4480:
2461:. Cambridge University Press. pp. 151–152.
2412:
2410:
2408:
2173:
2114:Gippius, V. V. (1989). Robert A. Maguire (ed.).
2057:. Harvard University Press. pp. 24, 87–88.
1242:
395:), although Gogol also enjoyed the patronage of
32:"Gogol" redirects here. Not to be confused with
3032:. Harvard University Press. pp. 370, 371.
2556:
1986:
1660:(«Різдвяна ніч», with libretto in Ukrainian by
1072:It stunned Gogol when some critics interpreted
620:. Despite the support of Alexander Pushkin and
371:, were influenced by his Ukrainian upbringing,
89:
2678:
2090:(Interview with Vladimir Voropaev) (in French)
1808:has been in production for about fifty years.
1776:was released in April 2018 and the third film
1153:are in-depth, distinguished by description of
29:Russian writer of Ukrainian origin (1809–1852)
4885:
4769:
4636:
4466:
4315:
4012:
3090:. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 95, 96.
2785:"Зачем Сталин убрал памятник Гоголю в Москве"
2562:
2454:
2405:
2167:
1993:Bojanowska, Edyta M. (2007). "Introduction".
1894:
1834:
1832:
1234:about Ukrainian nationhood. His unpublished "
75:
5168:19th-century writers from the Russian Empire
3867:
3746:
3310:"Antisemitism in Literature and in the Arts"
3083:
2150:. The Macmillan Press LTD. pp. 13, 76.
1980:Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary
3045:concomitant to serving Russian nationalism.
2950:Essays on Gogol: Logos and the Russian Word
2931:
2295:, Vol. 56, No. 2 (April 1997), pp. 209–232.
2204:
1664:) in 1872. Just two years later, in 1874,
1607:(2002, adaptations by Jim Poyser) starring
1042:A more conventional statue of Gogol at the
988:, Gogol's work influenced the emergence of
333:in his writings, for example in his works "
4892:
4878:
4776:
4762:
4643:
4629:
4473:
4459:
4322:
4308:
4026:
4019:
4005:
3844:
3659:, Berlin Film Festival, 12 February 2016.
3025:
2666:
2512:
2500:
2488:
2416:
2399:
2351:
2143:
2107:
1992:
1829:
1442:into opera and film. The Russian composer
618:Saint Vladimir Imperial University of Kiev
112:
3386:[Two Compositions Commissioned].
3360:Journal: Jewish News, Events, Los Angeles
3241:. New York: New Directions. p. 140.
3060:Nikolai Gogol: Performing Hybrid Identity
3026:Bojanowska, Edyta M. (28 February 2007).
2448:
2137:
2084:"Gogol: russe et ukrainien en même temps"
1905:[nʲɪkɐˈlajvɐˈsʲilʲjɪvʲɪdʑˈɡoɡəlʲ]
1688:wrote the libretto and music for his own
853:. He intensified his relationship with a
665:Commemorative plaque on his house in Rome
5178:Saint Petersburg State University alumni
3992:Gogol House at Google Cultural Institute
3753:. Oxford University Press. p. 274.
3209:writer." See under "Russian literature."
3110:
2797:For a full story and illustrations, see
1749:(1960) and the South Korean horror film
1329:
1201:'s demand for national homogenization".
1063:
1049:
1037:
1025:
953:
894:
882:
790:
660:
554:
423:", are also among his best-known works.
295:
200:Playwright, short story writer, novelist
5133:Russian male dramatists and playwrights
4291:
3868:Poliukhovych, Olha (20 February 2023).
3234:
2952:. Northwestern University Press, 1994.
2857:to the vaudevillians of the 1820s; the
2113:
786:
550:
14:
5080:
3056:
2506:
2050:
2023:"Nikolay Gogol: Ukrainian-born writer"
2017:
1704:on Christmas Eve 2010, 2011 and 2015.
1605:Three Ivans, Two Aunts and an Overcoat
1281:as "the triumph of Gogolesque irony".
1113:, and the Orthodox Church in his book
914:The first Gogol monument in Moscow, a
712:, frequently meeting the Polish poets
609:contemporaries and friends, including
349:". These stories, and others such as "
4873:
4757:
4624:
4454:
4303:
4290:
4205:Ivan Fyodorovich Shponka and His Aunt
4000:
3593:
3149:
3021:
3019:
1929:
1903:
1787:Alexandre Alexeieff and Claire Parker
1668:composed his version under the title
1625:Ivan Fyodorovich Shponka and His Aunt
795:One of several portraits of Gogol by
168:, Poltava Governorate, Russian Empire
5173:Nizhyn Gogol State University alumni
3907:Works by Nikolai Gogol in eBook form
3825:This article incorporates text from
3747:Nowell-Smith, Geoffrey, ed. (1996).
3384:"Zwei Kompositionsaufträge vergeben"
2715:
2693:Gogol declared that "the subject of
2643:
2324:"Natural School (Натуральная школа)"
2211:The Slavic and East European Journal
2081:
1681:Cherevichki (The Tsarina's Slippers)
1556:Gogol is mentioned several times in
1433:
5143:Monarchists from the Russian Empire
3618:"Patrick Cassavetti boards Lenin?!"
3594:Gogol, Nikolai (24 December 2015).
3057:Ilchuk, Yuliya (26 February 2021).
2205:Postoutenko, Kirill (Summer 2000).
1805:The Nose or Conspiracy of Mavericks
1759:The Russian TV-3 television series
1696:. It was adapted also for radio by
24:
4103:The Order of Vladimir, Third Class
3838:
3750:The Oxford History of World Cinema
3471:(in Russian). 2009. Archived from
3312:. Sicsa.huji.ac.il. Archived from
3016:
1770:in August 2017. A sequel entitled
1721:) in 2006; the action-horror film
762:and his most famous short story, "
658:Gogol resigned his chair in 1835.
466:said: "We all came out from under
353:", have also been noted for their
25:
5199:
3977:Мертвыя души [Dead Souls]
3888:
3156:Slavonic and East European Review
2885:– a long and yet incomplete list.
2787:(in Russian). rg.ru. 1 June 2017.
1553:and many other towns and cities.
992:, and served as a forerunner for
821:. The first part represented the
120:Otto Friedrich Theodor von Möller
5153:Russian male short story writers
4177:May Night, or the Drowned Maiden
3932:
3894:
3818:
3340:University of Pennsylvania Press
1848:
1221:and "pidginized Russian" of the
286:
5183:Burials at Novodevichy Cemetery
4156:Evenings on a Farm Near Dikanka
4123:Evenings on a Farm Near Dikanka
3774:
3740:
3720:
3701:
3682:
3662:
3650:
3624:
3610:
3596:"Nikolai Gogol – Christmas Eve"
3587:
3559:
3543:
3515:
3487:
3455:
3429:
3411:
3376:
3364:
3348:
3328:
3302:
3282:
3255:
3228:
3212:
3199:
3182:
3143:
3104:
3077:
3050:
2994:
2976:
2963:
2942:
2925:
2916:
2899:A History of Russian Literature
2888:
2827:
2791:
2777:
2756:
2741:
2701:
2687:
2672:
2637:
2619:
2583:
2534:
2455:Richard Peace (30 April 2009).
2435:
2338:
2316:
2298:
2285:
2272:
2256:
2198:
2051:Fanger, Donald (30 June 2009).
1811:
1650:composers. Ukrainian composer
1247:Even before the publication of
746:, completed his second comedy,
587:Evenings on a Farm Near Dikanka
411:(1842), and the short stories "
368:Evenings on a Farm Near Dikanka
229:Evenings on a Farm Near Dikanka
3556:-photo service (19 March 2009)
2938:(in Russian). Leningrad: Ogiz.
2075:
2044:
2011:
1968:
1841:
1595:
1133:Ukrainian cultural connections
575:Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
559:Cover of the first edition of
543:poem of German idyllic life –
399:who liked his work. The novel
361:, Gogol used the technique of
13:
1:
5108:People from Mirgorodsky Uyezd
5008:Incognito from St. Petersburg
3810:Townsend, Dorian Aleksandra,
3803:
3004:. marxists.org. February 2008
2903:Northwestern University Press
2598:American Conservative Theater
2417:Bojanowska, Edyta M. (2007).
2346:Concise Literary Encyclopedia
2054:The Creation of Nikolai Gogol
1727:in 2014; and the horror film
1690:opera based on the same story
1243:Influence and interpretations
534:Nizhyn Gogol State University
473:
118:Portrait of Nikolai Gogol by
45:Eastern Slavic naming customs
3987:A quiz on Gogol at Goodreads
3980:From the Collections at the
3949:Gogol : Magical realism
3336:The History of Antisemitism.
3294:University of Nebraska Press
2681:Journal of Ukrainian Studies
2082:Vaag, Irina (9 April 2009).
1961:
1678:) and revised it in 1885 as
1615:. The stories adapted were "
1588:considered Gogol along with
1205:Scollins, Gogol's narrative
647:University of St. Petersburg
131:Nikolai Vasilyevich Yanovsky
7:
3931:(public domain audiobooks)
3235:Nabokov, Vladimir (2017) .
3111:Scollins, Kathleen (2022).
2881:); the French tradition of
2753:Retrieved 23 September 2013
1951:
1924:
1401:The History of Antisemitism
1068:Postage stamp, Russia, 2009
1021:
922:, represented the sculptor
891:, as it looked in 1952–2009
781:The Adventures of Chichikov
769:In 1841, the first part of
720:. He eventually settled in
611:Hryhory Kvitka-Osnovyanenko
573:in the lands of the former
10:
5204:
5103:People from Poltava Oblast
5027:(Russian Federation, 1996)
4837:The Girl in the White Coat
4688:The Night Before Christmas
4680:The Night Before Christmas
4672:The Night Before Christmas
3679:, London, 29 January 2016.
2849:in the Russian version by
2591:"The Government Inspector"
2180:. SUNY Press. p. 65.
1818:Nikolai Gogol bibliography
1815:
1802:released in January 2020.
1694:The Night Before Christmas
1674:(with Russian libretto by
1489:The Girl in the White Coat
1403:, the author mentions that
1227:The Night before Christmas
958:Among the illustrators of
634:, based on the history of
440:Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin
303:of Gogol taken in 1845 by
43:In this name that follows
42:
31:
5034:
4913:
4855:
4796:
4741:
4698:
4663:
4599:
4564:
4537:
4494:
4438:
4411:
4344:
4297:
4146:
4112:
4073:
4048:
4035:
3698:Russia, 12 February 2016.
3579:: CS1 maint: unfit URL (
3503:(in Ukrainian). Ukrposhta
3400:: CS1 maint: unfit URL (
2569:New York University Press
2174:Amy C. Singleton (1997).
1943:
1939:
1913:
1896:Николай Васильевич Гоголь
1895:
1713:in 1967; the horror film
1495:
1169:, historical memory, and
312:Nikolai Vasilyevich Gogol
285:
280:
220:
212:
204:
196:
186:
172:
127:
111:
90:
76:
70:
5113:Eastern Orthodox writers
4906:The Government Inspector
4385:Taras Bulba, the Cossack
4219:The Old World Landowners
4082:The Government Inspector
3851:Indiana University Press
3668:Russian Art and Culture
3523:
3495:
3463:
3168:10.1353/see.2023.a923986
3129:10.1353/pnr.2022.a903273
2818:13 December 2018 at the
2768:4 September 2011 at the
1925:Mykola Vasyliovych Hohol
1914:Микола Васильович Гоголь
1822:
1782:debuted in August 2018.
1503:National Bank of Ukraine
1457:The Government Inspector
1358:The Government Inspector
1315:The Government Inspector
1195:self-conscious Ukrainian
1075:The Government Inspector
949:
681:The Government Inspector
562:The Government Inspector
464:Eugène-Melchior de Vogüé
386:The Government Inspector
357:qualities. According to
245:The Government Inspector
4978:President Panchaksharam
4589:Gogol. Terrible Revenge
4546:Viy 2: Journey to China
4163:The Fair at Sorochyntsi
3970:Encyclopædia Britannica
3275:, judging by his story
2971:Encyclopædia Britannica
2804:17 October 2007 at the
2364:Encyclopædia Britannica
2027:Encyclopedia Britannica
1779:Gogol: Terrible Revenge
1633:The Mysterious Portrait
1284:The period of literary
1278:Encyclopædia Britannica
1100:constitutional monarchy
1092:Russian Orthodox Church
305:Sergei Lvovich Levitsky
5188:Ukrainian male writers
5148:Russian male novelists
5043:Chlestakows Wiederkehr
4933:(Czechoslovakia, 1933)
4554:Viy 3: Travel to India
3925:Works by Nikolai Gogol
3916:Works by Nikolai Gogol
3713:29 August 2018 at the
3150:Green, Daniel (2023).
3002:"Letter to N.V. Gogol"
2969:"Russian literature."
2723:"Novodevichy Cemetery"
2600:. 2008. Archived from
2563:Lindstrom, T. (1966).
2067:. pp. 24, 87–88:
1592:his favorite writers.
1440:adapted numerous times
1431:
1418:
1341:
1137:Gogol was born in the
1069:
1061:
1047:
1044:Villa Borghese gardens
1035:
967:
900:
892:
873:, close to his fellow
800:
756:), wrote the fragment
666:
656:
566:
478:Gogol was born in the
308:
182:Moscow, Russian Empire
38:Gogol (disambiguation)
36:. For other uses, see
5118:Magic realism writers
4962:The Inspector-General
4946:The Inspector General
4930:The Inspector General
4808:(1926 silent Russian)
3656:Screen International
3194:Duke University Press
2644:RBTH (24 June 2013).
1737:Viy: The Story Retold
1642:Gogol's short story "
1446:wrote the eight-part
1427:
1405:
1333:
1067:
1053:
1041:
1029:
957:
898:
887:Gogol's grave at the
886:
803:After the triumph of
794:
690:Alexandrinsky Theatre
664:
651:
558:
500:Vasily Gogol-Yanovsky
326:of Ukrainian origin.
299:
5011:(Soviet Union, 1977)
4965:(Soviet Union, 1952)
4821:The Bespoke Overcoat
4573:Gogol. The Beginning
4198:A Terrible Vengeance
3903:at Wikimedia Commons
3316:on 26 September 2013
2935:The Mastery Of Gogol
2932:Andrey Bely (1934).
2607:on 24 September 2020
2542:"Welcome to Ukraine"
1767:Gogol. The Beginning
1569:Crime and Punishment
1223:Zaporizhian Cossacks
1149:, Gogol's images of
1078:as an indictment of
978:A Terrible Vengeance
905:Novodevichy Cemetery
889:Novodevichy Cemetery
787:Later life and death
640:Mykhaylo Maksymovych
636:Zaporozhian Сossacks
551:Literary development
498:in 1710. His father
191:Novodevichy Cemetery
5158:Ukrainian novelists
5019:(Netherlands, 1982)
4994:Calzonzin Inspector
4292:Associated subjects
3982:Library of Congress
3675:1 July 2016 at the
3598:. BBC Radio 4 Extra
2144:Joe Andrew (1995).
1791:pinscreen animation
1586:Ryūnosuke Akutagawa
1477:Theater an der Wien
1466:Dmitri Shostakovich
1407:"The 'Yankel' from
579:Russian nationalism
522:left-bank Ukrainian
488:Poltava Governorate
444:Ryūnosuke Akutagawa
314:(1 April [
5123:Mythopoeic writers
4938:Antek policmajster
4922:A City Upside Down
4722:(1887 Tchaikovsky)
3694:3 May 2019 at the
3356:The Jewish Journal
2491:, p. 160-161.
1662:Mykhailo Starytsky
1558:Fyodor Dostoyevsky
1507:commemorative coin
1385:Fyodor Dostoyevsky
1342:
1310:Vsevolod Meyerhold
1265:Dmitry Grigorovich
1163:Evenings on a Farm
1119:Vissarion Belinsky
1096:Fyodor Dostoyevsky
1070:
1062:
1048:
1036:
968:
936:October Revolution
901:
893:
801:
676:Vissarion Belinsky
667:
567:
309:
5138:Russian satirists
5075:
5074:
5069:
5068:
4973:(Indonesia, 1955)
4867:
4866:
4751:
4750:
4618:
4617:
4448:
4447:
4284:
4283:
4254:Diary of a Madman
4212:A Bewitched Place
3959:Books and Writers
3953:Petri Liukkonen.
3920:Project Gutenberg
3899:Media related to
3860:978-0-253-00176-4
3760:978-0-19-874242-5
3717:16 February 2016.
3531:on 19 August 2014
3248:978-0-8112-0120-9
3097:978-1-7936-1830-6
3070:978-1-4875-0825-8
3039:978-0-674-02291-1
2988:Argumenty i Fakty
2813:Москва и москвичи
2727:Passport Magazine
2631:Argumenty i Fakty
2468:978-0-521-11023-5
2344:Nikolai Gogol //
2310:Argumenty i Fakty
2278:Ilnytzkyj, Oleh.
2269:, 1970. – p. 230.
2187:978-0-7914-3399-7
2021:(27 March 2021).
1949:
1922:
1719:The Power of Fear
1637:Diary of a Madman
1434:In music and film
1298:Serapion Brothers
1290:Russian formalism
1273:Vladimir Sollogub
1207:double-voicedness
1139:Ukrainian Cossack
982:A Bewitched Place
944:Socialist Realist
878:Aleksey Khomyakov
871:Danilov Monastery
606:Nikolai Nadezhdin
577:led to a rise of
571:November Uprising
545:Hans Küchelgarten
480:Ukrainian Cossack
460:Flannery O'Connor
436:Fyodor Dostoevsky
405:(1835), the play
373:Ukrainian culture
363:defamiliarization
351:Diary of a Madman
294:
293:
16:(Redirected from
5195:
5051:Inspecting Carol
4894:
4887:
4880:
4871:
4870:
4778:
4771:
4764:
4755:
4754:
4707:Vakula the Smith
4645:
4638:
4631:
4622:
4621:
4475:
4468:
4461:
4452:
4451:
4324:
4317:
4310:
4301:
4300:
4288:
4287:
4021:
4014:
4007:
3998:
3997:
3936:
3935:
3898:
3884:
3882:
3880:
3864:
3822:
3821:
3797:
3796:
3794:
3792:
3778:
3772:
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3769:
3767:
3744:
3738:
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3724:
3718:
3705:
3699:
3686:
3680:
3666:
3660:
3654:
3648:
3647:
3645:
3643:
3638:on 10 April 2016
3628:
3622:
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3614:
3608:
3607:
3605:
3603:
3591:
3585:
3584:
3578:
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3538:
3536:
3519:
3513:
3512:
3510:
3508:
3491:
3485:
3484:
3482:
3480:
3475:on 17 March 2012
3459:
3453:
3452:
3450:
3448:
3443:on 22 March 2009
3433:
3427:
3426:
3415:
3409:
3405:
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3300:
3286:
3280:
3259:
3253:
3252:
3232:
3226:
3216:
3210:
3203:
3197:
3196:, 1989, p. 166).
3186:
3180:
3179:
3147:
3141:
3140:
3108:
3102:
3101:
3081:
3075:
3074:
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3014:
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3011:
3009:
2998:
2992:
2991:
2980:
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2967:
2961:
2946:
2940:
2939:
2929:
2923:
2920:
2914:
2892:
2886:
2859:picaresque novel
2831:
2825:
2824:
2810:
2795:
2789:
2788:
2781:
2775:
2774:
2760:
2754:
2752:
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2719:
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2549:
2538:
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2414:
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2355:
2349:
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2335:
2333:
2331:
2320:
2314:
2313:
2302:
2296:
2289:
2283:
2276:
2270:
2267:Sovetsky Pisatel
2263:Viktor Shklovsky
2260:
2254:
2253:
2247:
2245:
2202:
2196:
2195:
2171:
2165:
2164:
2141:
2135:
2134:
2111:
2105:
2104:
2097:
2095:
2079:
2073:
2072:
2048:
2042:
2041:
2035:
2033:
2015:
2009:
2008:
1990:
1984:
1972:
1955:
1954:
1948:romanized:
1947:
1945:
1941:
1937:
1927:
1917:
1915:
1907:
1902:
1898:
1897:
1892:
1891:
1888:
1887:
1884:
1881:
1878:
1875:
1872:
1867:
1866:
1863:
1860:
1857:
1854:
1845:
1839:
1836:
1751:Evil Spirit: Viy
1671:Vakula the Smith
1609:Griff Rhys-Jones
1452:incidental music
1444:Alfred Schnittke
1381:Ze'ev Jabotinsky
1325:Vladimir Nabokov
1306:Mikhail Bulgakov
1302:Yevgeny Zamyatin
1185:Edyta Bojanowska
1173:". His image of
1147:Edyta Bojanowska
1105:After defending
1088:House of Romanov
1032:Nikolay Andreyev
924:Nikolay Andreyev
909:Mikhail Bulgakov
704:, among Russian
516:
468:Gogol's Overcoat
456:Vladimir Nabokov
452:Mikhail Bulgakov
359:Viktor Shklovsky
355:proto-surrealist
290:
262:
254:Petersburg Tales
179:
176:21 February 1852
163:
155:
153:
147:
139:
137:
116:
106:
102:
101:
93:
92:
87:
79:
78:
68:
67:
21:
5203:
5202:
5198:
5197:
5196:
5194:
5193:
5192:
5078:
5077:
5076:
5071:
5070:
5065:
5030:
5016:De Boezemvriend
5003:(Finland, 1975)
4925:(Germany, 1933)
4909:
4898:
4868:
4863:
4861:"Nayi Sherwani"
4851:
4792:
4782:
4752:
4747:
4737:
4732:Rimsky-Korsakov
4694:
4659:
4649:
4619:
4614:
4595:
4560:
4533:
4490:
4479:
4449:
4444:
4434:
4407:
4340:
4328:
4293:
4285:
4280:
4247:Nevsky Prospekt
4142:
4114:
4108:
4069:
4044:
4031:
4025:
3955:"Nikolai Gogol"
3933:
3911:Standard Ebooks
3891:
3878:
3876:
3861:
3841:
3839:Further reading
3819:
3806:
3801:
3800:
3790:
3788:
3780:
3779:
3775:
3765:
3763:
3761:
3745:
3741:
3726:
3725:
3721:
3715:Wayback Machine
3706:
3702:
3696:Wayback Machine
3687:
3683:
3677:Wayback Machine
3667:
3663:
3655:
3651:
3641:
3639:
3630:
3629:
3625:
3616:
3615:
3611:
3601:
3599:
3592:
3588:
3572:
3571:
3567:"Christmas Eve"
3565:
3564:
3560:
3548:
3544:
3534:
3532:
3525:
3521:
3520:
3516:
3506:
3504:
3497:
3493:
3492:
3488:
3478:
3476:
3465:
3461:
3460:
3456:
3446:
3444:
3435:
3434:
3430:
3419:"Nikolai Gogol"
3417:
3416:
3412:
3393:
3392:
3382:
3381:
3377:
3369:
3365:
3353:
3349:
3334:Léon Poliakov.
3333:
3329:
3319:
3317:
3308:
3307:
3303:
3287:
3283:
3273:Aleksey Remizov
3260:
3256:
3249:
3233:
3229:
3217:
3213:
3204:
3200:
3187:
3183:
3148:
3144:
3109:
3105:
3098:
3082:
3078:
3071:
3055:
3051:
3040:
3024:
3017:
3007:
3005:
3000:
2999:
2995:
2982:
2981:
2977:
2968:
2964:
2947:
2943:
2930:
2926:
2921:
2917:
2893:
2889:
2879:E.T.A. Hoffmann
2832:
2828:
2822:
2820:Wayback Machine
2808:
2806:Wayback Machine
2796:
2792:
2783:
2782:
2778:
2772:
2770:Wayback Machine
2761:
2757:
2750:
2746:
2742:
2732:
2730:
2721:
2720:
2716:
2710:
2706:
2702:
2692:
2688:
2683:. 35–36: 51–68.
2677:
2673:
2667:Bojanowska 2012
2665:
2661:
2651:
2649:
2642:
2638:
2625:
2624:
2620:
2610:
2608:
2604:
2593:
2589:
2588:
2584:
2571:. p. 131.
2561:
2557:
2547:
2545:
2544:. Wumag.kiev.ua
2540:
2539:
2535:
2528:
2511:
2507:
2501:Bojanowska 2012
2499:
2495:
2489:Bojanowska 2012
2487:
2483:
2473:
2471:
2469:
2453:
2449:
2441:Krys Svitlana,
2440:
2436:
2429:
2415:
2406:
2400:Bojanowska 2012
2398:
2379:
2369:
2367:
2359:"Nikolay Gogol"
2357:
2356:
2352:
2343:
2339:
2329:
2327:
2322:
2321:
2317:
2304:
2303:
2299:
2290:
2286:
2277:
2273:
2261:
2257:
2248:. p. 319:
2243:
2241:
2203:
2199:
2188:
2172:
2168:
2158:
2142:
2138:
2128:
2112:
2108:
2093:
2091:
2080:
2076:
2065:
2049:
2045:
2031:
2029:
2016:
2012:
2005:
1991:
1987:
1973:
1969:
1964:
1959:
1958:
1900:
1893:; Russian:
1869:
1851:
1847:
1846:
1842:
1837:
1830:
1825:
1820:
1814:
1686:Rimsky-Korsakov
1598:
1590:Edgar Allan Poe
1498:
1460:performed as a
1436:
1423:Sholem Aleichem
1245:
1145:. According to
1135:
1057:Dead Souls, by
1024:
952:
839:Mikhail Pogodin
789:
714:Adam Mickiewicz
672:Stepan Shevyrev
602:Nikolai Polevoy
553:
510:
476:
397:Tsar Nicholas I
347:Nevsky Prospekt
329:Gogol used the
276:
256:
181:
177:
164:
157:
151:
149:
141:
135:
133:
132:
123:
107:
104:
103:
95:
88:
81:
74:
73:
64:
41:
30:
23:
22:
15:
12:
11:
5:
5201:
5191:
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5170:
5165:
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5155:
5150:
5145:
5140:
5135:
5130:
5125:
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5115:
5110:
5105:
5100:
5095:
5090:
5073:
5072:
5067:
5066:
5064:
5063:
5055:
5047:
5038:
5036:
5032:
5031:
5029:
5028:
5020:
5012:
5004:
4998:
4997:(Mexico, 1974)
4990:
4982:
4974:
4966:
4958:
4950:
4942:
4941:(Poland, 1935)
4934:
4926:
4917:
4915:
4911:
4910:
4897:
4896:
4889:
4882:
4874:
4865:
4864:
4859:
4857:
4853:
4852:
4850:
4849:
4841:
4833:
4832:(1959 Russian)
4825:
4817:
4816:(1952 Italian)
4809:
4800:
4798:
4794:
4793:
4781:
4780:
4773:
4766:
4758:
4749:
4748:
4746:
4745:
4742:
4739:
4738:
4736:
4735:
4723:
4715:
4702:
4700:
4696:
4695:
4693:
4692:
4684:
4676:
4667:
4665:
4661:
4660:
4648:
4647:
4640:
4633:
4625:
4616:
4615:
4613:
4612:
4603:
4601:
4597:
4596:
4594:
4593:
4585:
4577:
4568:
4566:
4562:
4561:
4559:
4558:
4550:
4541:
4539:
4535:
4534:
4532:
4531:
4523:
4515:
4507:
4498:
4496:
4492:
4491:
4478:
4477:
4470:
4463:
4455:
4446:
4445:
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4442:
4439:
4436:
4435:
4433:
4432:
4424:
4415:
4413:
4409:
4408:
4406:
4405:
4397:
4396:(2009 Russian)
4389:
4381:
4373:
4365:
4357:
4348:
4346:
4342:
4341:
4327:
4326:
4319:
4312:
4304:
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4250:
4243:
4236:
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4222:
4215:
4208:
4201:
4194:
4187:
4180:
4173:
4170:St. John's Eve
4166:
4159:
4150:
4148:
4144:
4143:
4141:
4140:
4133:
4126:
4118:
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3994:
3989:
3984:
3973:
3962:
3951:
3946:
3937:
3922:
3913:
3904:
3890:
3889:External links
3887:
3886:
3885:
3865:
3859:
3840:
3837:
3836:
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3816:
3805:
3802:
3799:
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3363:
3347:
3327:
3301:
3281:
3254:
3247:
3227:
3211:
3198:
3181:
3162:(4): 784–785.
3142:
3117:Pushkin Review
3103:
3096:
3076:
3069:
3049:
3038:
3015:
2993:
2986:(in Russian).
2975:
2962:
2941:
2924:
2922:Mirsky, p. 191
2915:
2887:
2883:Gothic romance
2835:puppet theatre
2826:
2790:
2776:
2755:
2740:
2714:
2700:
2686:
2671:
2669:, p. 165.
2659:
2636:
2629:(in Russian).
2618:
2582:
2555:
2533:
2526:
2505:
2503:, p. 161.
2493:
2481:
2467:
2447:
2434:
2427:
2404:
2402:, p. 160.
2377:
2350:
2337:
2315:
2308:(in Russian).
2297:
2293:Russian Review
2284:
2271:
2255:
2223:10.2307/309969
2217:(2): 319–320.
2197:
2190:. p. 65:
2186:
2166:
2160:. p. 76:
2156:
2136:
2126:
2106:
2074:
2063:
2043:
2010:
2003:
1985:
1966:
1965:
1963:
1960:
1957:
1956:
1840:
1827:
1826:
1824:
1821:
1816:Main article:
1813:
1810:
1676:Yakov Polonsky
1652:Mykola Lysenko
1597:
1594:
1497:
1494:
1435:
1432:
1253:Natural School
1244:
1241:
1134:
1131:
1023:
1020:
990:Gothic romance
951:
948:
851:Osyp Bodiansky
843:Sergey Aksakov
788:
785:
718:Bohdan Zaleski
552:
549:
532:(Nizhyn) (now
525:home theater.
504:Lyzohub family
496:Lubny Regiment
492:Russian Empire
475:
472:
292:
291:
283:
282:
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180:(aged 42)
174:
170:
169:
140:20 March 1809
129:
125:
124:
117:
109:
108:
77:Николай Гоголь
71:
28:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
5200:
5189:
5186:
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5179:
5176:
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5141:
5139:
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5134:
5131:
5129:
5126:
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5119:
5116:
5114:
5111:
5109:
5106:
5104:
5101:
5099:
5096:
5094:
5091:
5089:
5088:Nikolai Gogol
5086:
5085:
5083:
5061:
5060:
5056:
5053:
5052:
5048:
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5044:
5040:
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5026:
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5021:
5018:
5017:
5013:
5010:
5009:
5005:
5002:
4999:
4996:
4995:
4991:
4989:(Italy, 1962)
4988:
4987:
4986:Roaring Years
4983:
4981:(India, 1959)
4980:
4979:
4975:
4972:
4971:
4967:
4964:
4963:
4959:
4957:(India, 1950)
4956:
4955:
4951:
4948:
4947:
4943:
4940:
4939:
4935:
4932:
4931:
4927:
4924:
4923:
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4912:
4908:
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4901:Nikolai Gogol
4895:
4890:
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4876:
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4790:
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4785:Nikolai Gogol
4779:
4774:
4772:
4767:
4765:
4760:
4759:
4756:
4744:
4743:
4740:
4733:
4729:
4728:
4727:Christmas Eve
4724:
4721:
4720:
4716:
4713:
4709:
4708:
4704:
4703:
4701:
4697:
4690:
4689:
4685:
4682:
4681:
4677:
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4669:
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4666:
4662:
4657:
4656:Christmas Eve
4653:
4652:Nikolai Gogol
4646:
4641:
4639:
4634:
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4627:
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4609:
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4508:
4505:
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4489:
4488:
4483:
4482:Nikolai Gogol
4476:
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4462:
4457:
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4379:
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4369:The Rebel Son
4366:
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4362:
4358:
4355:
4354:
4350:
4349:
4347:
4343:
4338:
4337:
4332:
4331:Nikolai Gogol
4325:
4320:
4318:
4313:
4311:
4306:
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4302:
4296:
4289:
4276:
4272:
4269:
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4230:
4227:
4223:
4220:
4216:
4213:
4209:
4206:
4202:
4199:
4195:
4192:
4191:Christmas Eve
4188:
4185:
4181:
4178:
4174:
4171:
4167:
4164:
4160:
4158:
4157:
4152:
4151:
4149:
4147:Short stories
4145:
4139:
4138:
4134:
4132:
4131:
4127:
4125:
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4120:
4119:
4117:
4111:
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4038:
4037:
4034:
4030:
4029:Nikolai Gogol
4022:
4017:
4015:
4010:
4008:
4003:
4002:
3999:
3993:
3990:
3988:
3985:
3983:
3979:
3978:
3974:
3972:
3971:
3966:
3965:Nikolay Gogol
3963:
3960:
3956:
3952:
3950:
3947:
3945:
3941:
3940:Nikolai Gogol
3938:
3930:
3926:
3923:
3921:
3917:
3914:
3912:
3908:
3905:
3902:
3901:Nikolai Gogol
3897:
3893:
3892:
3875:
3871:
3866:
3862:
3856:
3852:
3848:
3843:
3842:
3834:
3832:
3831:public domain
3828:
3817:
3815:
3813:
3808:
3807:
3787:
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3777:
3762:
3756:
3752:
3751:
3743:
3735:
3734:
3729:
3723:
3716:
3712:
3709:
3707:Britshow.com
3704:
3697:
3693:
3690:
3688:Kinodata.Pro
3685:
3678:
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3658:
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3432:
3424:
3420:
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3408:
3403:
3397:
3389:
3385:
3379:
3373:, CD Universe
3372:
3367:
3361:
3357:
3351:
3345:
3341:
3337:
3331:
3315:
3311:
3305:
3299:
3295:
3291:
3285:
3278:
3277:The Sacrifice
3274:
3270:
3266:
3265:
3258:
3250:
3244:
3240:
3239:
3238:Nikolai Gogol
3231:
3225:
3224:0-8112-0120-1
3221:
3215:
3208:
3202:
3195:
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3123:(1): 97–101.
3122:
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3003:
2997:
2990:. 1 May 2016.
2989:
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2972:
2966:
2959:
2958:0-8101-1191-8
2955:
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2911:0-8101-1679-0
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2696:
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2682:
2675:
2668:
2663:
2647:
2640:
2633:. 1 May 2016.
2632:
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2603:
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2527:1-55130-107-5
2523:
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2428:9780674022911
2424:
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2401:
2396:
2394:
2392:
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2366:
2365:
2360:
2354:
2348:in 9 volumes.
2347:
2341:
2325:
2319:
2312:. 1 May 2016.
2311:
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2301:
2294:
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2240:
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2163:
2159:
2157:9781349044214
2153:
2149:
2148:
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2133:
2130:. p. 7:
2129:
2127:9780822309079
2123:
2119:
2118:
2110:
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2089:
2085:
2078:
2071:
2066:
2064:9780674036697
2060:
2056:
2055:
2047:
2040:
2028:
2024:
2020:
2019:Lavrin, Janko
2014:
2006:
2004:9780674022911
2000:
1996:
1989:
1982:
1981:
1976:
1971:
1967:
1953:
1942:; Ukrainian:
1936:
1932:
1926:
1920:
1911:
1906:
1890:
1844:
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1809:
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1702:Radio 4 Extra
1699:
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1673:
1672:
1667:
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1659:
1658:
1657:Christmas Eve
1653:
1649:
1645:
1644:Christmas Eve
1640:
1638:
1634:
1630:
1626:
1622:
1618:
1617:The Two Ivans
1614:
1613:Stephen Moore
1610:
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1481:Lera Auerbach
1478:
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1398:
1397:Léon Poliakov
1394:
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1269:Vladimir Dahl
1266:
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1237:
1231:
1228:
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1196:
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1103:
1101:
1097:
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1077:
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1056:
1052:
1045:
1040:
1033:
1028:
1019:
1017:
1012:
1008:
1007:
1001:
999:
998:impressionism
995:
991:
987:
983:
979:
974:
972:
965:
964:Pyotr Sokolov
961:
956:
947:
945:
941:
940:Joseph Stalin
937:
933:
929:
925:
921:
917:
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910:
906:
897:
890:
885:
881:
879:
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861:
856:
852:
848:
844:
840:
834:
832:
831:
826:
825:
820:
816:
815:
814:Divine Comedy
810:
806:
798:
797:Fyodor Moller
793:
784:
782:
778:
774:
773:
767:
765:
761:
760:
755:
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637:
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623:
622:Sergey Uvarov
619:
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607:
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588:
582:
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572:
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531:
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398:
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327:
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321:
317:
313:
306:
302:
301:Daguerreotype
298:
289:
284:
279:
272:
271:
267:
266:
265:
264:(1833–1842)
263:
260:
255:
247:
246:
242:
239:
238:
234:
231:
230:
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221:Notable works
219:
215:
211:
207:
203:
199:
195:
192:
189:
187:Resting place
185:
175:
171:
167:
161:
156:1 April 1809
145:
130:
126:
122:(early 1840s)
121:
115:
110:
99:
91:Микола Гоголь
85:
72:Nikolai Gogol
69:
66:
62:
58:
55: and the
54:
50:
46:
39:
35:
27:
19:
5057:
5049:
5041:
5022:
5014:
5006:
5000:
4992:
4984:
4976:
4968:
4960:
4952:
4944:
4936:
4928:
4920:
4904:
4900:
4845:The Overcoat
4844:
4835:
4829:The Overcoat
4827:
4819:
4813:The Overcoat
4811:
4805:The Overcoat
4803:
4789:The Overcoat
4784:
4725:
4717:
4705:
4686:
4679:
4671:
4651:
4606:
4587:
4579:
4571:
4552:
4544:
4525:
4517:
4511:Black Sunday
4509:
4501:
4485:
4481:
4426:
4418:
4404:(2011 Hindi)
4399:
4391:
4383:
4375:
4367:
4359:
4351:
4334:
4330:
4275:The Overcoat
4268:The Carriage
4240:The Portrait
4155:
4135:
4128:
4121:
4101:
4096:The Gamblers
4094:
4087:
4080:
4062:
4055:
4040:Bibliography
4028:
3976:
3968:
3958:
3877:. Retrieved
3873:
3846:
3824:
3811:
3789:. Retrieved
3785:
3776:
3764:. Retrieved
3749:
3742:
3731:
3722:
3703:
3684:
3664:
3652:
3640:. Retrieved
3636:the original
3626:
3612:
3600:. Retrieved
3589:
3561:
3545:
3533:. Retrieved
3529:the original
3517:
3505:. Retrieved
3500:
3489:
3477:. Retrieved
3473:the original
3468:
3457:
3445:. Retrieved
3441:the original
3431:
3422:
3413:
3387:
3378:
3366:
3350:
3335:
3330:
3318:. Retrieved
3314:the original
3304:
3289:
3284:
3276:
3268:
3263:
3257:
3237:
3230:
3214:
3201:
3189:
3184:
3159:
3155:
3145:
3120:
3116:
3106:
3086:
3079:
3059:
3052:
3043:
3028:
3006:. Retrieved
2996:
2978:
2965:
2949:
2944:
2934:
2927:
2918:
2898:
2890:
2844:
2838:
2829:
2823:(in Russian)
2809:(in Russian)
2793:
2779:
2773:(in Russian)
2758:
2751:(in Russian)
2743:
2733:12 September
2731:. Retrieved
2729:. April 2008
2726:
2717:
2711:(in Russian)
2703:
2694:
2689:
2680:
2674:
2662:
2650:. Retrieved
2639:
2621:
2609:. Retrieved
2602:the original
2597:
2585:
2567:. New York:
2564:
2558:
2546:. Retrieved
2536:
2517:
2508:
2496:
2484:
2472:. Retrieved
2457:
2450:
2442:
2437:
2418:
2368:. Retrieved
2362:
2353:
2340:
2328:. Retrieved
2318:
2300:
2292:
2287:
2274:
2258:
2249:
2242:. Retrieved
2214:
2210:
2200:
2191:
2176:
2169:
2161:
2146:
2139:
2131:
2116:
2109:
2099:
2092:. Retrieved
2087:
2077:
2068:
2053:
2046:
2037:
2030:. Retrieved
2026:
2013:
1994:
1988:
1978:
1970:
1934:
1843:
1812:Bibliography
1803:
1797:
1795:
1789:, using the
1784:
1777:
1771:
1765:
1760:
1758:
1755:
1750:
1746:Black Sunday
1744:
1736:
1728:
1722:
1718:
1714:
1708:
1706:
1679:
1669:
1656:
1641:
1621:The Overcoat
1604:
1599:
1584:
1577:
1567:
1561:
1555:
1549:, Belgrade,
1539:Petrozavodsk
1499:
1487:
1485:
1470:
1455:
1447:
1437:
1428:
1419:
1408:
1406:
1400:
1392:
1388:
1377:antisemitism
1374:
1362:The Overcoat
1357:
1353:
1343:
1335:
1313:
1283:
1276:
1248:
1246:
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1216:
1210:
1203:
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1189:
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1126:
1114:
1104:
1073:
1071:
1054:
1004:
1002:
975:
971:D. S. Mirsky
969:
959:
920:Arbat Square
913:
902:
868:
859:
835:
828:
822:
812:
808:
804:
802:
780:
770:
768:
764:The Overcoat
757:
753:
747:
743:The Portrait
741:
735:
731:
726:
699:
685:
679:
668:
657:
652:
644:
629:
615:
597:
591:
585:
583:
568:
560:
544:
538:
527:
519:
477:
462:and others.
425:
421:The Carriage
417:The Portrait
406:
400:
390:
384:
366:
343:The Overcoat
328:
311:
310:
268:
252:
251:
243:
235:
227:
178:(1852-02-21)
105:Mykola Hohol
65:
60:
52:
26:
5098:1852 deaths
5093:1809 births
5059:Der Revisor
4949:(USA, 1949)
4719:Cherevichki
4712:Tchaikovsky
4428:Taras Bulba
4420:Taras Bulba
4393:Taras Bulba
4377:Taras Bulba
4361:Taras Bulba
4353:Taras Bulba
4336:Taras Bulba
4154:Preface to
4115:collections
4113:Short story
4064:Taras Bulba
3827:D.S. Mirsky
3791:28 November
3786:Коммерсантъ
3766:13 November
3469:kraspost.ru
3388:wien.orf.at
3371:Gogol Suite
3008:12 December
2895:D.S. Mirsky
2698:volumes..."
2648:(in French)
2370:31 December
2251:literature.
1735:video game
1698:Adam Beeson
1666:Tchaikovsky
1648:East Slavic
1601:BBC Radio 4
1596:Adaptations
1579:The Seagull
1531:Vladivostok
1448:Gogol Suite
1409:Taras Bulba
1393:Taras Bulba
1370:D.S. Mirsky
1350:Andrei Bely
1320:Andrei Bely
1218:Taras Bulba
1143:Sorochyntsi
986:Andrey Bely
932:Leo Tolstoy
847:Maksymovych
740:(1842) and
737:Taras Bulba
708:and Polish
706:expatriates
631:Taras Bulba
511: [
508:Ostap Hohol
484:Sorochyntsi
448:Franz Kafka
402:Taras Bulba
307:(1819–1898)
257: [
232:(1831–1832)
166:Sorochyntsi
57:family name
53:Vasilievich
5082:Categories
4970:Tamu Agung
4856:Television
4581:Gogol. Viy
4565:Television
4431:(rhapsody)
4137:Arabesques
4057:Dead Souls
3804:References
3344:Google.com
3298:Google.com
3264:The Double
2695:Dead Souls
2514:Luckyj, G.
2330:1 December
1938:(Russian:
1773:Gogol: Viy
1741:Mario Bava
1654:wrote his
1547:Bratislava
1366:"The Nose"
1354:Dead Souls
1337:Dead Souls
1294:Eichenbaum
1249:Dead Souls
1180:Dead Souls
1127:status quo
1084:Slavophile
1059:Ilya Repin
960:Dead Souls
928:Ilya Repin
918:statue on
875:Slavophile
860:Dead Souls
809:Dead Souls
805:Dead Souls
772:Dead Souls
732:Dead Souls
695:Nicholas I
626:bureaucrat
598:Arabesques
474:Early life
392:Dead Souls
324:playwright
270:Dead Souls
197:Occupation
152:1809-04-01
136:1809-03-20
49:patronymic
5024:Inspector
5001:Reviisori
4848:(Russian)
4600:Animation
4027:Works by
3733:Vedomosti
3642:24 August
3602:24 August
3535:24 August
3176:2222-4327
3137:2165-0683
2913:. p. 155.
2652:30 August
2611:31 August
2244:5 October
2231:0037-6752
2088:L'Express
2032:31 August
1962:Citations
1952:Yanovskyi
1944:Яновський
1919:romanized
1910:Ukrainian
1729:Gogol Viy
1563:Poor Folk
1523:Krasnodar
1505:issued a
1286:modernism
1257:Goncharov
1161:. In his
1123:Karl Marx
1107:autocracy
1006:poshlost'
994:absurdism
930:and from
916:Symbolist
830:Purgatory
688:) at the
486:, in the
432:Ukrainian
331:grotesque
281:Signature
98:Ukrainian
4791:" (1842)
4658:" (1832)
4261:The Nose
4130:Mirgorod
4089:Marriage
3929:LibriVox
3874:Prospect
3711:Archived
3692:Archived
3673:Archived
3575:cite web
3396:cite web
3358:, 2009.
3269:Overcoat
3207:nonsense
2960:. p. 55.
2905:, 1999.
2867:Narezhny
2816:Archived
2802:Archived
2766:Archived
2577:66-22218
2516:(1998).
2474:15 April
1940:Яновский
1935:Yanovsky
1799:The Nose
1753:(2008).
1743:'s film
1629:The Nose
1527:Vladimir
1519:Myrhorod
1492:(2011).
1471:The Nose
1346:Belinsky
1261:Turgenev
1236:Mazepa’s
1212:Evenings
1209:in both
1171:language
1155:folklore
1141:town of
1090:and the
1022:Politics
754:Zhenitba
749:Marriage
593:Mirgorod
541:Romantic
482:town of
408:Marriage
377:folklore
345:", and "
335:The Nose
237:Mirgorod
205:Language
5062:(opera)
5046:(opera)
4538:Sequels
4423:(opera)
3879:2 March
3507:3 April
3479:3 April
3447:3 April
3407:Alt URL
3338:p. 75.
3320:22 July
3292:p. 64.
2973:, 2005.
2855:Molière
2851:Gnedich
2843:), the
2548:22 July
2094:2 April
1975:"Gogol"
1921::
1635:" and "
1574:Chekhov
1511:Lipetsk
1360:, and "
1312:staged
1190:khokhol
1167:culture
1159:history
1151:Ukraine
1111:serfdom
1094:. Like
1080:Tsarism
1034:, 1909)
980:" and "
855:starets
824:Inferno
728:Pushkin
686:Revizor
490:of the
428:Russian
419:" and "
216:1840–51
208:Russian
84:Russian
5054:(play)
4840:(2011)
4824:(1955)
4710:(1876
4691:(1961)
4683:(1951)
4675:(1913)
4611:(1996)
4592:(2018)
4584:(2018)
4576:(2017)
4557:(2024)
4549:(2019)
4530:(2014)
4522:(1967)
4514:(1960)
4506:(1909)
4388:(1962)
4380:(1962)
4372:(1938)
4364:(1936)
4356:(1924)
4339:(1835)
4049:Novels
3857:
3823:
3757:
3245:
3222:
3174:
3135:
3094:
3067:
3036:
2956:
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2871:Sterne
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1551:Harbin
1496:Legacy
1464:, and
1425:, who
1414:Dniper
1199:empire
1175:Russia
1046:, Rome
1011:Sterne
799:(1840)
777:Moscow
710:exiles
565:(1836)
530:Nezhin
381:Russia
273:(1842)
248:(1836)
240:(1835)
213:Period
94:
80:
47:, the
34:Googol
5035:Other
4954:Afsar
4914:Films
4797:Films
4699:Opera
4664:Films
4495:Films
4412:Other
4345:Films
4074:Plays
3554:UNIAN
3501:Марки
3190:Gogol
2875:Tieck
2861:from
2846:Iliad
2605:(PDF)
2594:(PDF)
2235:JSTOR
2117:Gogol
1823:Notes
1761:Gogol
1717:(aka
1715:Vedma
1535:Penza
1515:Odesa
950:Style
864:Devil
819:Dante
702:Paris
515:]
261:]
61:Gogol
18:Gogol
4787:'s "
4654:'s "
4401:Veer
3944:IMDb
3881:2023
3855:ISBN
3793:2020
3768:2021
3755:ISBN
3644:2016
3604:2016
3581:link
3537:2016
3509:2009
3481:2009
3449:2009
3423:IMDb
3402:link
3322:2013
3243:ISBN
3220:ISBN
3172:ISSN
3133:ISSN
3092:ISBN
3065:ISBN
3034:ISBN
3010:2017
2954:ISBN
2907:ISBN
2877:and
2840:dumy
2811:and
2735:2013
2654:2016
2613:2016
2573:LCCN
2550:2013
2522:ISBN
2476:2012
2463:ISBN
2423:ISBN
2372:2010
2332:2013
2246:2022
2227:ISSN
2182:ISBN
2152:ISBN
2122:ISBN
2096:2021
2059:ISBN
2034:2019
1999:ISBN
1901:IPA:
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1611:and
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1271:and
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722:Rome
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320:O.S.
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