Children in 19th-century Russian lit
Greene, Raquel
GREENER at GRINNELL.EDU
Fri May 14 20:51:26 UTC 2004
There is also "Maksimka" by Konstantin Staniukovich. It tells the story of how Russian sailors rescue and care for a slave boy they find floating in the Atlantic Ocean.
> ----------
> From: Slavic & East European Languages and Literature list on behalf of Jenny Kaminer
> Reply To: Slavic & East European Languages and Literature list
> Sent: Friday, May 14, 2004 2:03 PM
> To: SEELANGS at LISTSERV.CUNY.EDU
> Subject: [SEELANGS] Children in 19th-century Russian lit
>
> Dear SEELANGers-
>
> Does anyone know of any works of 19th-century Russian literature that
> feature a child under the age of approximately 10 as a reasonably
> significant character (besides obvious examples, such as Anna Karenina's
> son, Oblomov in his dream, the boys in the Brothers Karamazov, etc.)?
>
> Please reply either on or offlist, to j-kaminer at northwestern.edu.
>
> Thank you in advance.
>
> Sincerely,
>
> Jenny Kaminer
> PhD Candidate
> Northwestern University
>
> Jenny Kaminer
> Northwestern University, Evanston, IL. USA
> j-kaminer at northwestern.edu
>
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