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Metro Stop Dostoevsky: Travels in Russian Time

door Ingrid Bengis

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The daughter of Russian emigres, Ingrid Bengis grew up wondering whether she was an American or, deep down, "really Russian." In 1991, naively in love with Russia and Russian literature, she settled in St. Petersburg, where she was quickly immersed in "catastroika," a period of immense turmoil that mirrored her own increasingly complex and contradictory experience." "Bengis's involvement with Russia is heightened by her involvement with B, a Russian whose collapsing marriage, paralleling the collapse of the Soviet Union, produces a situation in which "anything could happen." Their relationship reflects the social tumult, as well as the sometimes dangerous consequences of American good intentions. As Bengis takes part in Russian life - becoming a reluctant entrepreneur, undergoing surgery in a St. Petersburg hospital, descending into a coal mine - she becomes increasingly aware of its Dostoevskian duality, never more so than when she meets the impoverished, importuning great-great-granddaughter of the writer himself. Beneath the seismic shifting remains a centuries-old preoccupation with "the big questions": tradition and progress, destiny and activism, skepticism and faith. With its elaborate pattern of digression and its eye for the revealing detail, Bengis's account has the intimacy of a late-night conversation in a Russian kitchen where such questions are perpetually being asked… (meer)
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The daughter of Russian emigres, Ingrid Bengis grew up wondering whether she was an American or, deep down, "really Russian." In 1991, naively in love with Russia and Russian literature, she settled in St. Petersburg, where she was quickly immersed in "catastroika," a period of immense turmoil that mirrored her own increasingly complex and contradictory experience." "Bengis's involvement with Russia is heightened by her involvement with B, a Russian whose collapsing marriage, paralleling the collapse of the Soviet Union, produces a situation in which "anything could happen." Their relationship reflects the social tumult, as well as the sometimes dangerous consequences of American good intentions. As Bengis takes part in Russian life - becoming a reluctant entrepreneur, undergoing surgery in a St. Petersburg hospital, descending into a coal mine - she becomes increasingly aware of its Dostoevskian duality, never more so than when she meets the impoverished, importuning great-great-granddaughter of the writer himself. Beneath the seismic shifting remains a centuries-old preoccupation with "the big questions": tradition and progress, destiny and activism, skepticism and faith. With its elaborate pattern of digression and its eye for the revealing detail, Bengis's account has the intimacy of a late-night conversation in a Russian kitchen where such questions are perpetually being asked

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