The Russian novel: the narrators role in Tolstoys Anna Karenina
Summary :
Table of Contents
- Introduction.
- A tremendous, almost god like presence of the author.
- The diagnosis of Nikolai.
- The description of a body that can 'no longer contain life'.
- The fact that Nikolai's sick.
- Kitty's faithful nature.
- Conclusion.
- Bibliography.
Abstract
"Death"(Part 5, chapter 20) is the only chapter of Leo tolstoy's anna karenina with a title. It is not the only death in the book; anna's suicide at the end of the novel is arguably the story's most important death. Although the death of Nikolai Levin by no means drastically alters the plot, it helps illuminate certain aspects of the wider novel, particularly the author's concept of death, a potent and mysterious concept for both readers and characters. The idea of death and the life cycle is present throughout the novel and can be further explored through an examination of the narrator's tangible presence and how it shapes the passage dealing with Nikolai's death
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