L-14 Part III Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

50
L-14 Part III Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

description

L-14 Part III Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture. A. Themes. Expansion of education, esp. secondary and tertiary Religious dissent: intensifies, diversifies Growth of Russian national consciousness Emergence of proto-intelligentsia Golden age of Russian literature. B. Education. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of L-14 Part III Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Page 1: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

L-14

Part III Pre-reform Russia (5)

7. Culture

Page 2: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

A. Themes

1. Expansion of education, esp. secondary and tertiary

2. Religious dissent: intensifies, diversifies

3. Growth of Russian national consciousness

4. Emergence of proto-intelligentsia

5. Golden age of Russian literature

Page 3: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

B. Education

1. Educational Reform of 1804a. Structureb. Problems

2. Nikolaevan Retrenchmenta. Education as social policyb. Nikolaevan policy

3. Growth and Impact4. Science and Scholarship

Page 4: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Primary and Secondary School Enrollments

Country 1840 1860

Total (thousands)

Per 1,000 population

Total (thousands)

Per 1,000 population

Russia 270 5 955 13

Germany 3,700 113 7,100 156

France 2,900 85 4,029 149

Page 5: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Literacy Rates (percent)

Country 1800 1850

M F M F

Russia 6 4 19 10

Gt. Britain 68 43 72 45

Germany 80 50 86 84

France 47 27 69 46

Page 6: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Russia: Gymnasium and University Enrollments

Year Gymnasium University

1809 450

1825 7,700 1,700

1848 18,900 4,600

1854 17,800 3,600

Page 7: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Social Composition of University (1848-49)

Social Group Number Percent

Nobility 2,506 63.6

Clergy 279 7.2

Raznochintsy 1,152 29.3

Total 3,937 100.0

Page 8: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Moscow University: 1804 Charter

Page 9: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

C. Religion: Orthodoxy and Dissent

1. Official Church and Popular Orthodoxy

2. Dissent: Old Believers and Sectarians

Page 10: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Old Believer Center: Rogozhskoe Cemetery Complex (Moscow)

Page 11: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

D. Russian National Consciousness

Page 12: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Admiral Aleksandr S. Shishkov (1754-1841)

Page 13: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

A. N. Karamzin(1766-1826)

Page 14: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

E. Decembrism

1. Historiography

2. Movement: overview

3. Decembrists: profile

4. “Decembrism”: liberal nationalism

5. Significance: mutual alienation

Page 15: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Decembrist Movement: Overview

1816 SPB Union of Salvation1818 Union of Welfare1821 Northern Society1821 Southern Society1825 Society of United Slavs1825 Uprising:

14 December SPB29 December Chernigov Regiment

Page 16: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Decembrist Uprising on Senate Square (December 1825)

Page 17: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Pavel Pestel: Pravda Russkaia (Russian Truth)

Page 18: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Sergei Murav’ev-Apostol

Page 19: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Decembrists in Chains

Page 20: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

5 Decembrist Martyrs:Pestel, Ryleev, Bestuzhev,

Murav’ev, Kakhovskii

Page 21: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Decembrist Execution Site: Petropavslovskii Fortress

Page 22: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

F. Proto-intelligentsia1. Terminology: Radicals and obshchestvo

(“educated society”)

2. Social Profile

3. “Circles” (kruzhki) of the 1830s

4. Westerner-Slavophile debate

5. Radical socialist currentsa. Herzen: Russian peasant socialism

b. Bakunin: Anarchism

c. Petrashevtsy: Utopian socialism, mass engagement

6. Russian Liberalism

Page 23: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Radical Dissenters: Social Origins

Social Category Percent of Arrested

Nobles 80

Non-nobles 20

Page 24: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Radical Dissenters: Social Position

Social Status Percent of Arrested

Student 49

Civil Servant 25

Writer, Artist 10

Army Officer 6

Teacher 9

Unknown 1

Page 25: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

P. Ia. Chaadaev (1794-1856)

1836 “Philosophical

Letter”

1837 “Apology of a

Madman”

Page 26: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Vissarion G. Belinskii (1811-1848)

Page 27: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Konstantin Dm. Kavelin (1818-85): Westerner, Historian

Page 28: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Sergei Timofeevich Aksakov (1759-1859)

Page 29: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Konstantin S. Aksakov (1817-60)

Page 30: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Ivan S. Aksakov (1823-86)

Page 31: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Boris Chicherin 1828-1904: Liberal Ideologist

Page 32: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Alexander Herzen (1812-70):Russian peasant socialism

Page 33: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Alexander Herzen & Family Estate near Moscow

Page 34: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Mikhail Bakunin, 1814-76:Anarchism

Page 35: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Mikhail V. Petrashevskii (1821-66): Utopian socialism

Page 36: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

6. Literature and Creative Arts

1. Why a golden age?

2. Literary giants: Griboedov, Pushkin, Lermontov, Gogol’

3. Art: Ivanov and Venetsianov

4. Music: Glinka and Russian national opera

Page 37: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Aleksandr Griboedov (1795-1829): “Woe of Wit” (1822-4)

Page 38: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

A.S. Pushkin, 1799-1837

Page 39: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Hannibal and Granddaughter, Nadezhda O. Pushkina (and

Pushkin’s mother)

Page 40: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Mikhail Iu. Lermontov (1814-41)

Page 41: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Nikolai V. Gogol (1809-52)

Page 42: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Aleksandr Ivanov (1806-58)

Page 43: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Ivanov: “Appearance of Christ before the People” (1837-57)

Page 44: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Aleksei G. Venetsianov 1780-1847

Page 45: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Venetsianov: “Fortune-telling with cards” (1830s)

Page 46: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Venetsianov: “In the Fields in Spring”

Page 47: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Venetsianov, “Peasant Children” (1820s)

Page 48: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Venetsianov, “The Reapers” (1820s)

Page 49: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

Mikhail Iv. Glinka 1804-57

Page 50: L-14 Part III  Pre-reform Russia (5) 7. Culture

6. Conclusions

1. Elite identity

2. Impact of Western ideology

3. Revolutionary inaction

4. Cultural pluralism

5. Elite/narod gap