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Leo Tolstoy

Count Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy[note 1] (/ˈtlstɔɪ, ˈtɒl-/;[2] Russian: Лев Николаевич Толстой,[note 2] IPA: [ˈlʲef nʲɪkɐˈla(j)ɪvʲɪtɕ tɐlˈstoj] (listen); 9 September [O.S. 28 August] 1828 – 20 November [O.S. 7 November] 1910), usually referred to in English as Leo Tolstoy, was a Russian writer who is regarded as one of the greatest authors of all time.[3] He received nominations for the Nobel Prize in Literature every year from 1902 to 1906 and for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1901, 1902, and 1909; the fact that he never won is a major controversy.[4][5][6][7]

Leo Tolstoy
Tolstoy on 23 May 1908 at Yasnaya Polyana,[1] Lithograph print by Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky
Native name
Лев Николаевич Толстой
Born(1828-09-09)9 September 1828
Yasnaya Polyana, Krapivensky Uyezd, Tula Governorate, Russian Empire
Died20 November 1910(1910-11-20) (aged 82)
Astapovo, Ranenburgsky Uyezd, Ryazan Governorate, Russian Empire
Resting placeYasnaya Polyana, Tula
OccupationNovelist, short story writer, playwright, essayist
LanguageRussian
Period1847–1910
Literary movementRealism
Notable works
Spouse
(m. 1862)
Children13
Relatives
  • Nikolay Tolstoy (father)
  • Mariya Tolstaya (mother)
Signature
Portrait of Leo Tolstoy by Ivan Kramskoi, 1873

Born to an aristocratic Russian family in 1828,[3] Tolstoy's notable works include the novels War and Peace (1869) and Anna Karenina (1878),[8] often cited as pinnacles of realist fiction.[3] He first achieved literary acclaim in his twenties with his semi-autobiographical trilogy, Childhood, Boyhood, and Youth (1852–1856), and Sevastopol Sketches (1855), based upon his experiences in the Crimean War. His fiction includes dozens of short stories and several novellas such as The Death of Ivan Ilyich (1886), Family Happiness (1859), "After the Ball" (1911), and Hadji Murad (1912). He also wrote plays and numerous philosophical essays.

In the 1870s, Tolstoy experienced a profound moral crisis, followed by what he regarded as an equally profound spiritual awakening, as outlined in his non-fiction work A Confession (1882). His literal interpretation of the ethical teachings of Jesus, centering on the Sermon on the Mount, caused him to become a fervent Christian anarchist and pacifist.[3] His ideas on nonviolent resistance, expressed in such works as The Kingdom of God Is Within You (1894), had a profound impact on such pivotal 20th-century figures as Mahatma Gandhi[9] and Martin Luther King Jr.[10] He also became a dedicated advocate of Georgism, the economic philosophy of Henry George, which he incorporated into his writing, particularly Resurrection (1899).

Origins

The Tolstoys were a well-known family of old Russian nobility who traced their ancestry to a mythical nobleman named Indris described by Pyotr Tolstoy as arriving "from Nemec, from the lands of Caesar" to Chernigov in 1353 along with his two sons Litvinos (or Litvonis) and Zimonten (or Zigmont) and a druzhina of 3000 people.[11][12] While the word "Nemec" has been long used to describe Germans only, at that time it was applied to any foreigner who didn't speak Russian (from the word nemoy meaning mute).[13] Indris was then converted to Eastern Orthodoxy, under the name of Leonty, and his sons as Konstantin and Feodor. Konstantin's grandson Andrei Kharitonovich was nicknamed Tolstiy (translated as fat) by Vasily II of Moscow after he moved from Chernigov to Moscow.[11][12]

Because of the pagan names and the fact that Chernigov at the time was ruled by Demetrius I Starshy, some researchers concluded that they were Lithuanians who arrived from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.[11][14][15] At the same time, no mention of Indris was ever found in the 14th-to-16th-century documents, while the Chernigov Chronicles used by Pyotr Tolstoy as a reference were lost.[11] The first documented members of the Tolstoy family also lived during the 17th century, thus Pyotr Tolstoy himself is generally considered the founder of the noble house, being granted the title of count by Peter the Great.[16][17]

Life and career

 
Leo Tolstoy at age 20, c. 1848

Tolstoy was born at Yasnaya Polyana, a family estate 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) southwest of Tula, and 200 kilometres (120 mi) south of Moscow. He was the fourth of five children of Count Nikolai Ilyich Tolstoy (1794–1837), a veteran of the Patriotic War of 1812, and Princess Mariya Tolstaya (née Volkonskaya; 1790–1830). His mother died when he was two and his father when he was nine.[18] Tolstoy and his siblings were brought up by relatives.[3] In 1844, he began studying law and oriental languages at Kazan University, where teachers described him as "both unable and unwilling to learn".[18] Tolstoy left the university in the middle of his studies,[18] returned to Yasnaya Polyana and then spent much time in Moscow, Tula and Saint Petersburg, leading a lax and leisurely lifestyle.[3] He began writing during this period,[18] including his first novel Childhood, a fictitious account of his own youth, which was published in 1852.[3] In 1851, after running up heavy gambling debts, he went with his older brother to the Caucasus and joined the army. Tolstoy served as a young artillery officer during the Crimean War and was in Sevastopol during the 11-month-long siege of Sevastopol in 1854–55,[19] including the Battle of the Chernaya. During the war he was recognised for his courage and promoted to lieutenant.[19] He was appalled by the number of deaths involved in warfare,[18] and left the army after the end of the Crimean War.[3]

His experience in the army, and two trips around Europe in 1857 and 1860–61 converted Tolstoy from a dissolute and privileged society author to a non-violent and spiritual anarchist. Others who followed the same path were Alexander Herzen, Mikhail Bakunin and Peter Kropotkin. During his 1857 visit, Tolstoy witnessed a public execution in Paris, a traumatic experience that marked the rest of his life. In a letter to his friend Vasily Botkin, Tolstoy wrote: "The truth is that the State is a conspiracy designed not only to exploit, but above all to corrupt its citizens ... Henceforth, I shall never serve any government anywhere."[20] Tolstoy's concept of non-violence or ahimsa was bolstered when he read a German version of the Tirukkural.[21][22] He later instilled the concept in Mahatma Gandhi through his A Letter to a Hindu when young Gandhi corresponded with him seeking his advice.[22][23][24]

His European trip in 1860–61 shaped both his political and literary development when he met Victor Hugo. Tolstoy read Hugo's newly finished Les Misérables. The similar evocation of battle scenes in Hugo's novel and Tolstoy's War and Peace indicates this influence. Tolstoy's political philosophy was also influenced by a March 1861 visit to French anarchist Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, then living in exile under an assumed name in Brussels. Tolstoy reviewed Proudhon's forthcoming publication, La Guerre et la Paix ("War and Peace" in French), and later used the title for his masterpiece. The two men also discussed education, as Tolstoy wrote in his educational notebooks: "If I recount this conversation with Proudhon, it is to show that, in my personal experience, he was the only man who understood the significance of education and of the printing press in our time."

Fired by enthusiasm, Tolstoy returned to Yasnaya Polyana and founded 13 schools for the children of Russia's peasants, who had just been emancipated from serfdom in 1861. Tolstoy described the schools' principles in his 1862 essay "The School at Yasnaya Polyana".[25] His educational experiments were short-lived, partly due to harassment by the Tsarist secret police. However, as a direct forerunner to A.S. Neill's Summerhill School, the school at Yasnaya Polyana[26] can justifiably be claimed the first example of a coherent theory of democratic education.

Personal life

The death of his brother Nikolay in 1860 had an impact on Tolstoy, and led him to a desire to marry.[18] On 23 September 1862, Tolstoy married Sophia Andreevna Behrs, who was sixteen years his junior and the daughter of a court physician. She was called Sonya, the Russian diminutive of Sofia, by her family and friends.[27] They had 13 children, eight of whom survived childhood:[28]

 
Tolstoy's wife Sophia and their daughter Alexandra

The marriage was marked from the outset by sexual passion and emotional insensitivity when Tolstoy, on the eve of their marriage, gave her his diaries detailing his extensive sexual past and the fact that one of the serfs on his estate had borne him a son.[27] Even so, their early married life was happy and allowed Tolstoy much freedom and the support system to compose War and Peace and Anna Karenina with Sonya acting as his secretary, editor, and financial manager. Sonya was copying and hand-writing his epic works time after time. Tolstoy would continue editing War and Peace and had to have clean final drafts to be delivered to the publisher.[27][29]

However, their later life together has been described by A.N. Wilson as one of the unhappiest in literary history. Tolstoy's relationship with his wife deteriorated as his beliefs became increasingly radical. This saw him seeking to reject his inherited and earned wealth, including the renunciation of the copyrights on his earlier works.

Some of the members of the Tolstoy family left Russia in the aftermath of the 1905 Russian Revolution and the subsequent establishment of the Soviet Union, and many of Leo Tolstoy's relatives and descendants today live in Sweden, Germany, the United Kingdom, France and the United States. Tolstoy's son, Count Lev Lvovich Tolstoy, settled in Sweden and married a Swedish woman. Leo Tolstoy's last surviving grandchild, Countess Tatiana Tolstoy-Paus, died in 2007 at Herresta manor in Sweden, which is owned by Tolstoy's descendants.[30] Swedish jazz singer Viktoria Tolstoy is also descended from Leo Tolstoy.[31]

One of his great-great-grandsons, Vladimir Tolstoy (born 1962), is a director of the Yasnaya Polyana museum since 1994 and an adviser to the President of Russia on cultural affairs since 2012.[32][33] Ilya Tolstoy's great-grandson, Pyotr Tolstoy, is a well-known Russian journalist and TV presenter as well as a State Duma deputy since 2016. His cousin Fyokla Tolstaya (born Anna Tolstaya in 1971), daughter of the acclaimed Soviet Slavist Nikita Tolstoy (ru) (1923–1996), is also a Russian journalist, TV and radio host.[34]

Novels and fictional works

 
Tolstoy in 1906

Tolstoy is considered one of the giants of Russian literature; his works include the novels War and Peace and Anna Karenina and novellas such as Hadji Murad and The Death of Ivan Ilyich.

Tolstoy's earliest works, the autobiographical novels Childhood, Boyhood, and Youth (1852–1856), tell of a rich landowner's son and his slow realization of the chasm between himself and his peasants. Though he later rejected them as sentimental, a great deal of Tolstoy's own life is revealed. They retain their relevance as accounts of the universal story of growing up.

Tolstoy served as a second lieutenant in an artillery regiment during the Crimean War, recounted in his Sevastopol Sketches. His experiences in battle helped stir his subsequent pacifism and gave him material for realistic depiction of the horrors of war in his later work.[35]

His fiction consistently attempts to convey realistically the Russian society in which he lived.[36] The Cossacks (1863) describes the Cossack life and people through a story of a Russian aristocrat in love with a Cossack girl. Anna Karenina (1877) tells parallel stories of an adulterous woman trapped by the conventions and falsities of society and of a philosophical landowner (much like Tolstoy), who works alongside the peasants in the fields and seeks to reform their lives. Tolstoy not only drew from his own life experiences but also created characters in his own image, such as Pierre Bezukhov and Prince Andrei in War and Peace, Levin in Anna Karenina and to some extent, Prince Nekhlyudov in Resurrection. Richard Pevear, who translated many of Tolstoy's works, said of Tolstoy’s signature style, "His works are full of provocation and irony, and written with broad and elaborately developed rhetorical devices."[37]

War and Peace is generally thought to be one of the greatest novels ever written, remarkable for its dramatic breadth and unity. Its vast canvas includes 580 characters, many historical with others fictional. The story moves from family life to the headquarters of Napoleon, from the court of Alexander I of Russia to the battlefields of Austerlitz and Borodino. Tolstoy's original idea for the novel was to investigate the causes of the Decembrist revolt, to which it refers only in the last chapters, from which can be deduced that Andrei Bolkonsky's son will become one of the Decembrists. The novel explores Tolstoy's theory of history, and in particular the insignificance of individuals such as Napoleon and Alexander. Somewhat surprisingly, Tolstoy did not consider War and Peace to be a novel (nor did he consider many of the great Russian fictions written at that time to be novels). This view becomes less surprising if one considers that Tolstoy was a novelist of the realist school who considered the novel to be a framework for the examination of social and political issues in nineteenth-century life.[38] War and Peace (which is to Tolstoy really an epic in prose) therefore did not qualify. Tolstoy thought that Anna Karenina was his first true novel.[39]

After Anna Karenina, Tolstoy concentrated on Christian themes, and his later novels such as The Death of Ivan Ilyich (1886) and What Is to Be Done? develop a radical anarcho-pacifist Christian philosophy which led to his excommunication from the Russian Orthodox Church in 1901.[40] For all the praise showered on Anna Karenina and War and Peace, Tolstoy rejected the two works later in his life as something not as true of reality.[41]

In his novel Resurrection, Tolstoy attempts to expose the injustice of man-made laws and the hypocrisy of an institutionalized church. Tolstoy also explores and explains the economic philosophy of Georgism, of which he had become a very strong advocate towards the end of his life.

Tolstoy also tried himself in poetry, with several soldier songs written during his military service, and fairy tales in verse such as Volga-bogatyr and Oaf stylized as national folk songs. They were written between 1871 and 1874 for his Russian Book for Reading, a collection of short stories in four volumes (total of 629 stories in various genres) published along with the New Azbuka textbook and addressed to schoolchildren. Nevertheless, he was skeptical about poetry as a genre. As he famously said, "Writing poetry is like ploughing and dancing at the same time." According to Valentin Bulgakov, he criticised poets, including Alexander Pushkin, for their "false" epithets used "simply to make it rhyme."[42][43]

Critical appraisal by other authors

 
Captioned "War and Peace", caricature of Tolstoy in the London magazine Vanity Fair, February 1901

Tolstoy's contemporaries paid him lofty tributes. Fyodor Dostoyevsky, who died thirty years before Tolstoy, admired and was delighted by Tolstoy's novels (and, conversely, Tolstoy also admired Dostoyevsky's work).[44] Gustave Flaubert, on reading a translation of War and Peace, exclaimed, "What an artist and what a psychologist!" Anton Chekhov, who often visited Tolstoy at his country estate, wrote, "When literature possesses a Tolstoy, it is easy and pleasant to be a writer; even when you know you have achieved nothing yourself and are still achieving nothing, this is not as terrible as it might otherwise be, because Tolstoy achieves for everyone. What he does serves to justify all the hopes and aspirations invested in literature." The 19th-century British poet and critic Matthew Arnold opined that "A novel by Tolstoy is not a work of art but a piece of life."[3] Isaac Babel said that "if the world could write by itself, it would write like Tolstoy."[3]

Later novelists continued to appreciate Tolstoy's art, but sometimes also expressed criticism. Arthur Conan Doyle wrote, "I am attracted by his earnestness and by his power of detail, but I am repelled by his looseness of construction and by his unreasonable and impracticable mysticism."[45] Virginia Woolf declared him "the greatest of all novelists."[3] James Joyce noted that, "He is never dull, never stupid, never tired, never pedantic, never theatrical!" Thomas Mann wrote of Tolstoy's seemingly guileless artistry: "Seldom did art work so much like nature." Vladimir Nabokov heaped superlatives upon The Death of Ivan Ilyich and Anna Karenina; he questioned, however, the reputation of War and Peace, and sharply criticized Resurrection and The Kreutzer Sonata. Critic Harold Bloom called Hadji Murat "my personal touchstone for the sublime in prose fiction, to me the best story in the world."[46]

Religious and political beliefs

 
Tolstoy dressed in peasant clothing, by Ilya Repin (1901)

After reading Schopenhauer's The World as Will and Representation, Tolstoy gradually became converted to the ascetic morality upheld in that work as the proper spiritual path for the upper classes. In 1869 he writes: "Do you know what this summer has meant for me? Constant raptures over Schopenhauer and a whole series of spiritual delights which I've never experienced before....no student has ever studied so much on his course, and learned so much, as I have this summer."[47]

 
Leo Tolstoy in Hell. Collection of the Museum of the History of Religion and Atheism. 1883 On a fragment of a wall painting from the church of St. Tazov Kursk Governorate Tolstoy is depicted in the arms of Satan

In Chapter VI of A Confession, Tolstoy quoted the final paragraph of Schopenhauer's work. It explains how a complete denial of self causes only a relative nothingness which is not to be feared. Tolstoy was struck by the description of Christian, Buddhist, and Hindu ascetic renunciation as being the path to holiness. After reading passages such as the following, which abound in Schopenhauer's ethical chapters, the Russian nobleman chose poverty and formal denial of the will:

But this very necessity of involuntary suffering (by poor people) for eternal salvation is also expressed by that utterance of the Savior (Matthew 19:24): "It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God." Therefore, those who were greatly in earnest about their eternal salvation, chose voluntary poverty when fate had denied this to them and they had been born in wealth. Thus Buddha Sakyamuni was born a prince, but voluntarily took to the mendicant's staff; and Francis of Assisi, the founder of the mendicant orders who, as a youngster at a ball, where the daughters of all the notabilities were sitting together, was asked: "Now Francis, will you not soon make your choice from these beauties?" and who replied: "I have made a far more beautiful choice!" "Whom?" "La povertà (poverty)": whereupon he abandoned every thing shortly afterwards and wandered through the land as a mendicant.[48]

In 1884, Tolstoy wrote a book called What I Believe, in which he openly confessed his Christian beliefs. He affirmed his belief in Jesus Christ's teachings and was particularly influenced by the Sermon on the Mount, and the injunction to turn the other cheek, which he understood as a "commandment of non-resistance to evil by force" and a doctrine of pacifism and nonviolence. In his work The Kingdom of God Is Within You, he explains that he considered mistaken the Church's doctrine because they had made a "perversion" of Christ's teachings. Tolstoy also received letters from American Quakers who introduced him to the non-violence writings of Quaker Christians such as George Fox, William Penn, and Jonathan Dymond. Tolstoy believed being a Christian required him to be a pacifist; the apparently inevitable waging of war by governments is why he is considered a philosophical anarchist.

Later, various versions of "Tolstoy's Bible" were published, indicating the passages Tolstoy most relied on, specifically, the reported words of Jesus himself.[49]

 
Mohandas K. Gandhi and other residents of Tolstoy Farm, South Africa, 1910

Tolstoy believed that a true Christian could find lasting happiness by striving for inner perfection through following the Great Commandment of loving one's neighbor and God, rather than guidance from the Church or state. Another distinct attribute of his philosophy based on Christ's teachings is nonresistance during conflict. This idea in Tolstoy's book The Kingdom of God Is Within You directly influenced Mahatma Gandhi and therefore also nonviolent resistance movements to this day.

Tolstoy believed that the aristocracy was a burden on the poor.[50] He opposed private land ownership and the institution of marriage, and valued chastity and sexual abstinence (discussed in Father Sergius and his preface to The Kreutzer Sonata), ideals also held by the young Gandhi. Tolstoy's passion from the depth of his austere moral views is reflected in his later work.[51] One example is the sequence of the temptation of Sergius in Father Sergius. Maxim Gorky relates how Tolstoy once read this passage before him and Chekhov, and Tolstoy was moved to tears by the end of the reading. Later passages of rare power include the personal crises faced by the protagonists of The Death of Ivan Ilyich, and of Master and Man, where the main character in the former and the reader in the latter are made aware of the foolishness of the protagonists' lives.

In 1886, Tolstoy wrote to the Russian explorer and anthropologist Nicholas Miklouho-Maclay, who was one of the first anthropologists to refute polygenism, the view that the different races of mankind belonged to different species: "You were the first to demonstrate beyond question by your experience that man is man everywhere, that is, a kind, sociable being with whom communication can and should be established through kindness and truth, not guns and spirits."[52]

Tolstoy had a profound influence on the development of Christian anarchist thought.[53] The Tolstoyans were a small Christian anarchist group formed by Tolstoy's companion, Vladimir Chertkov (1854–1936), to spread Tolstoy's religious teachings. From 1892 he regularly met with the student-activist Vasily Maklakov who would defend several Tolstoyans; they discussed the fate of the Doukhobors. Philosopher Peter Kropotkin wrote of Tolstoy in the article on anarchism in the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica:

Without naming himself an anarchist, Leo Tolstoy, like his predecessors in the popular religious movements of the 15th and 16th centuries, Chojecki, Denk and many others, took the anarchist position as regards the state and property rights, deducing his conclusions from the general spirit of the teachings of Jesus and from the necessary dictates of reason. With all the might of his talent, Tolstoy made (especially in The Kingdom of God Is Within You) a powerful criticism of the church, the state and law altogether, and especially of the present property laws. He describes the state as the domination of the wicked ones, supported by brutal force. Robbers, he says, are far less dangerous than a well-organized government. He makes a searching criticism of the prejudices which are current now concerning the benefits conferred upon men by the church, the state, and the existing distribution of property, and from the teachings of Jesus he deduces the rule of non-resistance and the absolute condemnation of all wars. His religious arguments are, however, so well combined with arguments borrowed from a dispassionate observation of the present evils, that the anarchist portions of his works appeal to the religious and the non-religious reader alike.[54]

 
Tolstoy organising famine relief in Samara, 1891

Tolstoy denounced the intervention by the Eight-Nation Alliance in the Boxer Rebellion in China,[55][56] the Filipino-American War, and the Second Boer War.[57]

Tolstoy praised the Boxer Rebellion and harshly criticized the atrocities of the Russian, German, American, Japanese, and other troops of the Eight-Nation alliance. He heard about the looting, rapes, and murders, and accused the troops of slaughter and "Christian brutality." He named the monarchs most responsible for the atrocities as Tsar Nicholas II and Kaiser Wilhelm II.[58][59] He described the intervention as "terrible for its injustice and cruelty".[60] The war was also criticized by other intellectuals such as Leonid Andreyev and Gorky. As part of the criticism, Tolstoy wrote an epistle called To the Chinese people.[61] In 1902, he wrote an open letter describing and denouncing Nicholas II's activities in China.[62]

The Boxer Rebellion stirred Tolstoy's interest in Chinese philosophy.[63] He was a famous sinophile, and read the works of Confucius[64][65][66] and Lao Zi. Tolstoy wrote Chinese Wisdom and other texts about China. Tolstoy corresponded with the Chinese intellectual Gu Hongming and recommended that China remain an agrarian nation, and not reform like Japan. Tolstoy and Gu opposed the Hundred Day's Reform by Kang Youwei and believed that the reform movement was perilous.[67] Tolstoy's ideology of non-violence shaped the thought of the Chinese anarchist group Society for the Study of Socialism.[68]

Film by Aleksandr Osipovich Drankov of Tolstoy's 80th birthday (1908) at Yasnaya Polyana, showing his wife Sofya (picking flowers in the garden) daughter Aleksandra (sitting in the carriage in the white blouse); his aide and confidante V. Chertkov (bald man with the beard and mustache); and students.

In hundreds of essays over the last 20 years of his life, Tolstoy reiterated the anarchist critique of the state and recommended books by Kropotkin and Proudhon to his readers, while rejecting anarchism's espousal of violent revolutionary means. In the 1900 essay, "On Anarchy,” he wrote: "The Anarchists are right in everything; in the negation of the existing order, and in the assertion that, without Authority, there could not be worse violence than that of Authority under existing conditions. They are mistaken only in thinking that Anarchy can be instituted by a revolution. But it will be instituted only by there being more and more people who do not require the protection of governmental power ... There can be only one permanent revolution – a moral one: the regeneration of the inner man." Despite his misgivings about anarchist violence, Tolstoy took risks to circulate the prohibited publications of anarchist thinkers in Russia, and corrected the proofs of Kropotkin's "Words of a Rebel", illegally published in St Petersburg in 1906.[69]

 
Tolstoy in his study in 1908 (age 80)

In 1908, Tolstoy wrote A Letter to a Hindu[70] outlining his belief in non-violence as a means for India to gain independence from colonial rule. In 1909, Gandhi read a copy of the letter when he was becoming an activist in South Africa. He wrote to Tolstoy seeking proof that he was the author, which led to further correspondence.[21] Tolstoy's The Kingdom of God Is Within You also helped to convince Gandhi of nonviolent resistance, a debt Gandhi acknowledged in his autobiography, calling Tolstoy "the greatest apostle of non-violence that the present age has produced". Their correspondence lasted only a year, from October 1909 until Tolstoy's death in November 1910, but led Gandhi to give the name Tolstoy Colony to his second ashram in South Africa.[71] Both men also believed in the merits of vegetarianism, the subject of several of Tolstoy's essays.[72]

Tolstoy also became a major supporter of the Esperanto movement. He was impressed by the pacifist beliefs of the Doukhobors and brought their persecution to the attention of the international community, after they burned their weapons in peaceful protest in 1895. He aided the Doukhobors to migrate to Canada.[73] He also provided inspiration to the Mennonites, another religious group with anti-government and anti-war sentiments.[74][75] In 1904, Tolstoy condemned the ensuing Russo-Japanese War and wrote to the Japanese Buddhist priest Soyen Shaku in a failed attempt to make a joint pacifist statement.

Towards the end of his life, Tolstoy become occupied with the economic theory and social philosophy of Georgism.[76][77][78] He incorporated it approvingly into works such as Resurrection (1899), the book that was a major cause for his excommunication.[79] He spoke with great admiration of Henry George, stating once that "People do not argue with the teaching of George; they simply do not know it. And it is impossible to do otherwise with his teaching, for he who becomes acquainted with it cannot but agree."[80] He also wrote a preface to George's journal Social Problems.[81] Tolstoy and George both rejected private property in land (the most important source of income for Russian aristocracy that Tolstoy heavily criticized). They also rejected a centrally planned socialist economy. Because Georgism requires an administration to collect land rent and spend it on infrastructure, some assume that this embrace moved Tolstoy away from his anarchist views. However, anarchist versions of Georgism have been proposed since then.[82] Tolstoy's 1899 novel Resurrection explores his thoughts on Georgism and hints that Tolstoy had such a view. It suggests small communities with local governance to manage the collective land rents for common goods, while still heavily criticising state institutions such as the justice system.

Death

 
Tolstoy's grave with flowers at Yasnaya Polyana

Tolstoy died on 20 November, 1910 at the age of 82. Just before his death, his health was a concern of his family, who cared for him daily. In his last days, he spoke and wrote about dying. Renouncing his aristocratic lifestyle, he left home one winter night.[83] His secretive departure was an apparent attempt to escape from his wife's tirades. She spoke out against many of his teachings, and in recent years had grown envious of his attention to Tolstoyan "disciples".

Tolstoy died of pneumonia[84] at Astapovo railway station, after a day's train journey south.[85] The station master took Tolstoy to his apartment, and his personal doctors arrived and gave him injections of morphine and camphor.

The police tried to limit access to his funeral procession, but thousands of peasants lined the streets. Still, some were heard to say that, other than knowing that "some nobleman had died", they knew little else about Tolstoy.[86][better source needed]

According to some sources, Tolstoy spent the last hours of his life preaching love, non-violence, and Georgism to fellow passengers on the train.[79]

Legacy

 
Statue of Tolstoy in Castlegar, British Columbia
 
Bust of Tolstoy in Mariupol, Ukraine, 2011
 
Bust of Tolstoy in Montevideo, Uruguay

Although Leo Tolstoy was regarded as a Christian anarchist and not a socialist, his ideas and works still influenced socialist thinkers throughout history. He held an unromantic view of governments as being essentially violent forces held together by intimidation from state authority, corruption on behalf of officials, and the indoctrination of people from a young age.[87] In regard to his view of economics, he advocated for a return to subsistence agriculture.[88] In his view, a simplified economy would afford a lesser need for the exchange of goods, and as such, factories and cities – the centers of industry – would become obsolete.[88]

In 1944, literary historian and Soviet medievalist Nikolai Gudzii wrote a biography of Tolstoy that spanned 80 pages. It was designed to show readers that Tolstoy would have revised his pacifistic and anti-patriotic sentiments if he were alive amid World War II.[89] At around the same time, literary scholar and historian Boris Eikhenbaum – in a stark contrast from his earlier works on Tolstoy – portrayed the Russian novelist as someone whose ideas aligned with those of early utopian socialists such as Robert Owen and Henri Saint-Simon. Eikenbaum suggested that these influences can be seen in Tolstoy's emphases on individual happiness and peasant welfare.[90] The discrepancies in Eikenbaum's portrayals of Tolstoy can be attributed to the political pressure in Soviet Russia at the time: public officials pressured literary scholars to conform with party doctrine.[90]

In Soviet Russia

From Tolstoy's writings the Tolstoyan movement was birthed, and its members used his works to promote non-violence, anti-urbanism and opposition to the state.[91] While Tolstoy himself never associated with the movement, as he was opposed to joining any organization or group, he named his thirteenth child Alexandra (Sasha) L'vovna Tolstaya the heir to his works with the intention that she would publish them for the Russian people.[91] Meanwhile, Tolstoy designated Vladimir Chertkov – who kept many of Tolstoy's manuscripts – as the editor of his works. Originally Tolstoy wanted to make the Russian people the heirs to his writings, but Russian law at the time decreed that property could only be inherited by one individual.[91]

Following the Russian Civil War in 1917, writings that were formerly censored could now be published, since all literary works were nationalized in November 1918.[91] Alexandra worked during these years to publish sets of Tolstoy's works: from 1917 to 1919, she worked with Zadruga Publishing House to publish thirteen booklets on Tolstoy's writings, which had previously been censored under Russia's imperial rule. However, publishing a complete collection of Tolstoy's works proved to be more difficult. In December 1918, the Commissariat of Education granted Chertkov a 10 million rouble subsidy to publish a complete edition of his works, but it never materialized due to government control of publication rights.[91] Cooperatives were additionally made illegal in Russia in 1921, creating another obstacle for Alexandra and Chertkov.[91]

In the 1920s, Tolstoy's estate, Yasnaya Polyana, was sanctioned by the Soviet state to exist as a commune for Tolstoyans. The government permitted this Christian-oriented community because they felt as if religious sects like the Tolstoyans were models for the Russian peasantry.[91] The Soviet government owned the estate, which was deemed a memorial for the late Russian writer, but Alexandra had jurisdiction over the education offered at Yasnaya Polyana. Unlike most Soviet schools, the schooling at Yasnaya Polyana did not offer militaristic training and did spread atheistic propaganda. Over time, though, local communists – as opposed to the state government, which financially supported the institution – often denounced the estate and called for frequent inspections. After 1928, a change in cultural policy in the Soviet regime led to a takeover of local institutions, including Tolstoy's estate. When Alexandra stepped down from her role as head of Yasnaya Poliana in 1929, the Commissariat of Education and Health took control.[91]

In 1925, the Soviet government created its first Jubilee Committee to celebrate the centennial of Tolstoy's birth, which originally consisted of 13 members but grew to 38 members after a second committee formed in 1927.[91] Alexandra was not content with the funds provided by the government, and met with Stalin in June 1928. During the meeting, Stalin said the government could not provide the one million roubles requested by the committee.[91] However, an agreement was reached with the State Publishing House in April 1928 for the publishing of a 92-volume collection of Tolstoy's works.[91] During the Jubilee Celebration, Anatoly Luncharsky – the head of the People's Commissariat for Education – gave a speech in which he refuted reports that claimed the Soviet government was hostile towards Tolstoy and his legacy. Instead of focusing on the aspects of Tolstoy's works that pitted him against the Soviet regime, he instead focused on the unifying aspects, such as Tolstoy's love for equality and labor as well as his disdain for the state and private property.[91] More than 400 million copies of Tolstoy's works have been printed in the Soviet Union, making him the best-selling author in Soviet Russia.[92]

Influence

Vladimir Lenin wrote several essays about Tolstoy, suggesting that a contradiction exists within his critique of Russian society. According to Lenin, Tolstoy – who adored the peasantry and voiced their discontent with imperial Russian society – may have been revolutionary in his critiques, but his political consciousness was not fully developed for a revolution.[93] Lenin uses this line of thinking to suggest that the 1905 Russian Revolution, which he called a "peasant bourgeois revolution," failed because of its backwardness: the revolutionaries wanted to dismantle the existing medieval forms of oppression and replace them with an old and patriarchal village-commune.[93] Tolstoy's concept of non-resistance to evil additionally hindered the 1905 revolution's success, Lenin thought, because the movement was not militant and had thus allowed the autocracy to crush them.[93] Nevertheless, Lenin concludes in his writings that despite the many contradictions in Tolstoy's critiques, his hatred for feudalism and capitalism mark the prelude to proletarian socialism.[93]

Additionally, Tolstoy's philosophy of non-resistance to evil made an impact on Mahatma Gandhi's political thinking. Gandhi was deeply moved by Tolstoy's concept of truth, which, in his view, constitutes any doctrine that reduces suffering.[94] For both Gandhi and Tolstoy, truth is God, and since God is universal love, truth must therefore also be universal love. The Gujarati word for Gandhi's non-violent movement is "satyagraha," derived from the word "sadagraha" – the "sat" portion translating to "truth," and the "agraha" translating to "firmness."[94] Gandhi's conception of satyagraha was birthed from Tolstoy's understanding of Christianity, rather than from Hindu tradition.[94]

In films

A 2009 film about Tolstoy's final year, The Last Station, based on the 1990 novel by Jay Parini, was made by director Michael Hoffman with Christopher Plummer as Tolstoy and Helen Mirren as Sofya Tolstoya. Both performers were nominated for Oscars for their roles. There have been other films about the writer, including Departure of a Grand Old Man, made in 1912 just two years after his death, How Fine, How Fresh the Roses Were (1913), and Lev Tolstoy, directed by and starring Sergei Gerasimov in 1984.

There is also a famous lost film of Tolstoy made a decade before he died. In 1901, the American travel lecturer Burton Holmes visited Yasnaya Polyana with Albert J. Beveridge, the U.S. senator and historian. As the three men conversed, Holmes filmed Tolstoy with his 60-mm movie camera. Afterwards, Beveridge's advisers succeeded in having the film destroyed, fearing that the meeting with the Russian author might hurt Beveridge's chances of running for the U.S. presidency.[95]

Bibliography

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Tolstoy pronounced his first name as [lʲɵf], which corresponds to the romanization Lyov. (Nabokov, Vladimir. Lectures on Russian literature. p. 216.)
  2. ^ In Tolstoy's day, his name was written as Левъ Николаевичъ Толстой in pre-reformed Russian.

References

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Further reading

  • Bayley, John (1997). Leo Tolstoy. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-07463-0744-1.
  • Bloom, Harold, ed. (2009) [2003]. Leo Tolstoy. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 978-14381-1328-9.
  • Dillon, Emile Joseph (1934). Count Leo Tolstoy: A New Portrait. Hutchinson.
  • Moulin, Daniel (2014). Leo Tolstoy. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-14725-0484-5.
  • Rowe, William W. (1986). Leo Tolstoy. Twayne Publishers. ISBN 978-08057-6623-3.
  • Simmons, Ernest Joseph (1946). Leo Tolstoy. Little, Brown and Company.
  • Zorin, Andrei (2020). Leo Tolstoy. Reaktion Books. ISBN 978-17891-4256-3.
  • Craraft, James. Two Shining Souls: Jane Addams, Leo Tolstoy, and the Quest for Global Peace (Lanham: Lexington, 2012). 179 pp.
  • Lednicki, Waclaw (April 1947). "Tolstoy through American eyes". The Slavonic and East European Review. 25 (65).
  • Leon, Derrick (1944). Tolstoy His Life and Work. London: Routledge.
  • Trotsky's 1908 tribute to Leo Tolstoy Published by the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI).
  • The Life of Tolstoy: Later years by Aylmer Maude, Dodd, Mead and Company, 1911 at Internet Archive
  • Why We Fail as Christians by Robert Hunter, The Macmillan Company, 1919 at Wikiquote
  • Why we fail as Christians by Robert Hunter, The Macmillan Company, 1919 at Google Books

External links

tolstoy, tolstoy, tolstoy, redirect, here, other, uses, tolstoy, disambiguation, tolstoy, disambiguation, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, nikolayevich, family, name, tolstoy, count, nikolayevich, tolstoy, note, ɔɪ, . Tolstoy and Lev Tolstoy redirect here For other uses see Tolstoy disambiguation and Lev Tolstoy disambiguation In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Nikolayevich and the family name is Tolstoy Count Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy note 1 ˈ t oʊ l s t ɔɪ ˈ t ɒ l 2 Russian Lev Nikolaevich Tolstoj note 2 IPA ˈlʲef nʲɪkɐˈla j ɪvʲɪtɕ tɐlˈstoj listen 9 September O S 28 August 1828 20 November O S 7 November 1910 usually referred to in English as Leo Tolstoy was a Russian writer who is regarded as one of the greatest authors of all time 3 He received nominations for the Nobel Prize in Literature every year from 1902 to 1906 and for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1901 1902 and 1909 the fact that he never won is a major controversy 4 5 6 7 Leo TolstoyTolstoy on 23 May 1908 at Yasnaya Polyana 1 Lithograph print by Sergey Prokudin GorskyNative nameLev Nikolaevich TolstojBorn 1828 09 09 9 September 1828Yasnaya Polyana Krapivensky Uyezd Tula Governorate Russian EmpireDied20 November 1910 1910 11 20 aged 82 Astapovo Ranenburgsky Uyezd Ryazan Governorate Russian EmpireResting placeYasnaya Polyana TulaOccupationNovelist short story writer playwright essayistLanguageRussianPeriod1847 1910Literary movementRealismNotable worksWar and PeaceAnna KareninaThe Death of Ivan IlyichThe Kingdom of God Is Within YouResurrectionSpouseSophia Behrs m 1862 wbr Children13RelativesNikolay Tolstoy father Mariya Tolstaya mother SignatureLeo Tolstoy s voice source source source recorded 1908Portrait of Leo Tolstoy by Ivan Kramskoi 1873 Born to an aristocratic Russian family in 1828 3 Tolstoy s notable works include the novels War and Peace 1869 and Anna Karenina 1878 8 often cited as pinnacles of realist fiction 3 He first achieved literary acclaim in his twenties with his semi autobiographical trilogy Childhood Boyhood and Youth 1852 1856 and Sevastopol Sketches 1855 based upon his experiences in the Crimean War His fiction includes dozens of short stories and several novellas such as The Death of Ivan Ilyich 1886 Family Happiness 1859 After the Ball 1911 and Hadji Murad 1912 He also wrote plays and numerous philosophical essays In the 1870s Tolstoy experienced a profound moral crisis followed by what he regarded as an equally profound spiritual awakening as outlined in his non fiction work A Confession 1882 His literal interpretation of the ethical teachings of Jesus centering on the Sermon on the Mount caused him to become a fervent Christian anarchist and pacifist 3 His ideas on nonviolent resistance expressed in such works as The Kingdom of God Is Within You 1894 had a profound impact on such pivotal 20th century figures as Mahatma Gandhi 9 and Martin Luther King Jr 10 He also became a dedicated advocate of Georgism the economic philosophy of Henry George which he incorporated into his writing particularly Resurrection 1899 Contents 1 Origins 2 Life and career 3 Personal life 4 Novels and fictional works 5 Critical appraisal by other authors 6 Religious and political beliefs 7 Death 8 Legacy 8 1 In Soviet Russia 8 2 Influence 8 3 In films 9 Bibliography 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksOriginsMain article Tolstoy family The Tolstoys were a well known family of old Russian nobility who traced their ancestry to a mythical nobleman named Indris described by Pyotr Tolstoy as arriving from Nemec from the lands of Caesar to Chernigov in 1353 along with his two sons Litvinos or Litvonis and Zimonten or Zigmont and a druzhina of 3000 people 11 12 While the word Nemec has been long used to describe Germans only at that time it was applied to any foreigner who didn t speak Russian from the word nemoy meaning mute 13 Indris was then converted to Eastern Orthodoxy under the name of Leonty and his sons as Konstantin and Feodor Konstantin s grandson Andrei Kharitonovich was nicknamed Tolstiy translated as fat by Vasily II of Moscow after he moved from Chernigov to Moscow 11 12 Because of the pagan names and the fact that Chernigov at the time was ruled by Demetrius I Starshy some researchers concluded that they were Lithuanians who arrived from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania 11 14 15 At the same time no mention of Indris was ever found in the 14th to 16th century documents while the Chernigov Chronicles used by Pyotr Tolstoy as a reference were lost 11 The first documented members of the Tolstoy family also lived during the 17th century thus Pyotr Tolstoy himself is generally considered the founder of the noble house being granted the title of count by Peter the Great 16 17 Life and career Leo Tolstoy at age 20 c 1848 Tolstoy was born at Yasnaya Polyana a family estate 12 kilometres 7 5 mi southwest of Tula and 200 kilometres 120 mi south of Moscow He was the fourth of five children of Count Nikolai Ilyich Tolstoy 1794 1837 a veteran of the Patriotic War of 1812 and Princess Mariya Tolstaya nee Volkonskaya 1790 1830 His mother died when he was two and his father when he was nine 18 Tolstoy and his siblings were brought up by relatives 3 In 1844 he began studying law and oriental languages at Kazan University where teachers described him as both unable and unwilling to learn 18 Tolstoy left the university in the middle of his studies 18 returned to Yasnaya Polyana and then spent much time in Moscow Tula and Saint Petersburg leading a lax and leisurely lifestyle 3 He began writing during this period 18 including his first novel Childhood a fictitious account of his own youth which was published in 1852 3 In 1851 after running up heavy gambling debts he went with his older brother to the Caucasus and joined the army Tolstoy served as a young artillery officer during the Crimean War and was in Sevastopol during the 11 month long siege of Sevastopol in 1854 55 19 including the Battle of the Chernaya During the war he was recognised for his courage and promoted to lieutenant 19 He was appalled by the number of deaths involved in warfare 18 and left the army after the end of the Crimean War 3 His experience in the army and two trips around Europe in 1857 and 1860 61 converted Tolstoy from a dissolute and privileged society author to a non violent and spiritual anarchist Others who followed the same path were Alexander Herzen Mikhail Bakunin and Peter Kropotkin During his 1857 visit Tolstoy witnessed a public execution in Paris a traumatic experience that marked the rest of his life In a letter to his friend Vasily Botkin Tolstoy wrote The truth is that the State is a conspiracy designed not only to exploit but above all to corrupt its citizens Henceforth I shall never serve any government anywhere 20 Tolstoy s concept of non violence or ahimsa was bolstered when he read a German version of the Tirukkural 21 22 He later instilled the concept in Mahatma Gandhi through his A Letter to a Hindu when young Gandhi corresponded with him seeking his advice 22 23 24 His European trip in 1860 61 shaped both his political and literary development when he met Victor Hugo Tolstoy read Hugo s newly finished Les Miserables The similar evocation of battle scenes in Hugo s novel and Tolstoy s War and Peace indicates this influence Tolstoy s political philosophy was also influenced by a March 1861 visit to French anarchist Pierre Joseph Proudhon then living in exile under an assumed name in Brussels Tolstoy reviewed Proudhon s forthcoming publication La Guerre et la Paix War and Peace in French and later used the title for his masterpiece The two men also discussed education as Tolstoy wrote in his educational notebooks If I recount this conversation with Proudhon it is to show that in my personal experience he was the only man who understood the significance of education and of the printing press in our time Fired by enthusiasm Tolstoy returned to Yasnaya Polyana and founded 13 schools for the children of Russia s peasants who had just been emancipated from serfdom in 1861 Tolstoy described the schools principles in his 1862 essay The School at Yasnaya Polyana 25 His educational experiments were short lived partly due to harassment by the Tsarist secret police However as a direct forerunner to A S Neill s Summerhill School the school at Yasnaya Polyana 26 can justifiably be claimed the first example of a coherent theory of democratic education Personal lifeThe death of his brother Nikolay in 1860 had an impact on Tolstoy and led him to a desire to marry 18 On 23 September 1862 Tolstoy married Sophia Andreevna Behrs who was sixteen years his junior and the daughter of a court physician She was called Sonya the Russian diminutive of Sofia by her family and friends 27 They had 13 children eight of whom survived childhood 28 Tolstoy s wife Sophia and their daughter Alexandra Count Sergei Lvovich Tolstoy 1863 1947 composer and ethnomusicologist Countess Tatyana Lvovna Tolstaya 1864 1950 wife of Mikhail Sergeevich Sukhotin Count Ilya Lvovich Tolstoy 1866 1933 writer Count Lev Lvovich Tolstoy 1869 1945 writer and sculptor Countess Maria Lvovna Tolstaya 1871 1906 wife of Nikolai Leonidovich Obolensky Count Peter Lvovich Tolstoy 1872 1873 died in infancy Count Nikolai Lvovich Tolstoy 1874 1875 died in infancy Countess Varvara Lvovna Tolstaya 1875 1875 died in infancy Count Andrei Lvovich Tolstoy 1877 1916 served in the Russo Japanese War Count Michael Lvovich Tolstoy 1879 1944 Count Alexei Lvovich Tolstoy 1881 1886 Countess Alexandra Lvovna Tolstaya 1884 1979 Count Ivan Lvovich Tolstoy 1888 1895 The marriage was marked from the outset by sexual passion and emotional insensitivity when Tolstoy on the eve of their marriage gave her his diaries detailing his extensive sexual past and the fact that one of the serfs on his estate had borne him a son 27 Even so their early married life was happy and allowed Tolstoy much freedom and the support system to compose War and Peace and Anna Karenina with Sonya acting as his secretary editor and financial manager Sonya was copying and hand writing his epic works time after time Tolstoy would continue editing War and Peace and had to have clean final drafts to be delivered to the publisher 27 29 However their later life together has been described by A N Wilson as one of the unhappiest in literary history Tolstoy s relationship with his wife deteriorated as his beliefs became increasingly radical This saw him seeking to reject his inherited and earned wealth including the renunciation of the copyrights on his earlier works Some of the members of the Tolstoy family left Russia in the aftermath of the 1905 Russian Revolution and the subsequent establishment of the Soviet Union and many of Leo Tolstoy s relatives and descendants today live in Sweden Germany the United Kingdom France and the United States Tolstoy s son Count Lev Lvovich Tolstoy settled in Sweden and married a Swedish woman Leo Tolstoy s last surviving grandchild Countess Tatiana Tolstoy Paus died in 2007 at Herresta manor in Sweden which is owned by Tolstoy s descendants 30 Swedish jazz singer Viktoria Tolstoy is also descended from Leo Tolstoy 31 One of his great great grandsons Vladimir Tolstoy born 1962 is a director of the Yasnaya Polyana museum since 1994 and an adviser to the President of Russia on cultural affairs since 2012 32 33 Ilya Tolstoy s great grandson Pyotr Tolstoy is a well known Russian journalist and TV presenter as well as a State Duma deputy since 2016 His cousin Fyokla Tolstaya born Anna Tolstaya in 1971 daughter of the acclaimed Soviet Slavist Nikita Tolstoy ru 1923 1996 is also a Russian journalist TV and radio host 34 Novels and fictional works Tolstoy in 1906 Tolstoy is considered one of the giants of Russian literature his works include the novels War and Peace and Anna Karenina and novellas such as Hadji Murad and The Death of Ivan Ilyich Tolstoy s earliest works the autobiographical novels Childhood Boyhood and Youth 1852 1856 tell of a rich landowner s son and his slow realization of the chasm between himself and his peasants Though he later rejected them as sentimental a great deal of Tolstoy s own life is revealed They retain their relevance as accounts of the universal story of growing up Tolstoy served as a second lieutenant in an artillery regiment during the Crimean War recounted in his Sevastopol Sketches His experiences in battle helped stir his subsequent pacifism and gave him material for realistic depiction of the horrors of war in his later work 35 His fiction consistently attempts to convey realistically the Russian society in which he lived 36 The Cossacks 1863 describes the Cossack life and people through a story of a Russian aristocrat in love with a Cossack girl Anna Karenina 1877 tells parallel stories of an adulterous woman trapped by the conventions and falsities of society and of a philosophical landowner much like Tolstoy who works alongside the peasants in the fields and seeks to reform their lives Tolstoy not only drew from his own life experiences but also created characters in his own image such as Pierre Bezukhov and Prince Andrei in War and Peace Levin in Anna Karenina and to some extent Prince Nekhlyudov in Resurrection Richard Pevear who translated many of Tolstoy s works said of Tolstoy s signature style His works are full of provocation and irony and written with broad and elaborately developed rhetorical devices 37 The Power of Darkness 2015 at Vienna s Akademietheater War and Peace is generally thought to be one of the greatest novels ever written remarkable for its dramatic breadth and unity Its vast canvas includes 580 characters many historical with others fictional The story moves from family life to the headquarters of Napoleon from the court of Alexander I of Russia to the battlefields of Austerlitz and Borodino Tolstoy s original idea for the novel was to investigate the causes of the Decembrist revolt to which it refers only in the last chapters from which can be deduced that Andrei Bolkonsky s son will become one of the Decembrists The novel explores Tolstoy s theory of history and in particular the insignificance of individuals such as Napoleon and Alexander Somewhat surprisingly Tolstoy did not consider War and Peace to be a novel nor did he consider many of the great Russian fictions written at that time to be novels This view becomes less surprising if one considers that Tolstoy was a novelist of the realist school who considered the novel to be a framework for the examination of social and political issues in nineteenth century life 38 War and Peace which is to Tolstoy really an epic in prose therefore did not qualify Tolstoy thought that Anna Karenina was his first true novel 39 After Anna Karenina Tolstoy concentrated on Christian themes and his later novels such as The Death of Ivan Ilyich 1886 and What Is to Be Done develop a radical anarcho pacifist Christian philosophy which led to his excommunication from the Russian Orthodox Church in 1901 40 For all the praise showered on Anna Karenina and War and Peace Tolstoy rejected the two works later in his life as something not as true of reality 41 In his novel Resurrection Tolstoy attempts to expose the injustice of man made laws and the hypocrisy of an institutionalized church Tolstoy also explores and explains the economic philosophy of Georgism of which he had become a very strong advocate towards the end of his life Tolstoy also tried himself in poetry with several soldier songs written during his military service and fairy tales in verse such as Volga bogatyr and Oaf stylized as national folk songs They were written between 1871 and 1874 for his Russian Book for Reading a collection of short stories in four volumes total of 629 stories in various genres published along with the New Azbuka textbook and addressed to schoolchildren Nevertheless he was skeptical about poetry as a genre As he famously said Writing poetry is like ploughing and dancing at the same time According to Valentin Bulgakov he criticised poets including Alexander Pushkin for their false epithets used simply to make it rhyme 42 43 Critical appraisal by other authors Captioned War and Peace caricature of Tolstoy in the London magazine Vanity Fair February 1901 Tolstoy s contemporaries paid him lofty tributes Fyodor Dostoyevsky who died thirty years before Tolstoy admired and was delighted by Tolstoy s novels and conversely Tolstoy also admired Dostoyevsky s work 44 Gustave Flaubert on reading a translation of War and Peace exclaimed What an artist and what a psychologist Anton Chekhov who often visited Tolstoy at his country estate wrote When literature possesses a Tolstoy it is easy and pleasant to be a writer even when you know you have achieved nothing yourself and are still achieving nothing this is not as terrible as it might otherwise be because Tolstoy achieves for everyone What he does serves to justify all the hopes and aspirations invested in literature The 19th century British poet and critic Matthew Arnold opined that A novel by Tolstoy is not a work of art but a piece of life 3 Isaac Babel said that if the world could write by itself it would write like Tolstoy 3 Later novelists continued to appreciate Tolstoy s art but sometimes also expressed criticism Arthur Conan Doyle wrote I am attracted by his earnestness and by his power of detail but I am repelled by his looseness of construction and by his unreasonable and impracticable mysticism 45 Virginia Woolf declared him the greatest of all novelists 3 James Joyce noted that He is never dull never stupid never tired never pedantic never theatrical Thomas Mann wrote of Tolstoy s seemingly guileless artistry Seldom did art work so much like nature Vladimir Nabokov heaped superlatives upon The Death of Ivan Ilyich and Anna Karenina he questioned however the reputation of War and Peace and sharply criticized Resurrection and The Kreutzer Sonata Critic Harold Bloom called Hadji Murat my personal touchstone for the sublime in prose fiction to me the best story in the world 46 Religious and political beliefs Tolstoy dressed in peasant clothing by Ilya Repin 1901 After reading Schopenhauer s The World as Will and Representation Tolstoy gradually became converted to the ascetic morality upheld in that work as the proper spiritual path for the upper classes In 1869 he writes Do you know what this summer has meant for me Constant raptures over Schopenhauer and a whole series of spiritual delights which I ve never experienced before no student has ever studied so much on his course and learned so much as I have this summer 47 Leo Tolstoy in Hell Collection of the Museum of the History of Religion and Atheism 1883 On a fragment of a wall painting from the church of St Tazov Kursk Governorate Tolstoy is depicted in the arms of SatanIn Chapter VI of A Confession Tolstoy quoted the final paragraph of Schopenhauer s work It explains how a complete denial of self causes only a relative nothingness which is not to be feared Tolstoy was struck by the description of Christian Buddhist and Hindu ascetic renunciation as being the path to holiness After reading passages such as the following which abound in Schopenhauer s ethical chapters the Russian nobleman chose poverty and formal denial of the will But this very necessity of involuntary suffering by poor people for eternal salvation is also expressed by that utterance of the Savior Matthew 19 24 It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God Therefore those who were greatly in earnest about their eternal salvation chose voluntary poverty when fate had denied this to them and they had been born in wealth Thus Buddha Sakyamuni was born a prince but voluntarily took to the mendicant s staff and Francis of Assisi the founder of the mendicant orders who as a youngster at a ball where the daughters of all the notabilities were sitting together was asked Now Francis will you not soon make your choice from these beauties and who replied I have made a far more beautiful choice Whom La poverta poverty whereupon he abandoned every thing shortly afterwards and wandered through the land as a mendicant 48 In 1884 Tolstoy wrote a book called What I Believe in which he openly confessed his Christian beliefs He affirmed his belief in Jesus Christ s teachings and was particularly influenced by the Sermon on the Mount and the injunction to turn the other cheek which he understood as a commandment of non resistance to evil by force and a doctrine of pacifism and nonviolence In his work The Kingdom of God Is Within You he explains that he considered mistaken the Church s doctrine because they had made a perversion of Christ s teachings Tolstoy also received letters from American Quakers who introduced him to the non violence writings of Quaker Christians such as George Fox William Penn and Jonathan Dymond Tolstoy believed being a Christian required him to be a pacifist the apparently inevitable waging of war by governments is why he is considered a philosophical anarchist Later various versions of Tolstoy s Bible were published indicating the passages Tolstoy most relied on specifically the reported words of Jesus himself 49 Mohandas K Gandhi and other residents of Tolstoy Farm South Africa 1910 Tolstoy believed that a true Christian could find lasting happiness by striving for inner perfection through following the Great Commandment of loving one s neighbor and God rather than guidance from the Church or state Another distinct attribute of his philosophy based on Christ s teachings is nonresistance during conflict This idea in Tolstoy s book The Kingdom of God Is Within You directly influenced Mahatma Gandhi and therefore also nonviolent resistance movements to this day Tolstoy believed that the aristocracy was a burden on the poor 50 He opposed private land ownership and the institution of marriage and valued chastity and sexual abstinence discussed in Father Sergius and his preface to The Kreutzer Sonata ideals also held by the young Gandhi Tolstoy s passion from the depth of his austere moral views is reflected in his later work 51 One example is the sequence of the temptation of Sergius in Father Sergius Maxim Gorky relates how Tolstoy once read this passage before him and Chekhov and Tolstoy was moved to tears by the end of the reading Later passages of rare power include the personal crises faced by the protagonists of The Death of Ivan Ilyich and of Master and Man where the main character in the former and the reader in the latter are made aware of the foolishness of the protagonists lives In 1886 Tolstoy wrote to the Russian explorer and anthropologist Nicholas Miklouho Maclay who was one of the first anthropologists to refute polygenism the view that the different races of mankind belonged to different species You were the first to demonstrate beyond question by your experience that man is man everywhere that is a kind sociable being with whom communication can and should be established through kindness and truth not guns and spirits 52 Tolstoy had a profound influence on the development of Christian anarchist thought 53 The Tolstoyans were a small Christian anarchist group formed by Tolstoy s companion Vladimir Chertkov 1854 1936 to spread Tolstoy s religious teachings From 1892 he regularly met with the student activist Vasily Maklakov who would defend several Tolstoyans they discussed the fate of the Doukhobors Philosopher Peter Kropotkin wrote of Tolstoy in the article on anarchism in the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica Without naming himself an anarchist Leo Tolstoy like his predecessors in the popular religious movements of the 15th and 16th centuries Chojecki Denk and many others took the anarchist position as regards the state and property rights deducing his conclusions from the general spirit of the teachings of Jesus and from the necessary dictates of reason With all the might of his talent Tolstoy made especially in The Kingdom of God Is Within You a powerful criticism of the church the state and law altogether and especially of the present property laws He describes the state as the domination of the wicked ones supported by brutal force Robbers he says are far less dangerous than a well organized government He makes a searching criticism of the prejudices which are current now concerning the benefits conferred upon men by the church the state and the existing distribution of property and from the teachings of Jesus he deduces the rule of non resistance and the absolute condemnation of all wars His religious arguments are however so well combined with arguments borrowed from a dispassionate observation of the present evils that the anarchist portions of his works appeal to the religious and the non religious reader alike 54 Tolstoy organising famine relief in Samara 1891 Tolstoy denounced the intervention by the Eight Nation Alliance in the Boxer Rebellion in China 55 56 the Filipino American War and the Second Boer War 57 Tolstoy praised the Boxer Rebellion and harshly criticized the atrocities of the Russian German American Japanese and other troops of the Eight Nation alliance He heard about the looting rapes and murders and accused the troops of slaughter and Christian brutality He named the monarchs most responsible for the atrocities as Tsar Nicholas II and Kaiser Wilhelm II 58 59 He described the intervention as terrible for its injustice and cruelty 60 The war was also criticized by other intellectuals such as Leonid Andreyev and Gorky As part of the criticism Tolstoy wrote an epistle called To the Chinese people 61 In 1902 he wrote an open letter describing and denouncing Nicholas II s activities in China 62 The Boxer Rebellion stirred Tolstoy s interest in Chinese philosophy 63 He was a famous sinophile and read the works of Confucius 64 65 66 and Lao Zi Tolstoy wrote Chinese Wisdom and other texts about China Tolstoy corresponded with the Chinese intellectual Gu Hongming and recommended that China remain an agrarian nation and not reform like Japan Tolstoy and Gu opposed the Hundred Day s Reform by Kang Youwei and believed that the reform movement was perilous 67 Tolstoy s ideology of non violence shaped the thought of the Chinese anarchist group Society for the Study of Socialism 68 source source source source source source source source Film by Aleksandr Osipovich Drankov of Tolstoy s 80th birthday 1908 at Yasnaya Polyana showing his wife Sofya picking flowers in the garden daughter Aleksandra sitting in the carriage in the white blouse his aide and confidante V Chertkov bald man with the beard and mustache and students In hundreds of essays over the last 20 years of his life Tolstoy reiterated the anarchist critique of the state and recommended books by Kropotkin and Proudhon to his readers while rejecting anarchism s espousal of violent revolutionary means In the 1900 essay On Anarchy he wrote The Anarchists are right in everything in the negation of the existing order and in the assertion that without Authority there could not be worse violence than that of Authority under existing conditions They are mistaken only in thinking that Anarchy can be instituted by a revolution But it will be instituted only by there being more and more people who do not require the protection of governmental power There can be only one permanent revolution a moral one the regeneration of the inner man Despite his misgivings about anarchist violence Tolstoy took risks to circulate the prohibited publications of anarchist thinkers in Russia and corrected the proofs of Kropotkin s Words of a Rebel illegally published in St Petersburg in 1906 69 Tolstoy in his study in 1908 age 80 In 1908 Tolstoy wrote A Letter to a Hindu 70 outlining his belief in non violence as a means for India to gain independence from colonial rule In 1909 Gandhi read a copy of the letter when he was becoming an activist in South Africa He wrote to Tolstoy seeking proof that he was the author which led to further correspondence 21 Tolstoy s The Kingdom of God Is Within You also helped to convince Gandhi of nonviolent resistance a debt Gandhi acknowledged in his autobiography calling Tolstoy the greatest apostle of non violence that the present age has produced Their correspondence lasted only a year from October 1909 until Tolstoy s death in November 1910 but led Gandhi to give the name Tolstoy Colony to his second ashram in South Africa 71 Both men also believed in the merits of vegetarianism the subject of several of Tolstoy s essays 72 Tolstoy also became a major supporter of the Esperanto movement He was impressed by the pacifist beliefs of the Doukhobors and brought their persecution to the attention of the international community after they burned their weapons in peaceful protest in 1895 He aided the Doukhobors to migrate to Canada 73 He also provided inspiration to the Mennonites another religious group with anti government and anti war sentiments 74 75 In 1904 Tolstoy condemned the ensuing Russo Japanese War and wrote to the Japanese Buddhist priest Soyen Shaku in a failed attempt to make a joint pacifist statement Towards the end of his life Tolstoy become occupied with the economic theory and social philosophy of Georgism 76 77 78 He incorporated it approvingly into works such as Resurrection 1899 the book that was a major cause for his excommunication 79 He spoke with great admiration of Henry George stating once that People do not argue with the teaching of George they simply do not know it And it is impossible to do otherwise with his teaching for he who becomes acquainted with it cannot but agree 80 He also wrote a preface to George s journal Social Problems 81 Tolstoy and George both rejected private property in land the most important source of income for Russian aristocracy that Tolstoy heavily criticized They also rejected a centrally planned socialist economy Because Georgism requires an administration to collect land rent and spend it on infrastructure some assume that this embrace moved Tolstoy away from his anarchist views However anarchist versions of Georgism have been proposed since then 82 Tolstoy s 1899 novel Resurrection explores his thoughts on Georgism and hints that Tolstoy had such a view It suggests small communities with local governance to manage the collective land rents for common goods while still heavily criticising state institutions such as the justice system Death Tolstoy s grave with flowers at Yasnaya Polyana Tolstoy died on 20 November 1910 at the age of 82 Just before his death his health was a concern of his family who cared for him daily In his last days he spoke and wrote about dying Renouncing his aristocratic lifestyle he left home one winter night 83 His secretive departure was an apparent attempt to escape from his wife s tirades She spoke out against many of his teachings and in recent years had grown envious of his attention to Tolstoyan disciples Tolstoy died of pneumonia 84 at Astapovo railway station after a day s train journey south 85 The station master took Tolstoy to his apartment and his personal doctors arrived and gave him injections of morphine and camphor The police tried to limit access to his funeral procession but thousands of peasants lined the streets Still some were heard to say that other than knowing that some nobleman had died they knew little else about Tolstoy 86 better source needed According to some sources Tolstoy spent the last hours of his life preaching love non violence and Georgism to fellow passengers on the train 79 LegacyThis section may need to be cleaned up It has been merged from Leo Tolstoy s influence Statue of Tolstoy in Castlegar British Columbia Bust of Tolstoy in Mariupol Ukraine 2011 Bust of Tolstoy in Montevideo Uruguay Although Leo Tolstoy was regarded as a Christian anarchist and not a socialist his ideas and works still influenced socialist thinkers throughout history He held an unromantic view of governments as being essentially violent forces held together by intimidation from state authority corruption on behalf of officials and the indoctrination of people from a young age 87 In regard to his view of economics he advocated for a return to subsistence agriculture 88 In his view a simplified economy would afford a lesser need for the exchange of goods and as such factories and cities the centers of industry would become obsolete 88 In 1944 literary historian and Soviet medievalist Nikolai Gudzii wrote a biography of Tolstoy that spanned 80 pages It was designed to show readers that Tolstoy would have revised his pacifistic and anti patriotic sentiments if he were alive amid World War II 89 At around the same time literary scholar and historian Boris Eikhenbaum in a stark contrast from his earlier works on Tolstoy portrayed the Russian novelist as someone whose ideas aligned with those of early utopian socialists such as Robert Owen and Henri Saint Simon Eikenbaum suggested that these influences can be seen in Tolstoy s emphases on individual happiness and peasant welfare 90 The discrepancies in Eikenbaum s portrayals of Tolstoy can be attributed to the political pressure in Soviet Russia at the time public officials pressured literary scholars to conform with party doctrine 90 In Soviet Russia From Tolstoy s writings the Tolstoyan movement was birthed and its members used his works to promote non violence anti urbanism and opposition to the state 91 While Tolstoy himself never associated with the movement as he was opposed to joining any organization or group he named his thirteenth child Alexandra Sasha L vovna Tolstaya the heir to his works with the intention that she would publish them for the Russian people 91 Meanwhile Tolstoy designated Vladimir Chertkov who kept many of Tolstoy s manuscripts as the editor of his works Originally Tolstoy wanted to make the Russian people the heirs to his writings but Russian law at the time decreed that property could only be inherited by one individual 91 Following the Russian Civil War in 1917 writings that were formerly censored could now be published since all literary works were nationalized in November 1918 91 Alexandra worked during these years to publish sets of Tolstoy s works from 1917 to 1919 she worked with Zadruga Publishing House to publish thirteen booklets on Tolstoy s writings which had previously been censored under Russia s imperial rule However publishing a complete collection of Tolstoy s works proved to be more difficult In December 1918 the Commissariat of Education granted Chertkov a 10 million rouble subsidy to publish a complete edition of his works but it never materialized due to government control of publication rights 91 Cooperatives were additionally made illegal in Russia in 1921 creating another obstacle for Alexandra and Chertkov 91 In the 1920s Tolstoy s estate Yasnaya Polyana was sanctioned by the Soviet state to exist as a commune for Tolstoyans The government permitted this Christian oriented community because they felt as if religious sects like the Tolstoyans were models for the Russian peasantry 91 The Soviet government owned the estate which was deemed a memorial for the late Russian writer but Alexandra had jurisdiction over the education offered at Yasnaya Polyana Unlike most Soviet schools the schooling at Yasnaya Polyana did not offer militaristic training and did spread atheistic propaganda Over time though local communists as opposed to the state government which financially supported the institution often denounced the estate and called for frequent inspections After 1928 a change in cultural policy in the Soviet regime led to a takeover of local institutions including Tolstoy s estate When Alexandra stepped down from her role as head of Yasnaya Poliana in 1929 the Commissariat of Education and Health took control 91 In 1925 the Soviet government created its first Jubilee Committee to celebrate the centennial of Tolstoy s birth which originally consisted of 13 members but grew to 38 members after a second committee formed in 1927 91 Alexandra was not content with the funds provided by the government and met with Stalin in June 1928 During the meeting Stalin said the government could not provide the one million roubles requested by the committee 91 However an agreement was reached with the State Publishing House in April 1928 for the publishing of a 92 volume collection of Tolstoy s works 91 During the Jubilee Celebration Anatoly Luncharsky the head of the People s Commissariat for Education gave a speech in which he refuted reports that claimed the Soviet government was hostile towards Tolstoy and his legacy Instead of focusing on the aspects of Tolstoy s works that pitted him against the Soviet regime he instead focused on the unifying aspects such as Tolstoy s love for equality and labor as well as his disdain for the state and private property 91 More than 400 million copies of Tolstoy s works have been printed in the Soviet Union making him the best selling author in Soviet Russia 92 Influence Vladimir Lenin wrote several essays about Tolstoy suggesting that a contradiction exists within his critique of Russian society According to Lenin Tolstoy who adored the peasantry and voiced their discontent with imperial Russian society may have been revolutionary in his critiques but his political consciousness was not fully developed for a revolution 93 Lenin uses this line of thinking to suggest that the 1905 Russian Revolution which he called a peasant bourgeois revolution failed because of its backwardness the revolutionaries wanted to dismantle the existing medieval forms of oppression and replace them with an old and patriarchal village commune 93 Tolstoy s concept of non resistance to evil additionally hindered the 1905 revolution s success Lenin thought because the movement was not militant and had thus allowed the autocracy to crush them 93 Nevertheless Lenin concludes in his writings that despite the many contradictions in Tolstoy s critiques his hatred for feudalism and capitalism mark the prelude to proletarian socialism 93 Additionally Tolstoy s philosophy of non resistance to evil made an impact on Mahatma Gandhi s political thinking Gandhi was deeply moved by Tolstoy s concept of truth which in his view constitutes any doctrine that reduces suffering 94 For both Gandhi and Tolstoy truth is God and since God is universal love truth must therefore also be universal love The Gujarati word for Gandhi s non violent movement is satyagraha derived from the word sadagraha the sat portion translating to truth and the agraha translating to firmness 94 Gandhi s conception of satyagraha was birthed from Tolstoy s understanding of Christianity rather than from Hindu tradition 94 In films A 2009 film about Tolstoy s final year The Last Station based on the 1990 novel by Jay Parini was made by director Michael Hoffman with Christopher Plummer as Tolstoy and Helen Mirren as Sofya Tolstoya Both performers were nominated for Oscars for their roles There have been other films about the writer including Departure of a Grand Old Man made in 1912 just two years after his death How Fine How Fresh the Roses Were 1913 and Lev Tolstoy directed by and starring Sergei Gerasimov in 1984 There is also a famous lost film of Tolstoy made a decade before he died In 1901 the American travel lecturer Burton Holmes visited Yasnaya Polyana with Albert J Beveridge the U S senator and historian As the three men conversed Holmes filmed Tolstoy with his 60 mm movie camera Afterwards Beveridge s advisers succeeded in having the film destroyed fearing that the meeting with the Russian author might hurt Beveridge s chances of running for the U S presidency 95 BibliographyMain article Leo Tolstoy bibliographySee also Russia portal Biography portal Politics portalAnarchism and religion Christian vegetarianism Leo Tolstoy bibliography Leo Tolstoy and Theosophy List of peace activists Tolstoyan movement Henry David Thoreau War amp Peace 2016 TV series Notes Tolstoy pronounced his first name as lʲɵf which corresponds to the romanization Lyov Nabokov Vladimir Lectures on Russian literature p 216 In Tolstoy s day his name was written as Lev Nikolaevich Tolstoj in pre reformed Russian References Tolstoy in Color Tolstoy Studies Journal a publication of the Tolstoy Society of North America n d Retrieved 27 June 2018 Tolstoy Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary a b c d e f g h i j k Leo Tolstoy Britannica com Retrieved 4 September 2018 Nomination Database old nobelprize org Archived from the original on 6 October 2019 Retrieved 8 March 2019 Proclamation sent to Leo Tolstoy after the 1901 year s presentation of Nobel Prizes NobelPrize org Retrieved 8 March 2019 Hedin Naboth 1 October 1950 Winning the Nobel Prize The Atlantic Retrieved 8 March 2019 Nobel Prize Snubs In Literature 9 Famous Writers Who Should Have Won Photos Huffington Post 7 October 2010 Retrieved 8 March 2019 Beard Mary 5 November 2013 Facing death with Tolstoy The New Yorker Martin E Hellman Resist Not Evil in World Without Violence Arun Gandhi ed M K Gandhi Institute 1994 retrieved on 14 December 2006 King Martin Luther Jr Clayborne Carson et al 2005 The Papers of Martin Luther King Jr Volume V Threshold of a New Decade January 1959 December 1960 University of California Press pp 149 269 248 ISBN 978 0 520 24239 5 a b c d Vitold Rummel Vladimir Golubtsov 1886 Genealogical Collection of Russian Noble Families in 2 Volumes Volume 2 The Tolstoys Counts and Noblemen Saint Petersburg A S Suvorin Publishing House p 487 a b Ivan Bunin The Liberation of Tolstoy A Tale of Two Writers p 100 Nemoy Nemoj word meaning from the Dahl s Explanatory Dictionary in Russian Troyat Henri 2001 Tolstoy ISBN 978 0 8021 3768 5 Robinson Harlow 6 November 1983 Six Centuries of Tolstoys The New York Times Tolstoy coat of arms by All Russian Armorials of Noble Houses of the Russian Empire Part 2 30 June 1798 in Russian The Tolstoys article from Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary 1890 1907 in Russian a b c d e f Author Data Sheet Macmillan Readers PDF Macmillan Publishers Limited Archived from the original PDF on 7 August 2021 Retrieved 22 October 2010 a b Ten Things You Didn t Know About Tolstoy BBC A N Wilson Tolstoy 1988 p 146 a b Rajaram M 2009 Thirukkural Pearls of Inspiration New Delhi Rupa Publications pp xviii xxi ISBN 978 81 291 1467 9 a b Walsh William 2018 Secular Virtue for surviving thriving and fulfillment Will Walsh ISBN 978 06 920 5418 5 Tolstoy Leo 14 December 1908 A Letter to A Hindu The Subjection of India Its Cause and Cure The Literature Network Retrieved 12 February 2012 The Hindu Kural Parel Anthony J 2002 Gandhi and Tolstoy in M P Mathai M S John Siby K Joseph eds Meditations on Gandhi a Ravindra Varma festschrift New Delhi Concept pp 96 112 retrieved 8 September 2012 Tolstoy Lev N 1904 The School at Yasnaya Polyana The Complete Works of Count Tolstoy Pedagogical Articles Linen Measurer Volume IV Translated by Wiener Leo Dana Estes amp Company p 227 Wilson A N 2001 Tolstoy W W Norton p xxi ISBN 978 0 393 32122 7 a b c Jacoby Susan 19 April 1981 The Wife of the Genius The New York Times Feuer Kathryn B Tolstoy and the Genesis of War and Peace Cornell University Press 1996 ISBN 0 8014 1902 6 War and Peace and Sonya uchicago edu Archived from the original on 23 December 2019 Retrieved 8 July 2017 Tanja Paus och Sonja Ceder till minne Svenska Dagbladet 11 March 2007 Nikolai Puzin The Lev Tolstoy House Museum In Yasnaya Polyana with a list of Leo Tolstoy s descendants 1998 Vladimir Ilyich Tolstoy Archived 23 February 2019 at the Wayback Machine at the official Yasnaya Polyana website Persons Directory President of Russia President of Russia Tolstye Telekanal Rossiya Kultura tvkultura ru Leo Tolstoy 1990 Government is Violence essays on anarchism and pacifism Phoenix Press Edward Crankshaw 1974 Tolstoy The Making of a Novelist Weidenfeld amp Nicolson Tolstoy L 2011 War and Peace Vintage Classic Russians Series United Kingdom Random House p xviii ISBN 978 1446484166 G Lukacs Tolstoy and the Development of Realism Marxists on Literature An Anthology London Penguin 1977 J Bayley 1967 Tolstoy and the Novel Chatto amp Windus L Tolstoy Church and State On Life and Essays on Religion 1934 R C Benson 1973 Women in Tolstoy the ideal and the erotic University of Illinois Press Leo Tolstoy 1874 Russian Book for Reading in 4 Volumes Moscow Aegitas 381 pages Valentin Bulgakov 2017 Diary of Leo Tolstoy s Secretary Moscow Zakharov 352 pages p 29 ISBN 978 5 8159 1435 3 Aimee Dostoyevskaya 1921 Fyodor Dostoyevsky A Study Honolulu Hawaii University Press of the Pacific p p 218 Doyle Arthur Conan January 1898 My Favourite Novelist and His Best Book London Retrieved 6 October 2017 Bloom Harold 1994 The Western Canon New York Harcourt Brace Tolstoy s Letter to A A Fet 30 August 1869 Schopenhauer Parerga and Paralipomena Vol II 170 Orwin Donna T The Cambridge Companion to Tolstoy Cambridge University Press 2002 Andrew Joe 18 June 1982 Russian Writers and Society in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century ISBN 978 1349044184 Sommers Aaron 8 September 2009 Why Leo Tolstoy Wouldn t Supersize It Coastlinejournal com Archived from the original on 23 November 2017 Retrieved 16 May 2010 Nicholas Maclay Russian Polymath Harbourtrust gov au 29 September 2020 Christoyannopoulos Alexandre 2009 The Contemporary Relevance of Leo Tolstoy s Late Political Thought International Political Science Association Tolstoy articulated his Christian anarchist political thought between 1880 and 1910 yet its continuing relevance should have become fairly self evident already Kropotkin Peter Alexeivitch 1911 Anarchism In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 914 919 see page 918 Tussing Orwin Donna 2002 The Cambridge Companion to Tolstoy Cambridge University Press pp 37 ISBN 978 0 521 52000 3 Tolstoy Leo Christian Reginald Frank 1978 Tolstoy s Letters 1880 1910 Continuum International Publishing Group Limited p 580 ISBN 978 0 485 71172 1 Apollon Davidson Irina Filatova The Russians and the Anglo Boer War Cape Town Human amp Rousseau 1998 p 181 Chamberlin William Henry Von Mohrenschildt Dimitri Sergius 1960 Karpovich Michael ed The Russian review Vol 19 Blackwell p 115 Original from the University of Michigan Moss Walter G 2008 An age of progress clashing twentieth century global forces Anthem Press p 3 ISBN 978 1 84331 301 4 Cohen Robert S Stachel J J Wartofsky Marx W 1974 For Dirk Struik Scientific Historical and Political Essays in Honour of Dirk J Struik Springer Science amp Business Media pp 606 ISBN 978 90 277 0393 4 Gamsa Mark 2008 The Chinese Translation of Russian Literature Three Studies Brill pp 14 ISBN 978 90 04 16844 2 Flath James Smith Norman 2011 Beyond Suffering Recounting War in Modern China UBC Press pp 125 ISBN 978 0 7748 1957 2 Bodde Derk 1967 Tolstoy and China Johnson Reprint Corporation pp 25 44 107 ISBN 9780384048959 Lukin Alexander 2003 The Bear Watches the Dragon ISBN 978 0 7656 1026 3 Tussing Orwin Donna 2002 The Cambridge companion to Tolstoy Cambridge University Press p 37 ISBN 978 0 521 52000 3 Bodde Derk 1950 Tolstoy and China Princeton University Press p 25 Original from the University of Michigan Lee Khoon Choy 2005 Pioneers of Modern China Understanding the Inscrutable Chinese World Scientific pp 10 ISBN 978 981 256 618 8 Campbell Heather M 2009 The Britannica Guide to Political and Social Movements That Changed the Modern World The Rosen Publishing Group pp 194 ISBN 978 1 61530 016 7 Woodcock G Avakumovic I 1990 Peter Kropotkin From Prince to Rebel Parel Anthony J 2002 Gandhi and Tolstoy in Mathai M P John M S Joseph Siby K eds Meditations on Gandhi a Ravindra Varma festschrift New Delhi Concept pp 96 112 Green M B 1983 Tolstoy and Gandhi men of peace a biography Basic Books Tolstoy Leo 1892 The First Step Retrieved 21 May 2016 if a man be really and seriously seeking to live a good life the first thing from which he will abstain will always be the use of animal food because its use is simply immoral as it involves the performance of an act which is contrary to the moral feeling killing Preface to the Russian translation of Howard William s The Ethics of Diet Mays H G October November 1999 Resurrection Tolstoy and Canada s Doukhobors The Beaver No 79 pp 38 44 Kropotkin Peter March 1898 Some of the Resources of Canada revoltlib com The Nineteenth Century pp 494 514 Miller Levi 1 January 1998 Leo Tolstoy and the Mennonites jms uwinnipeg ca Journal of Mennonite Studies Redfearn David Tolstoy Principles For A New World Order Tolstoy www wealthandwant com Leo Tolstoy Prosper Australia a b Wenzer Kenneth C October 1997 Tolstoy s Georgist Spiritual Political Economy 1897 1910 Anarchism and Land Reform The American Journal of Economics and Sociology 56 4 639 667 doi 10 1111 j 1536 7150 1997 tb02664 x JSTOR 3487337 OCLC 5550194757 A Great Iniquity letter to the London Times 1905 Tolstoy Leo Preface to the book Social Problems by Henry George Archived from the original on 15 January 2013 Retrieved 30 May 2015 Foldvary Fred E 15 July 2001 Geoanarchism anti state com Archived from the original on 18 October 2017 Retrieved 15 April 2009 The last days of Tolstoy VG Chertkov 1922 Heinemann Leo Tolstoy EJ Simmons 1946 Little Brown and Company Meek James 22 July 2010 James Meek reviews The Death of Tolstoy by William Nickell The Diaries of Sofia Tolstoy translated by Cathy Porter A Confession by Leo Tolstoy translated by Anthony Briggs and Anniversary Essays on Tolstoy by Donna Tussing Orwin LRB 22 July 2010 London Review of Books pp 3 8 The Last Days of Leo Tolstoy www linguadex com Archived from the original on 6 November 2018 Higgs Robert 2015 Tolstoy s Manifesto on the State Christian Anarchy and Pacifism The Independent Review 19 3 471 479 ISSN 1086 1653 JSTOR 24564569 a b McLean Hugh 2008 A Clash of Utopias A Clash of Utopias Tolstoy and Gorky In Quest of Tolstoy Academic Studies Press pp 181 194 doi 10 2307 j ctt1zxsjx2 15 ISBN 978 1 934843 02 4 JSTOR j ctt1zxsjx2 15 Retrieved 24 November 2020 Emerson Caryl 2016 Remarkable Tolstoy from the Age of Empire to the Putin Era 1894 2006 The Slavic and East European Journal 60 2 252 271 doi 10 30851 60 2 007 ISSN 0037 6752 JSTOR 26633177 a b Any Carol 1990 Boris Eikhenbaum s Unfinished Work on Tolstoy A Dialogue with Soviet History PMLA 105 2 233 244 doi 10 2307 462559 ISSN 0030 8129 JSTOR 462559 S2CID 163911913 a b c d e f g h i j k l Croskey Robert M c 2008 The legacy of Tolstoy Alexandra Tolstoy and the Soviet regime in the 1920s Donald W Treadgold studies on Russia East Europe and Central Asia Seattle hdl 2027 mdp 39015080856431 ISBN 978 0295988771 New York Times February 15 1987 a b c d Boer Roland 2014 Lenin on Tolstoy Between Imaginary Resolution and Revolutionary Christian Communism Science amp Society 78 1 41 60 doi 10 1521 siso 2014 78 1 41 ISSN 0036 8237 JSTOR 24583606 a b c Gray Stuart Hughes Thomas M 2015 Gandhi s Devotional Political Thought Philosophy East and West 65 2 375 400 doi 10 1353 pew 2015 0051 ISSN 0031 8221 JSTOR 43830813 S2CID 142595907 Wallace Irving Everybody s Rover Boy in The Sunday Gentleman New York Simon amp Schuster 1965 p 117 Further readingBayley John 1997 Leo Tolstoy Oxford University Press ISBN 978 07463 0744 1 Bloom Harold ed 2009 2003 Leo Tolstoy Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 14381 1328 9 Dillon Emile Joseph 1934 Count Leo Tolstoy A New Portrait Hutchinson Moulin Daniel 2014 Leo Tolstoy Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 14725 0484 5 Rowe William W 1986 Leo Tolstoy Twayne Publishers ISBN 978 08057 6623 3 Simmons Ernest Joseph 1946 Leo Tolstoy Little Brown and Company Zorin Andrei 2020 Leo Tolstoy Reaktion Books ISBN 978 17891 4256 3 Craraft James Two Shining Souls Jane Addams Leo Tolstoy and the Quest for Global Peace Lanham Lexington 2012 179 pp Lednicki Waclaw April 1947 Tolstoy through American eyes The Slavonic and East European Review 25 65 Leon Derrick 1944 Tolstoy His Life and Work London Routledge Trotsky s 1908 tribute to Leo Tolstoy Published by the International Committee of the Fourth International ICFI The Life of Tolstoy Later years by Aylmer Maude Dodd Mead and Company 1911 at Internet Archive Why We Fail as Christians by Robert Hunter The Macmillan Company 1919 at Wikiquote Why we fail as Christians by Robert Hunter The Macmillan Company 1919 at Google BooksExternal linksLeo Tolstoy at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Data from Wikidata Leo Tolstoy at Curlie Works by Leo Tolstoy in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Leo Tolstoy at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Leo Tolstoy at Internet Archive Works by Leo Tolstoy at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Leo Tolstoy at the Internet Book List Online project readingtolstoy ru to create open digital version of 90 volumes of Tolstoy works Newspaper clippings about Leo Tolstoy in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Wright Charles Theodore Hagberg 1911 Tolstoy Leo In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 26 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 1053 1061 Waltz in F major Page on Russian Wikipedia Tolstoy s only known musical composition Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leo Tolstoy amp oldid 1135720736, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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