The Artamonov Business
File:The Artamonov Business.jpg
Title page of the first edition (1925)
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Author | Maxim Gorky |
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Original title | Дело Артамоновых |
Country | Italy / Germany |
Language | Russian |
Genre | Family chronicle, historical novel |
Publisher | Verlag "Kniga" |
Publication date
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1925 |
The Artamonov Business (Russian: Дело Артамоновых; also translated as The Artamonovs or Decadence) is a novel by Maxim Gorky written during his 10-year emigration from Soviet Russia. It was published in Berlin in 1925 by Verlag "Kniga". Critics often call it Gorky's best novel, or best after The Life of Klim Samgin. The plot concerns the three generations of a pre-revolutionary industrialist family, from the beginning of 1860s to the Revolution of 1917.[1]
Contents
Reviews
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<The Artamonov Business> is undoubtedly the best of Gorky's novels. Something that only loomed in Foma Gordeyev, The Three, A Confession, Okurov, being lost in the fog of "conversations" and God-building searches, is now appearing in flesh... It belongs to one of the main traditions of Russian literature, to a great number of denunciations of Russian spiritual poverty, such as Oblomov, The Golovlyov Family and Bunin's The Village.
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Decadence is not a book that will add to Gorky's reputation as a novelist. Indeed, it might be contended with some show of reason that by no means the only decadence is that with which the story deals. Compared with Mother and others of the author's earlier works, his latest offering is weak in treatment, chaotic in texture, and loose in its grip upon its subject-matter.
— The New York Times, 1927
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This lengthy history of the Artamonov family, father and sons, rising with their big linen factory to as much power as they can control, then losing it all, is not satire or invective. It is honest, impersonal realism, thoughtful though morose. <...> But Author Gorky's powers, however fully displayed here, have produced books that were far more readable than this one.
— Time, 1927
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Of all Gorki’s novels, The Artamonov Business is the most impressive and dramatic. Here in concentrated form is the tragic failure of Russia’s middle classes in the decades before the Revolution, seen in the small-town microcosm of a family of textile-manufacturers. In this book Gorki displays at their best the power of creating character and the gift for managing scenes of energetic action which won world-wide admiration for his early stories. His distinctive blend of humour and tragedy, violence and pity, exuberance and introspection, is here put at the service of a grander and more moving theme than he had hitherto attempted.
— Alan Hodge, 1948[3]
List of English translations
- Veronica Dewey (1927, as Decadence, published by Cassell & Co., reissued in 1984 by Bison Books with a foreword by Irwin Weil)
- Alec Brown (1948, as The Artamonov Business, published by Hamish Hamilton and Pantheon Books, reissued by Grosset & Dunlap and with illustrations by Heron Books in 1968)
- Helen Altschuler (1952, as The Artamonovs, published by Foreign Languages Publishing House, reissued by Folio Society with illustrations and by Liberty Book Club in 1955)
Screen adaptations
- 1941 — The Artamonov Business, director Grigori Roshal.
- 1981 — Delo Artamonovykh, director Irina Sorokina (TV series).
References
External links
- The Artamonov Business at the Internet Archive (translation by Alec Brown with a foreword by Alan Hodge)
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- Articles with short description
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles containing Russian-language text
- 1925 Russian novels
- Novels by Maxim Gorky
- Family saga novels
- Novels set in the Russian Revolution
- Novels set in 19th-century Russia
- Novels set in 20th-century Russia
- Russian novels adapted into films
- Russian novels adapted into television shows
- Novels set during World War I
- 1920s historical novel stubs
- Family saga novel stubs