The Master of Petersburg: Coetzee and Dostoevsky Merging Through Fiction
In 1994, John Maxwell Coetzee, the white South African writer recipient of the Nobel prize for literature in 2003, writes The Master of Petersburg, a novel different in style and narrative structure from his previous works that features the Russian writer Fyodor Dostoevsky as its main character. The...
Main Author: | Alice Civieri |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures at the University of Verona
2015-06-01
|
Series: | Iperstoria |
Online Access: | https://iperstoria.it/article/view/269 |
Similar Items
-
Two fictional journeys in the life of Dostoevsky: Typskin’s Summer in Baden–Baden and Coetzee’s The Master of Petersburg
by: Antonio Martínez Illán
Published: (2017-10-01) -
Dostoevsky’s Petersburg through the Eyes of a Contemporary Schoolgirl
by: Ekaterina A. Mochalova
Published: (2023-03-01) -
Topographies of Blankness in J.M. Coetzee’s Fiction
by: Paula Martín Salván
Published: (2017-03-01) -
Contesting Discourses and Transmodalization in J.M.Coetzee’s Fiction
by: Sadia Ghaznavi
Published: (2021-12-01) -
“Napoleonic” Petersburg and its Reflection in Dostoevsky’s Novel Crime and Punishment
by: Nikolay N. Podosokorsky
Published: (2022-12-01)