fbpx
Wikipedia

Mikhail Bulgakov

Mikhail Afanasyevich Bulgakov (Russian: Михаил Афанасьевич Булгаков, IPA: [mʲɪxɐˈil ɐfɐˈnasʲjɪvʲɪtɕ bʊlˈɡakəf];[2] 15 May [O.S. 3 May] 1891 – 10 March 1940) was a Soviet writer, medical doctor, and playwright active in the first half of the 20th century.[1] He is best known for his novel The Master and Margarita, published posthumously, which has been called one of the masterpieces of the 20th century.[3]

Mikhail Bulgakov
Bulgakov in 1928
BornMikhail Afanasyevich Bulgakov
15 May [O.S. 3 May] 1891
Kiev, Kiev Governorate, Russian Empire
(now Kyiv, Ukraine)
Died10 March 1940(1940-03-10) (aged 48)
Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
(now Moscow, Russia)
Resting placeNovodevichy Cemetery, Moscow
OccupationNovelist, short-story writer, playwright, physician
NationalityRussian, later Soviet[1]
GenreSatire, fantasy, science fiction, historical fiction
Notable worksA Young Doctor's Notebook
Heart of a Dog
The White Guard
The Days of the Turbins
The Master and Margarita
Spouse
Tatiana Lappa
(m. 1913; div. 1924)

Lubov Belozerskaya
(m. 1925; div. 1931)

Elena Shilovskaya
(m. 1932)
Signature

He is also known for his novel The White Guard; his plays Ivan Vasilievich, Flight (also called The Run), and The Days of the Turbins; and other works of the 1920s and 1930s. He wrote mostly about the horrors of the Russian Civil War and about the fate of Russian intellectuals and officers of the Tsarist Army caught up in revolution and Civil War.[4]

Some of his works (Flight, all his works between the years 1922 and 1926, and others) were banned by the Soviet government, and personally by Joseph Stalin, after it was decided by them that they "glorified emigration and White generals".[5] On the other hand, Stalin loved The Days of the Turbins (also called The Turbin Brothers) very much and reportedly saw it at least 15 times.[6][7]

Life and work

Early life

 
Bulgakov House in Moscow. Bulgakov's novel Master and Margarita was written here.

Mikhail Bulgakov was born on 15 May [O.S. 3 May] 1891 in Kiev, Kiev Governorate of the Russian Empire, into a Russian family. He was one of the seven children (the oldest of three brothers) of Afanasiy Bulgakov [ru] – a state councilor, a professor at the Kiev Theological Academy, as well as a prominent Russian Orthodox essayist, thinker and translator of religious texts. His mother was Varvara Mikhailovna Bulgakova (nee Pokrovskaya), a former teacher. Both of his grandfathers were clergymen in the Russian Orthodox Church.[8]

Afanasiy Bulgakov was born in Bryansk Oblast, Russia, where his father was a priest, and he moved to Kiev to study in the academy.[9] Varvara Bulgakova was born in Karachev, Russia.[10] According to Edythe C. Haber, in his "autobiographical remarks" Bulgakov stated that she was a descendant of Tartar hordes, which supposedly influenced some of his works.[11] From childhood, Bulgakov was drawn to theater. At home, he wrote comedies, which his brothers and sisters acted out.[12]

In 1901, Bulgakov joined the First Kiev Gymnasium, where he developed an interest in Russian and European literature (his favourite authors at the time being Gogol, Pushkin, Dostoyevsky, Saltykov-Shchedrin, and Dickens), theatre and opera. The teachers of the Gymnasium exerted a great influence on the formation of his literary taste. After the death of his father in 1907, Mikhail's mother, a well-educated and extraordinarily diligent person, assumed responsibility for his education. After graduation from the Gymnasium in 1909,[13] Bulgakov entered the Medical Faculty of Kiev University, which he finished with special commendation. He then took a position as a physician at the Kiev Military Hospital.[14]

In 1913, Bulgakov married Tatiana Lappa. At the outbreak of the First World War, he volunteered with the Red Cross as a medical doctor and was sent directly to the front, where he was badly injured at least twice. Bulgakov's suffering from these wounds had deleterious long-term effects. To suppress chronic pain, especially in the abdomen, he injected himself with morphine. Over the next year his addiction grew stronger. In 1918, he abandoned morphine and never used it again. Morphine, a book released in 1926, is his account of that trying period.

In 1916, Bulgakov graduated from the Medical Department of Kiev University and after serving as a surgeon at Chernovtsy hospital, was appointed provincial physician to Smolensk province. His life in those days is reflected in his A Country Doctor's Notebook.[14] In September 1917, Bulgakov was moved to the hospital in Vyazma, near Smolensk. In February 1918, he returned to Kiev, Ukraine, where he opened a private practice at his home at Andreyevsky Descent, 13. Here he lived through the Civil War and witnessed ten coups. Successive governments drafted the young doctor into their service while two of his brothers were serving in the White Army against the Bolsheviks.

In February 1919, he was mobilised as an army physician by the White Army and assigned to the Northern Caucasus. There, he became seriously ill with typhus and barely survived.[14][15] In the Caucasus, he started working as a journalist, but when he and others were invited to return as doctors by the French and German governments, Bulgakov was refused permission to leave Russia because of the typhus. That was when he last saw his family; after the Civil War and the rise of the Soviets most of his relatives emigrated to Paris.

Career

After his illness, Bulgakov abandoned his medical practice to pursue writing. In his autobiography, he recalled how he began: "Once in 1919 when I was traveling at night by train I wrote a short story. In the town where the train stopped, I took the story to the publisher of the newspaper who published the story".[14] His first book was an almanac of feuilletons called Future Perspectives, written and published the same year. In December 1919, Bulgakov moved to Vladikavkaz. He wrote and saw his first two plays, Self Defence and The Turbin Brothers, being produced for the city theater stage with great success.[13][14]

 
Bulgakov in the 1910s

After travelling through the Caucasus, Bulgakov headed for Moscow, intending "to remain here forever". It was difficult to find work in the capital, but he was appointed secretary to the literary section of Glavpolitprosvet (Central Committee of the Republic for Political Education).[14] In September 1921, Bulgakov and his wife settled near Patriarch's Ponds, on Bolshaya Sadovaya street, 10 (now close to Mayakovskaya metro station). To make a living, he started working as a correspondent and feuilletons writer for the newspapers Gudok, Krasnaia Panorama and Nakanune, based in Berlin.[14] For the almanac Nedra, he wrote Diaboliad, The Fatal Eggs (1924), and Heart of a Dog (1925), works that combined bitter satire and elements of science fiction and were concerned with the fate of a scientist and the misuse of his discovery. The most significant features of Bulgakov's satire, such as a skillful blending of fantastic and realistic elements, grotesque situations, and a concern with important ethical issues, had already taken shape; these features were developed further in his most famous novel.[12]

Between 1922 and 1926, Bulgakov wrote several plays (including Zoyka's Apartment), none of which were allowed production at the time.[13] The Run, treating the horrors of a fratricidal war, was personally banned by Joseph Stalin after the Glavrepertkom (Department of Repertoire) decided that it "glorified emigration and White generals".[14] In 1924, Bulgakov divorced his first wife and the next year married Lyubov Belozerskaya.

When one of Moscow's theatre directors severely criticised Bulgakov, Stalin personally protected him, saying that a writer of Bulgakov's quality was above "party words" like "left" and "right".[16] Stalin found work for the playwright at a small Moscow theatre, and next the Moscow Art Theatre (MAT). Bulgakov's first major work was the novel The White Guard (Belaya gvardiya [Белая гвардия]), serialized in 1925 but never published in book form.[17] On 5 October 1926, The Days of the Turbins, the play which continued the theme of The White Guard (the fate of Russian intellectuals and officers of the Tsarist Army caught up in revolution and Civil war)[12] was premiered at the MAT.[13] Stalin liked it very much and reportedly saw it at least 15 times.[6][7]

His plays Ivan Vasilievich (Иван Васильевич), Don Quixote (Дон Кихот) and Last Days (Последние дни [Poslednie Dni], also called Pushkin) were banned. The premier of another, Moliėre (also known as The Cabal of Hypocrites), about the French dramatist in which Bulgakov plunged "into fairy Paris of the XVII century", received bad reviews in Pravda and the play was withdrawn from the theater repertoire.[14] In 1928, Zoyka's Apartment and The Purple Island were staged in Moscow; both comedies were accepted by the public with great enthusiasm, but critics again gave them bad reviews.[14] By March 1929, Bulgakov's career was ruined when Government censorship stopped the publication of any of his work and his plays.[13]

In despair, Bulgakov first wrote a personal letter to Joseph Stalin (July 1929), then on 28 March 1930, a letter to the Soviet government.[18] He requested permission to emigrate if the Soviet Union could not find use for him as a writer.[14] In his autobiography, Bulgakov claimed to have written to Stalin out of desperation and mental anguish, never intending to post the letter. He received a phone call directly from the Soviet leader, who asked the writer whether he really desired to leave the Soviet Union. Bulgakov replied that a Russian writer cannot live outside of his homeland. Stalin gave him permission to continue working at the Art Theater; on 10 May 1930,[13] he re-joined the theater, as stage director's assistant. Later he adapted Gogol's Dead Souls for stage.[12]

In 1932, Bulgakov married for the third time, to Yelena Shilovskaya, who would prove to be inspiration for the character Margarita in his most famous novel, on which he started working in 1928.[14] During the last decade of his life, Bulgakov continued to work on The Master and Margarita, wrote plays, critical works, and stories and made several translations and dramatisations of novels. Many of them were not published, others were "torn to pieces" by critics. Much of his work (ridiculing the Soviet system) stayed in his desk drawer for several decades. The refusal of the authorities to let him work in the theatre and his desire to see his family who were living abroad, whom he had not seen for many years, led him to seek drastic measures[clarification needed]. Despite his new work, the projects he worked on at the theatre were often prohibited, and he was stressed and unhappy.

Last years

In the late 1930s, he joined the Bolshoi Theatre as a librettist and consultant. He left after perceiving that none of his works would be produced there. Stalin's favor protected Bulgakov from arrests and execution, but he could not get his writing published. His novels and dramas were subsequently banned and, for the second time, Bulgakov's career as playwright was ruined. When his last play Batum (1939), a complimentary portrayal of Stalin's early revolutionary days,[19] was banned before rehearsals, Bulgakov requested permission to leave the country but was refused.

 
Gravestone of Mikhail Bulgakov and Yelena Bulgakova

In poor health, Bulgakov devoted his last years to what he called his "sunset" novel. The years 1937 to 1939 were stressful for Bulgakov, veering from glimpses of optimism, believing the publication of his masterpiece could still be possible, to bouts of depression, when he felt as if there were no hope. On 15 June 1938, when the manuscript was nearly finished, Bulgakov wrote in a letter to his wife:

"In front of me 327 pages of the manuscript (about 22 chapters). The most important remains – editing, and it's going to be hard, I will have to pay close attention to details. Maybe even re-write some things... 'What's its future?' you ask? I don't know. Possibly, you will store the manuscript in one of the drawers, next to my 'killed' plays, and occasionally it will be in your thoughts. Then again, you don't know the future. My own judgement of the book is already made and I think it truly deserves being hidden away in the darkness of some chest..."[12]

In 1939, Mikhail Bulgakov organized a private reading of The Master and Margarita to his close circle of friends. Yelena Bulgakova remembered 30 years later, "When he finally finished reading that night, he said: 'Well, tomorrow I am taking the novel to the publisher!' and everyone was silent", "...Everyone sat paralyzed. Everything scared them. P. (P. A. Markov, in charge of the literature division of MAT) later at the door fearfully tried to explain to me that trying to publish the novel would cause terrible things", she wrote in her diary (14 May 1939).[12]

In the last month of his life, friends and relatives were constantly on duty at his bedside. On 10 March 1940, Mikhail Afanasyevich Bulgakov died from nephrotic syndrome[20] (an inherited kidney disorder). His father had died of the same disease, and from his youth Bulgakov had guessed his future mortal diagnosis. On 11 March, a civil funeral was held in the building of the Union of Soviet Writers. Before the funeral, the Moscow sculptor Sergey Merkurov removed the death mask from his face. He was buried in the Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow.

Works

 
Bulgakov with Soviet writers Yury Olesha and Valentin Katayev

During his life, Bulgakov was best known for the plays he contributed to Konstantin Stanislavski's and Nemirovich-Danchenko's Moscow Art Theatre. Stalin was known to be fond of the play Days of the Turbins (Дни Турбиных, 1926), which was based on Bulgakov's novel The White Guard. His dramatization of Molière's life in The Cabal of Hypocrites (Кабала святош, 1936) is still performed by the Moscow Art Theatre. Even after his plays were banned from the theatres, Bulgakov wrote a comedy about Ivan the Terrible's visit into 1930s Moscow. His play Batum (Батум, 1939) about the early years of Stalin was prohibited by the premier himself. Bulgakov later reflected his experience of being a Soviet playwright in Theatrical Novel (Театральный роман, 1936, unfinished).

Bulgakov began writing novels with The White Guard (Белая гвардия) (1923, partly published in 1925, first full edition 1927–1929, Paris) – a novel about a life of a White Army officer's family in civil war Kiev. In the mid-1920s, he came to admire the works of Alexander Belyaev and H. G. Wells and wrote several stories and novellas with elements of science fiction, notably The Fatal Eggs (Роковые яйца) (1924) and Heart of a Dog (Собачье сердце) (1925). He intended to compile his stories of the mid-twenties (published mostly in medical journals) that were based on his work as a country doctor in 1916–1918 into a collection titled Notes of a Young Doctor (Записки юного врача), but the book came out only in 1963.[21]

The Fatal Eggs tells of the events of a Professor Persikov, who, in experimentation with eggs, discovers a red ray that accelerates growth in living organisms. At the time, an illness passes through the chickens of Moscow, killing most of them, and to remedy the situation, the Soviet government puts the ray into use at a farm. Due to a mix-up in egg shipments, the Professor ends up with chicken eggs, while the government-run farm receives the shipment of ostrich, snake and crocodile eggs ordered by the Professor. The mistake is not discovered until the eggs produce giant monstrosities that wreak havoc in the suburbs of Moscow and kill most of the workers on the farm. The propaganda machine turns on Persikov, distorting his nature in the same way his "innocent" tampering created the monsters. This tale of a bungling government earned Bulgakov his label of counter-revolutionary.

Heart of a Dog features a professor who implants human testicles and a pituitary gland into a dog named Sharik (means "Little Balloon" or "Little Ball" – a popular Russian nickname for a male dog). The dog becomes more and more human as time passes, resulting in all manner of chaos. The tale can be read as a critical satire of liberal nihilism and the communist mentality. It contains a few bold hints to the communist leadership; e.g. the name of the drunkard donor of the human organ implants is Chugunkin ("chugun" is cast iron) which can be seen as a parody on the name of Stalin ("stal'" is steel). It was adapted as a comic opera called The Murder of Comrade Sharik by William Bergsma in 1973. In 1988, an award-winning film version Sobachye Serdtse was produced by Lenfilm, starring Yevgeniy Yevstigneyev, Roman Kartsev and Vladimir Tolokonnikov.

The Master and Margarita

 
Soviet postal stamp: prepaid postcard of 1991

The novel The Master and Margarita is a critique of Soviet society and its literary establishment. The work is appreciated for its philosophical undertones and for its high artistic level, thanks to its picturesque descriptions (especially of old Jerusalem), lyrical fragments and style. It is a frame narrative involving two characteristically related time periods, or plot lines: a retelling in Bulgakov's interpretation of the New Testament and a description of contemporary Moscow.

The novel begins with Satan visiting Moscow in the 1930s, joining a conversation between a critic and a poet debating the most effective method of denying the existence of Jesus Christ. It develops into an all-embracing indictment of the corruption of communism and Soviet Russia. A story within the story portrays the interrogation of Jesus Christ by Pontius Pilate and the Crucifixion.

It became the best known novel by Bulgakov. He began writing it in 1928, but the novel was finally published by his widow only in 1966, twenty-six years after his death. The book contributed a number of sayings to the Russian language, for example, "Manuscripts don't burn" and "second-grade freshness". A destroyed manuscript of the Master is an important element of the plot. Bulgakov had to rewrite the novel from memory after he burned the draft manuscript in 1930, as he could not see a future as a writer in the Soviet Union at a time of widespread political repression.

Legacy

Exhibitions and museums

  • Several displays at the One Street Museum are dedicated to Bulgakov's family. Among the items presented in the museum are original photos of Mikhail Bulgakov, books and his personal belongings, and a window frame from the house where he lived. The museum also keeps scientific works of Prof. Afanasiy Bulgakov, Mikhail's father.

Mikhail Bulgakov Museum, Kyiv

The Mikhail Bulgakov Museum (Bulgakov House) in Kyiv has been converted to a literary museum with some rooms devoted to the writer, as well as some to his works.[22] This was his family home, the model for the house of the Turbin family in his play

The Bulgakov Museums in Moscow

In Moscow, two museums honour the memory of Mikhail Bulgakov and The Master and Margarita. Both are situated in Bulgakov's old apartment building on Bolshaya Sadovaya street nr. 10, in which parts of The Master and Margarita are set. Since the 1980s, the building has become a gathering spot for Bulgakov's fans, as well as Moscow-based Satanist groups, and had various kinds of graffiti scrawled on the walls. The numerous paintings, quips, and drawings were completely whitewashed in 2003. Previously the best drawings were kept as the walls were repainted, so that several layers of different colored paints could be seen around the best drawings.[23]

There is a rivalry between the two museums, mainly maintained by the later established official Museum M.A. Bulgakov, which invariably presents itself as "the first and only Memorial Museum of Mikhail Bulgakov in Moscow".[24]

The Bulgakov House

The Bulgakov House (Russian: Музей – театр "Булгаковский Дом") is situated at the ground floor. This museum has been established as a private initiative on 15 May 2004.

The Bulgakov House contains personal belongings, photos, and several exhibitions related to Bulgakov's life and his different works. Various poetic and literary events are often held, and excursions to Bulgakov's Moscow are organised, some of which are animated with living characters of The Master and Margarita. The Bulgakov House also runs the Theatre M.A. Bulgakov with 126 seats, and the Café 302-bis.

The Museum M.A. Bulgakov

In the same building, in apartment number 50 on the fourth floor, is a second museum that keeps alive the memory of Bulgakov, the Museum M.A. Bulgakov (Russian: Музей М. А. Булгаков). This second museum is a government initiative, and was founded on 26 March 2007.

The Museum M.A. Bulgakov contains personal belongings, photos, and several exhibitions related to Bulgakov's life and his different works. Various poetic and literary events are often held.

 
Mikhail Bulgakov Museum, Kyiv

Other places named after him

Works inspired by him

Literature

Music

Film

  • The Flight (1970) — a two-part historical drama based on Bulgakov's Flight, The White Guard and Black Sea. It was the first Soviet adaptation of Bulgakov's writings directed by Aleksandr Alov and Vladimir Naumov, with Bulgakov's third wife Elena Bulgakova credited as a "literary consultant". The film was officially selected for the 1971 Cannes Film Festival.
  • The Master and Margaret (1972) — a joint Yugoslav-Italian drama directed by Aleksandar Petrović, the first adaptation of the novel of the same name, along with Pilate and Others. It was selected as the Yugoslav entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 45th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee.
  • Pilate and Others (1972) — a German TV drama directed by Andrzej Wajda, it was also a loose adaptation of The Master and Margarita novel. The film focused on the biblical part of the story, and the action was moved to the modern-day Frankfurt.
  • Ivan Vasilievich: Back to the Future (1973) — an adaptation of Bulgakov's science fiction/comedy play Ivan Vasilievich about an unexpected visit of Ivan the Terrible to the modern-day Moscow. It was directed by one of the leading Soviet comedy directors Leonid Gaidai. With 60.7 million viewers on the year of release it became the 17th most popular film ever produced in the USSR.[28]
  • Dog's Heart (1976) — a joint Italian-German science fiction/comedy film directed by Alberto Lattuada. It was the first adaptation of the Heart of a Dog satirical novel about an old scientist who tries to grow a man out of a dog.
  • The Days of the Turbins (1976) — a three-part Soviet TV drama directed by Vladimir Basov. It was an adaptation of the play of the same name which, at the same time, was Bulgakov's stage adaptation of The White Guard novel.
  • Heart of a Dog (1988) — a Soviet black-and-white TV film directed by Vladimir Bortko, the second adaptation of the novel of the same name. Unlike the previous version, this film follows the original text closely, while also introducing characters, themes and dialogues featured in other Bulgakov's writings.
  • The Master and Margarita (1989) — a Polish TV drama in four parts directed by Maciej Wojtyszko. It was noted by critics as a very faithful adaptation of the original novel.
  • After the Revolution (1990) – a feature-length film created by András Szirtes, a Hungarian filmmaker, using a simple video camera, from 1987 to 1989. It is a very loose adaptation, but for all that, it is explicitly based on Bulgakov's novel, in a thoroughly experimental way. What you see in this film is documentary-like scenes shot in Moscow and Budapest, and New York, and these scenes are linked to the novel by some explicit links, and by these, the film goes beyond the level of being but a visual documentary which would only have reminded the viewer of The Master and Margarita.
  • Incident in Judaea, a 1991 film by Paul Bryers for Channel 4, focussing on the biblical parts of The Master and Margarita.
  • The Master and Margarita (1994) — Russian film directed by Yuri Kara in 1994 and released to public only in 2011. Known for a long, troubled post-production due to the director's resistance to cut about 80 minutes of the film on the producers' request, as well as copyright claims from the descendants of Elena Bulgakova (Shilovskaya).
  • The Master and Margarita (2005) — Russian TV mini-series directed by Vladimir Bortko and his second adaptation of Bulgakov's writings. Screened for Russia-1, it was seen by 40 million viewers on its initial release, becoming the most popular Russian TV series.[29]
  • Morphine (2008) — Russian film directed by Aleksei Balabanov loosely based on Bulgakov's autobiographical short stories Morphine and A Country Doctor's Notebook. The screenplay was written by Balabanov's friend and regular collaborator Sergei Bodrov, Jr. before his tragic death in 2002.
  • The White Guard (2012) — Russian TV mini-series produced by Russia-1. The film was shot in Saint Petersburg and Kyiv and released to mostly negative reviews. In 2014 the Ukrainian Ministry of Culture banned the distribution of the film, claiming that it shows "contempt for the Ukrainian language, people and state".[30]
  • A Young Doctor's Notebook (2012—2013) — British mini-series produced by BBC, with Jon Hamm and Daniel Radcliffe playing main parts. Unlike the Morphine film by Aleksei Balabanov that mixed drama and thriller, this version of A Country Doctor's Notebook was made as a black comedy.

Medical eponym

After graduating from the Medical School in 1909, he spent the early days of his career as a venereologist, rather than pursuing his goal of being a pediatrician, as syphilis was highly prevalent during those times. It was during those early years that he described the symptoms and characteristics of syphilis affecting the bones. He described the abnormal and concomitant change of the outline of the crests of the shin-bones with a pathological worm-eaten like appearance and creation of abnormal osteophytes in the bones of those suffering from later stages of syphilis. This became known as "Bulgakov's Sign" and is commonly used in the former Soviet states, but is known as the "Bandy Legs Sign" in the west.[31][32]

Bibliography

Novels

Novellas and short stories


  • Great Soviet Short Stories (1962)
  • The Terrible News: Russian Stories from the Years Following the Revolution (1990)
  • Diaboliad and Other Stories (1990)
  • Notes on the Cuff & Other Stories (1991)
  • The Fatal Eggs and Other Soviet Satire, 1918–1963 (1993)

Theatre

Biography

  • Life of M. de Molière, 1962

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Mikhail Afanasyevich Bulgakov Encyclopædia Britannica
  2. ^ "Bulgakov". Collins English Dictionary.
  3. ^ Mukherjee, Neel (9 May 2008). "The Master and Margarita: A graphic novel by Mikhail Bulgakov". The Times. London. Retrieved 19 January 2009.
  4. ^ Bulgakov's biography on britannica subject of Bulgakov's works (main part of the text starts from the "novel Belaya gvardiya (The White Guard)..."
  5. ^ Mikhail Bulgakov in the Western World: A Bibliography Mikhail Bulgakov in the Western World: A Bibliography
  6. ^ a b Shaternikova, Marianna. Why Did Stalin Loved The Days of the Turbuns. Почему Сталин любил спектакль «Дни Турбиных». Опубликовано: 15 октября 2006 г.
  7. ^ a b Stalin’s secret love affair with The White Guard Stalin’s secret love affair with The White Guard
  8. ^ Lesley Milne. Mikhail Bulgakov: A Critical Biography. Cambridge University Press. 2009. p. 5
  9. ^ Ермишин О. Т., Православная энциклопедия, Том 6, 2003 http://www.pravenc.ru/text/153625.html (in Russian)
  10. ^ Булгакова, Варвара Михайловна :: Булгакова, Варвара Михайловна (in Russian). Bulgakov.ru. Retrieved 21 September 2013.
  11. ^ Edythe C. Haber, Mikhail Bulgakov: The Early Years, Harvard University Press (1998), p. 70.
  12. ^ a b c d e f "Mikhail Bulgakov Biography". www.homeenglish.ru. Retrieved 10 October 2011.
  13. ^ a b c d e f . www.m-a-bulgakov.ru. Archived from the original on 9 October 2011. Retrieved 10 October 2011.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Katherine Konchakovska and Bohdan Yasinsky (1998). "Mikhail Bulgakov in the Western World: A Bibliography". Library of Congress. Retrieved 10 October 2011.
  15. ^ Vilensky, Yu, G., Bulgakov's doctor (1991) T. I. Borisova (ed.) Kiev. Zdorovie. pp. 99–103. ISBN 5-311-00639-0
  16. ^ Simon Sebag Montefiore, p. 110. swedish edition of Stalin: The Red Tsar and His Court.
  17. ^ Mikhail Bulgakov's biography on britannica Bulgakov's first work was Belaya gvardiya (The White Guard)
  18. ^ Михаил Афанасьевич Булгаков. Письмо правительству СССР (in Russian). lib.ru/Новый мир, 1987, N8. Retrieved 10 October 2011.
  19. ^ "Батум. Комментарии". lib.ru. Retrieved 10 October 2011.
  20. ^ Zilberstein, Gleb; Maor, Uriel; Baskin, Emmanuil; D'Amato, Alfonsina; Righetti, Pier Giorgio (2016). "Unearthing Bulgakov's trace proteome from the Master i Margarita manuscript". Journal of Proteomics. 152: 102–108. doi:10.1016/j.jprot.2016.10.019. PMID 27989937.
  21. ^ Coulehan, Jack (9 November 1999). "Literature Annotations: Bulgakov, Mikhail – A Country Doctor's Notebook". Literature Arts and Medicine Database. New York University. Retrieved 11 February 2009.
  22. ^ Inna Konchakovskaia (1902–85) a daughter of the owner (who had become a hero of Bulgakov's novel) and niece of composer Witold Maliszewski preserved the house during hard soviet times. [1]
  23. ^ Stephen, Chris (5 February 2005). "Devil-worshippers target famous writer's Moscow flat". The Irish Times. Page 9.
  24. ^ Galtseva, Elina. "About the museum". Museum M.A. Bulgakov.
  25. ^ Schmadel, Lutz (2003). Dictionary of Minor Planet Names. Springer. ISBN 9783540002383.
  26. ^ Lesley Milne, ed. (1995). Bulgakov: the novelist-playwright. Routledge. p. 232. ISBN 978-3-7186-5619-6.
  27. ^ Harkins, Thomas; Corbett, Bernard (2016). Pearl Jam FAQ: All That's Left to Know About Seattle's Most Enduring Band. Hal Leonard Corporation.
  28. ^ Soviet box office leaders at KinoPoisk
  29. ^ Vladimir Bortko about The Master and Margarita interview to the MIGNnews.com website (in Russian)
  30. ^ Ukraine Bans Russian Films for Distorting Historical Facts by Moscow Times, 29 July 2014.
  31. ^ Johnson, A.B. (1911). Surgical Diagnosis. Vol. 1. D. Appleton. p. 570. Retrieved 6 January 2017.
  32. ^ Milne, L. (1990). Mikhail Bulgakov: A Critical Biography. Cambridge University Press. p. 136. ISBN 9780521227285.

References

  • Voronina, Olga G., Depicting the Divine: Mikhail Bulgakov and Thomas Mann, Studies In Comparative Literature, 47 (Cambridge: Legenda, 2019).
  • Townsend, Dorian Aleksandra, From Upyr' to Vampire: The Slavic Vampire Myth in Russian Literature, Ph.D. Dissertation, School of German and Russian Studies, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, University of New South Wales, May 2011.

Sources

Biographies of Bulgakov

  • Michalopoulos, Dimitris, 2014, Russia under Communism: Bulgakov, his Life and his Book, Saarbruecken: Lambert Academic Publishing. ISBN 978-3-659-53121-7
  • Drawitz, Andrzey 2001. The Master and the Devil. transl. Kevin Windle, New York: Edwin Mellen.
  • Haber, Edythe C. 1998. Mikhail Bulgakov, the early years. Harvard University Press.
  • Milne, Leslie 1990. Mikhail Bulgakov: a critical biography. Cambridge University *Press.
  • Proffer, Ellendea 1984. Bulgakov: life and work. Ann Arbor: Ardis.
  • Proffer, Ellendea 1984. A pictorial biography of Mikhail Bulgakov. Ann Arbor: Ardis.
  • Wright, Colin 1978. Mikhail Bulgakov: life and interpretation. University of Toronto Press.

Letters, memoirs

  • Belozerskaya-Bulgakova, Lyubov 1983. My life with Mikhail Bulgakov. transl. Margareta Thompson, Ann Arbor: Ardis.
  • Curtis J.A.E. 1991. Manuscripts don't burn: Mikhail Bulgakov: a life in letters and diaries. London: Bloomsbury.
  • Vozvdvizhensky, Vyacheslav (ed) 1990. Mikhail Bulgakov and his times: memoirs, letters. transl. Liv Tudge, Moscow: Progress.
  • Vanhellemont, Jan, 2020, The Master and Margarita - Annotations per chapter, Vanhellemont, Leuven, Belgium, 257 pp., ISBN 978-9-081853-32-3, https://www.masterandmargarita.eu/en/10estore/bookse.html .

External links

  • Works by or about Mikhail Bulgakov at Internet Archive
  • Full English text of The Fatal Eggs
  • Full English translation of "Future Prospects" and "In the Café"
  • Master and Margarita profile and resources
  • Chris Hedges, Welcome to Satan's Ball, Truthdig, 10 March 2014. A comparison of the Soviet society described in Master and Margarita and modern society in the United States and Russia
  • Mikhail Bulgakov in the Western World: A Bibliography, Library of Congress, European Reading Room
  • "Remembering Gudok" by M.Bulgakov. {from SovLit.net}
  • Mikhail A. Bulgakov at IMDb
  • Mikhail Bulgakov at Library of Congress Authorities, with 180 catalogue records

mikhail, bulgakov, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, afanasyevich, family, name, bulgakov, mikhail, afanasyevich, bulgakov, russian, Михаил, Афанасьевич, Булгаков, mʲɪxɐˈil, ɐfɐˈnasʲjɪvʲɪtɕ, bʊlˈɡakəf, 1891, march, 19. In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Afanasyevich and the family name is Bulgakov Mikhail Afanasyevich Bulgakov Russian Mihail Afanasevich Bulgakov IPA mʲɪxɐˈil ɐfɐˈnasʲjɪvʲɪtɕ bʊlˈɡakef 2 15 May O S 3 May 1891 10 March 1940 was a Soviet writer medical doctor and playwright active in the first half of the 20th century 1 He is best known for his novel The Master and Margarita published posthumously which has been called one of the masterpieces of the 20th century 3 Mikhail BulgakovBulgakov in 1928BornMikhail Afanasyevich Bulgakov15 May O S 3 May 1891Kiev Kiev Governorate Russian Empire now Kyiv Ukraine Died10 March 1940 1940 03 10 aged 48 Moscow Russian SFSR Soviet Union now Moscow Russia Resting placeNovodevichy Cemetery MoscowOccupationNovelist short story writer playwright physicianNationalityRussian later Soviet 1 GenreSatire fantasy science fiction historical fictionNotable worksA Young Doctor s NotebookHeart of a DogThe White GuardThe Days of the TurbinsThe Master and MargaritaSpouseTatiana Lappa m 1913 div 1924 wbr Lubov Belozerskaya m 1925 div 1931 wbr Elena Shilovskaya m 1932 wbr SignatureHe is also known for his novel The White Guard his plays Ivan Vasilievich Flight also called The Run and The Days of the Turbins and other works of the 1920s and 1930s He wrote mostly about the horrors of the Russian Civil War and about the fate of Russian intellectuals and officers of the Tsarist Army caught up in revolution and Civil War 4 Some of his works Flight all his works between the years 1922 and 1926 and others were banned by the Soviet government and personally by Joseph Stalin after it was decided by them that they glorified emigration and White generals 5 On the other hand Stalin loved The Days of the Turbins also called The Turbin Brothers very much and reportedly saw it at least 15 times 6 7 Contents 1 Life and work 1 1 Early life 1 2 Career 1 3 Last years 2 Works 3 The Master and Margarita 4 Legacy 4 1 Exhibitions and museums 4 1 1 Mikhail Bulgakov Museum Kyiv 4 1 2 The Bulgakov Museums in Moscow 4 1 2 1 The Bulgakov House 4 1 2 2 The Museum M A Bulgakov 4 2 Other places named after him 4 3 Works inspired by him 4 3 1 Literature 4 3 2 Music 4 3 3 Film 5 Medical eponym 6 Bibliography 6 1 Novels 6 2 Novellas and short stories 6 3 Theatre 6 4 Biography 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 Sources 9 1 Biographies of Bulgakov 9 2 Letters memoirs 10 External linksLife and workEarly life Bulgakov House in Moscow Bulgakov s novel Master and Margarita was written here Mikhail Bulgakov was born on 15 May O S 3 May 1891 in Kiev Kiev Governorate of the Russian Empire into a Russian family He was one of the seven children the oldest of three brothers of Afanasiy Bulgakov ru a state councilor a professor at the Kiev Theological Academy as well as a prominent Russian Orthodox essayist thinker and translator of religious texts His mother was Varvara Mikhailovna Bulgakova nee Pokrovskaya a former teacher Both of his grandfathers were clergymen in the Russian Orthodox Church 8 Afanasiy Bulgakov was born in Bryansk Oblast Russia where his father was a priest and he moved to Kiev to study in the academy 9 Varvara Bulgakova was born in Karachev Russia 10 According to Edythe C Haber in his autobiographical remarks Bulgakov stated that she was a descendant of Tartar hordes which supposedly influenced some of his works 11 From childhood Bulgakov was drawn to theater At home he wrote comedies which his brothers and sisters acted out 12 In 1901 Bulgakov joined the First Kiev Gymnasium where he developed an interest in Russian and European literature his favourite authors at the time being Gogol Pushkin Dostoyevsky Saltykov Shchedrin and Dickens theatre and opera The teachers of the Gymnasium exerted a great influence on the formation of his literary taste After the death of his father in 1907 Mikhail s mother a well educated and extraordinarily diligent person assumed responsibility for his education After graduation from the Gymnasium in 1909 13 Bulgakov entered the Medical Faculty of Kiev University which he finished with special commendation He then took a position as a physician at the Kiev Military Hospital 14 In 1913 Bulgakov married Tatiana Lappa At the outbreak of the First World War he volunteered with the Red Cross as a medical doctor and was sent directly to the front where he was badly injured at least twice Bulgakov s suffering from these wounds had deleterious long term effects To suppress chronic pain especially in the abdomen he injected himself with morphine Over the next year his addiction grew stronger In 1918 he abandoned morphine and never used it again Morphine a book released in 1926 is his account of that trying period In 1916 Bulgakov graduated from the Medical Department of Kiev University and after serving as a surgeon at Chernovtsy hospital was appointed provincial physician to Smolensk province His life in those days is reflected in his A Country Doctor s Notebook 14 In September 1917 Bulgakov was moved to the hospital in Vyazma near Smolensk In February 1918 he returned to Kiev Ukraine where he opened a private practice at his home at Andreyevsky Descent 13 Here he lived through the Civil War and witnessed ten coups Successive governments drafted the young doctor into their service while two of his brothers were serving in the White Army against the Bolsheviks In February 1919 he was mobilised as an army physician by the White Army and assigned to the Northern Caucasus There he became seriously ill with typhus and barely survived 14 15 In the Caucasus he started working as a journalist but when he and others were invited to return as doctors by the French and German governments Bulgakov was refused permission to leave Russia because of the typhus That was when he last saw his family after the Civil War and the rise of the Soviets most of his relatives emigrated to Paris Career After his illness Bulgakov abandoned his medical practice to pursue writing In his autobiography he recalled how he began Once in 1919 when I was traveling at night by train I wrote a short story In the town where the train stopped I took the story to the publisher of the newspaper who published the story 14 His first book was an almanac of feuilletons called Future Perspectives written and published the same year In December 1919 Bulgakov moved to Vladikavkaz He wrote and saw his first two plays Self Defence and The Turbin Brothers being produced for the city theater stage with great success 13 14 Bulgakov in the 1910s After travelling through the Caucasus Bulgakov headed for Moscow intending to remain here forever It was difficult to find work in the capital but he was appointed secretary to the literary section of Glavpolitprosvet Central Committee of the Republic for Political Education 14 In September 1921 Bulgakov and his wife settled near Patriarch s Ponds on Bolshaya Sadovaya street 10 now close to Mayakovskaya metro station To make a living he started working as a correspondent and feuilletons writer for the newspapers Gudok Krasnaia Panorama and Nakanune based in Berlin 14 For the almanac Nedra he wrote Diaboliad The Fatal Eggs 1924 and Heart of a Dog 1925 works that combined bitter satire and elements of science fiction and were concerned with the fate of a scientist and the misuse of his discovery The most significant features of Bulgakov s satire such as a skillful blending of fantastic and realistic elements grotesque situations and a concern with important ethical issues had already taken shape these features were developed further in his most famous novel 12 Between 1922 and 1926 Bulgakov wrote several plays including Zoyka s Apartment none of which were allowed production at the time 13 The Run treating the horrors of a fratricidal war was personally banned by Joseph Stalin after the Glavrepertkom Department of Repertoire decided that it glorified emigration and White generals 14 In 1924 Bulgakov divorced his first wife and the next year married Lyubov Belozerskaya When one of Moscow s theatre directors severely criticised Bulgakov Stalin personally protected him saying that a writer of Bulgakov s quality was above party words like left and right 16 Stalin found work for the playwright at a small Moscow theatre and next the Moscow Art Theatre MAT Bulgakov s first major work was the novel The White Guard Belaya gvardiya Belaya gvardiya serialized in 1925 but never published in book form 17 On 5 October 1926 The Days of the Turbins the play which continued the theme of The White Guard the fate of Russian intellectuals and officers of the Tsarist Army caught up in revolution and Civil war 12 was premiered at the MAT 13 Stalin liked it very much and reportedly saw it at least 15 times 6 7 His plays Ivan Vasilievich Ivan Vasilevich Don Quixote Don Kihot and Last Days Poslednie dni Poslednie Dni also called Pushkin were banned The premier of another Moliere also known as The Cabal of Hypocrites about the French dramatist in which Bulgakov plunged into fairy Paris of the XVII century received bad reviews in Pravda and the play was withdrawn from the theater repertoire 14 In 1928 Zoyka s Apartment and The Purple Island were staged in Moscow both comedies were accepted by the public with great enthusiasm but critics again gave them bad reviews 14 By March 1929 Bulgakov s career was ruined when Government censorship stopped the publication of any of his work and his plays 13 In despair Bulgakov first wrote a personal letter to Joseph Stalin July 1929 then on 28 March 1930 a letter to the Soviet government 18 He requested permission to emigrate if the Soviet Union could not find use for him as a writer 14 In his autobiography Bulgakov claimed to have written to Stalin out of desperation and mental anguish never intending to post the letter He received a phone call directly from the Soviet leader who asked the writer whether he really desired to leave the Soviet Union Bulgakov replied that a Russian writer cannot live outside of his homeland Stalin gave him permission to continue working at the Art Theater on 10 May 1930 13 he re joined the theater as stage director s assistant Later he adapted Gogol s Dead Souls for stage 12 In 1932 Bulgakov married for the third time to Yelena Shilovskaya who would prove to be inspiration for the character Margarita in his most famous novel on which he started working in 1928 14 During the last decade of his life Bulgakov continued to work on The Master and Margarita wrote plays critical works and stories and made several translations and dramatisations of novels Many of them were not published others were torn to pieces by critics Much of his work ridiculing the Soviet system stayed in his desk drawer for several decades The refusal of the authorities to let him work in the theatre and his desire to see his family who were living abroad whom he had not seen for many years led him to seek drastic measures clarification needed Despite his new work the projects he worked on at the theatre were often prohibited and he was stressed and unhappy Last years In the late 1930s he joined the Bolshoi Theatre as a librettist and consultant He left after perceiving that none of his works would be produced there Stalin s favor protected Bulgakov from arrests and execution but he could not get his writing published His novels and dramas were subsequently banned and for the second time Bulgakov s career as playwright was ruined When his last play Batum 1939 a complimentary portrayal of Stalin s early revolutionary days 19 was banned before rehearsals Bulgakov requested permission to leave the country but was refused Gravestone of Mikhail Bulgakov and Yelena Bulgakova In poor health Bulgakov devoted his last years to what he called his sunset novel The years 1937 to 1939 were stressful for Bulgakov veering from glimpses of optimism believing the publication of his masterpiece could still be possible to bouts of depression when he felt as if there were no hope On 15 June 1938 when the manuscript was nearly finished Bulgakov wrote in a letter to his wife In front of me 327 pages of the manuscript about 22 chapters The most important remains editing and it s going to be hard I will have to pay close attention to details Maybe even re write some things What s its future you ask I don t know Possibly you will store the manuscript in one of the drawers next to my killed plays and occasionally it will be in your thoughts Then again you don t know the future My own judgement of the book is already made and I think it truly deserves being hidden away in the darkness of some chest 12 In 1939 Mikhail Bulgakov organized a private reading of The Master and Margarita to his close circle of friends Yelena Bulgakova remembered 30 years later When he finally finished reading that night he said Well tomorrow I am taking the novel to the publisher and everyone was silent Everyone sat paralyzed Everything scared them P P A Markov in charge of the literature division of MAT later at the door fearfully tried to explain to me that trying to publish the novel would cause terrible things she wrote in her diary 14 May 1939 12 In the last month of his life friends and relatives were constantly on duty at his bedside On 10 March 1940 Mikhail Afanasyevich Bulgakov died from nephrotic syndrome 20 an inherited kidney disorder His father had died of the same disease and from his youth Bulgakov had guessed his future mortal diagnosis On 11 March a civil funeral was held in the building of the Union of Soviet Writers Before the funeral the Moscow sculptor Sergey Merkurov removed the death mask from his face He was buried in the Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow WorksSee also Category Works by Mikhail Bulgakov Bulgakov with Soviet writers Yury Olesha and Valentin Katayev During his life Bulgakov was best known for the plays he contributed to Konstantin Stanislavski s and Nemirovich Danchenko s Moscow Art Theatre Stalin was known to be fond of the play Days of the Turbins Dni Turbinyh 1926 which was based on Bulgakov s novel The White Guard His dramatization of Moliere s life in The Cabal of Hypocrites Kabala svyatosh 1936 is still performed by the Moscow Art Theatre Even after his plays were banned from the theatres Bulgakov wrote a comedy about Ivan the Terrible s visit into 1930s Moscow His play Batum Batum 1939 about the early years of Stalin was prohibited by the premier himself Bulgakov later reflected his experience of being a Soviet playwright in Theatrical Novel Teatralnyj roman 1936 unfinished Bulgakov began writing novels with The White Guard Belaya gvardiya 1923 partly published in 1925 first full edition 1927 1929 Paris a novel about a life of a White Army officer s family in civil war Kiev In the mid 1920s he came to admire the works of Alexander Belyaev and H G Wells and wrote several stories and novellas with elements of science fiction notably The Fatal Eggs Rokovye yajca 1924 and Heart of a Dog Sobache serdce 1925 He intended to compile his stories of the mid twenties published mostly in medical journals that were based on his work as a country doctor in 1916 1918 into a collection titled Notes of a Young Doctor Zapiski yunogo vracha but the book came out only in 1963 21 The Fatal Eggs tells of the events of a Professor Persikov who in experimentation with eggs discovers a red ray that accelerates growth in living organisms At the time an illness passes through the chickens of Moscow killing most of them and to remedy the situation the Soviet government puts the ray into use at a farm Due to a mix up in egg shipments the Professor ends up with chicken eggs while the government run farm receives the shipment of ostrich snake and crocodile eggs ordered by the Professor The mistake is not discovered until the eggs produce giant monstrosities that wreak havoc in the suburbs of Moscow and kill most of the workers on the farm The propaganda machine turns on Persikov distorting his nature in the same way his innocent tampering created the monsters This tale of a bungling government earned Bulgakov his label of counter revolutionary Heart of a Dog features a professor who implants human testicles and a pituitary gland into a dog named Sharik means Little Balloon or Little Ball a popular Russian nickname for a male dog The dog becomes more and more human as time passes resulting in all manner of chaos The tale can be read as a critical satire of liberal nihilism and the communist mentality It contains a few bold hints to the communist leadership e g the name of the drunkard donor of the human organ implants is Chugunkin chugun is cast iron which can be seen as a parody on the name of Stalin stal is steel It was adapted as a comic opera called The Murder of Comrade Sharik by William Bergsma in 1973 In 1988 an award winning film version Sobachye Serdtse was produced by Lenfilm starring Yevgeniy Yevstigneyev Roman Kartsev and Vladimir Tolokonnikov The Master and MargaritaMain article The Master and Margarita Soviet postal stamp prepaid postcard of 1991 The novel The Master and Margarita is a critique of Soviet society and its literary establishment The work is appreciated for its philosophical undertones and for its high artistic level thanks to its picturesque descriptions especially of old Jerusalem lyrical fragments and style It is a frame narrative involving two characteristically related time periods or plot lines a retelling in Bulgakov s interpretation of the New Testament and a description of contemporary Moscow The novel begins with Satan visiting Moscow in the 1930s joining a conversation between a critic and a poet debating the most effective method of denying the existence of Jesus Christ It develops into an all embracing indictment of the corruption of communism and Soviet Russia A story within the story portrays the interrogation of Jesus Christ by Pontius Pilate and the Crucifixion It became the best known novel by Bulgakov He began writing it in 1928 but the novel was finally published by his widow only in 1966 twenty six years after his death The book contributed a number of sayings to the Russian language for example Manuscripts don t burn and second grade freshness A destroyed manuscript of the Master is an important element of the plot Bulgakov had to rewrite the novel from memory after he burned the draft manuscript in 1930 as he could not see a future as a writer in the Soviet Union at a time of widespread political repression LegacyExhibitions and museums Several displays at the One Street Museum are dedicated to Bulgakov s family Among the items presented in the museum are original photos of Mikhail Bulgakov books and his personal belongings and a window frame from the house where he lived The museum also keeps scientific works of Prof Afanasiy Bulgakov Mikhail s father Mikhail Bulgakov Museum Kyiv The Mikhail Bulgakov Museum Bulgakov House in Kyiv has been converted to a literary museum with some rooms devoted to the writer as well as some to his works 22 This was his family home the model for the house of the Turbin family in his play The Bulgakov Museums in Moscow In Moscow two museums honour the memory of Mikhail Bulgakov and The Master and Margarita Both are situated in Bulgakov s old apartment building on Bolshaya Sadovaya street nr 10 in which parts of The Master and Margarita are set Since the 1980s the building has become a gathering spot for Bulgakov s fans as well as Moscow based Satanist groups and had various kinds of graffiti scrawled on the walls The numerous paintings quips and drawings were completely whitewashed in 2003 Previously the best drawings were kept as the walls were repainted so that several layers of different colored paints could be seen around the best drawings 23 There is a rivalry between the two museums mainly maintained by the later established official Museum M A Bulgakov which invariably presents itself as the first and only Memorial Museum of Mikhail Bulgakov in Moscow 24 The Bulgakov House Main article Bulgakov House Moscow The Bulgakov House Russian Muzej teatr Bulgakovskij Dom is situated at the ground floor This museum has been established as a private initiative on 15 May 2004 The Bulgakov House contains personal belongings photos and several exhibitions related to Bulgakov s life and his different works Various poetic and literary events are often held and excursions to Bulgakov s Moscow are organised some of which are animated with living characters of The Master and Margarita The Bulgakov House also runs the Theatre M A Bulgakov with 126 seats and the Cafe 302 bis The Museum M A Bulgakov Main article Bulgakov Museum in Moscow In the same building in apartment number 50 on the fourth floor is a second museum that keeps alive the memory of Bulgakov the Museum M A Bulgakov Russian Muzej M A Bulgakov This second museum is a government initiative and was founded on 26 March 2007 The Museum M A Bulgakov contains personal belongings photos and several exhibitions related to Bulgakov s life and his different works Various poetic and literary events are often held Mikhail Bulgakov Museum Kyiv Other places named after him A minor planet 3469 Bulgakov discovered by the Soviet astronomer Lyudmila Georgievna Karachkina in 1982 is named after him 25 Works inspired by him Literature Salman Rushdie said that The Master and Margarita was an inspiration for his novel The Satanic Verses 1988 26 John Hodge s play Collaborators 2011 is a fictionalized account of the relationship between Bulgakov and Joseph Stalin inspired by The Days of the Turbins and The White Guard Music According to Mick Jagger Master and Margarita was the inspiration for The Rolling Stones Sympathy for the Devil 1968 The lyrics of Pearl Jam s song Pilate featured on their album Yield 1998 were inspired by Master and Margarita 27 The lyrics were written by the band s bassist Jeff Ament Alex Kapranos from Franz Ferdinand based Love and Destroy on the same book Film The Flight 1970 a two part historical drama based on Bulgakov s Flight The White Guard and Black Sea It was the first Soviet adaptation of Bulgakov s writings directed by Aleksandr Alov and Vladimir Naumov with Bulgakov s third wife Elena Bulgakova credited as a literary consultant The film was officially selected for the 1971 Cannes Film Festival The Master and Margaret 1972 a joint Yugoslav Italian drama directed by Aleksandar Petrovic the first adaptation of the novel of the same name along with Pilate and Others It was selected as the Yugoslav entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 45th Academy Awards but was not accepted as a nominee Pilate and Others 1972 a German TV drama directed by Andrzej Wajda it was also a loose adaptation of The Master and Margarita novel The film focused on the biblical part of the story and the action was moved to the modern day Frankfurt Ivan Vasilievich Back to the Future 1973 an adaptation of Bulgakov s science fiction comedy play Ivan Vasilievich about an unexpected visit of Ivan the Terrible to the modern day Moscow It was directed by one of the leading Soviet comedy directors Leonid Gaidai With 60 7 million viewers on the year of release it became the 17th most popular film ever produced in the USSR 28 Dog s Heart 1976 a joint Italian German science fiction comedy film directed by Alberto Lattuada It was the first adaptation of the Heart of a Dog satirical novel about an old scientist who tries to grow a man out of a dog The Days of the Turbins 1976 a three part Soviet TV drama directed by Vladimir Basov It was an adaptation of the play of the same name which at the same time was Bulgakov s stage adaptation of The White Guard novel Heart of a Dog 1988 a Soviet black and white TV film directed by Vladimir Bortko the second adaptation of the novel of the same name Unlike the previous version this film follows the original text closely while also introducing characters themes and dialogues featured in other Bulgakov s writings The Master and Margarita 1989 a Polish TV drama in four parts directed by Maciej Wojtyszko It was noted by critics as a very faithful adaptation of the original novel After the Revolution 1990 a feature length film created by Andras Szirtes a Hungarian filmmaker using a simple video camera from 1987 to 1989 It is a very loose adaptation but for all that it is explicitly based on Bulgakov s novel in a thoroughly experimental way What you see in this film is documentary like scenes shot in Moscow and Budapest and New York and these scenes are linked to the novel by some explicit links and by these the film goes beyond the level of being but a visual documentary which would only have reminded the viewer of The Master and Margarita Incident in Judaea a 1991 film by Paul Bryers for Channel 4 focussing on the biblical parts of The Master and Margarita The Master and Margarita 1994 Russian film directed by Yuri Kara in 1994 and released to public only in 2011 Known for a long troubled post production due to the director s resistance to cut about 80 minutes of the film on the producers request as well as copyright claims from the descendants of Elena Bulgakova Shilovskaya The Master and Margarita 2005 Russian TV mini series directed by Vladimir Bortko and his second adaptation of Bulgakov s writings Screened for Russia 1 it was seen by 40 million viewers on its initial release becoming the most popular Russian TV series 29 Morphine 2008 Russian film directed by Aleksei Balabanov loosely based on Bulgakov s autobiographical short stories Morphine and A Country Doctor s Notebook The screenplay was written by Balabanov s friend and regular collaborator Sergei Bodrov Jr before his tragic death in 2002 The White Guard 2012 Russian TV mini series produced by Russia 1 The film was shot in Saint Petersburg and Kyiv and released to mostly negative reviews In 2014 the Ukrainian Ministry of Culture banned the distribution of the film claiming that it shows contempt for the Ukrainian language people and state 30 A Young Doctor s Notebook 2012 2013 British mini series produced by BBC with Jon Hamm and Daniel Radcliffe playing main parts Unlike the Morphine film by Aleksei Balabanov that mixed drama and thriller this version of A Country Doctor s Notebook was made as a black comedy Medical eponymAfter graduating from the Medical School in 1909 he spent the early days of his career as a venereologist rather than pursuing his goal of being a pediatrician as syphilis was highly prevalent during those times It was during those early years that he described the symptoms and characteristics of syphilis affecting the bones He described the abnormal and concomitant change of the outline of the crests of the shin bones with a pathological worm eaten like appearance and creation of abnormal osteophytes in the bones of those suffering from later stages of syphilis This became known as Bulgakov s Sign and is commonly used in the former Soviet states but is known as the Bandy Legs Sign in the west 31 32 BibliographyMain article Mikhail Bulgakov bibliography See also Category Works by Mikhail Bulgakov Novels The White Guard 1925 1975 The Master and Margarita 1940 1967 Theatrical Novel 1936 1967 aka Black Snow Novellas and short stories Notes on the Cuffs 1923 Diaboliad 1924 The Fatal Eggs 1925 A Young Doctor s Notebook 1926 1963 Heart of a Dog 1925 1968 Morphine 1927 The Murderer 1928 Great Soviet Short Stories 1962 The Terrible News Russian Stories from the Years Following the Revolution 1990 Diaboliad and Other Stories 1990 Notes on the Cuff amp Other Stories 1991 The Fatal Eggs and Other Soviet Satire 1918 1963 1993 Theatre The Days of the Turbins 1926 Flight 1927 The Cabal of Hypocrites 1929 Ivan Vasilievich 1936 Biography Life of M de Moliere 1962Footnotes a b Mikhail Afanasyevich Bulgakov Encyclopaedia Britannica Bulgakov Collins English Dictionary Mukherjee Neel 9 May 2008 The Master and Margarita A graphic novel by Mikhail Bulgakov The Times London Retrieved 19 January 2009 Bulgakov s biography on britannica subject of Bulgakov s works main part of the text starts from the novel Belaya gvardiya The White Guard Mikhail Bulgakov in the Western World A Bibliography Mikhail Bulgakov in the Western World A Bibliography a b Shaternikova Marianna Why Did Stalin Loved The Days of the Turbuns Pochemu Stalin lyubil spektakl Dni Turbinyh Opublikovano 15 oktyabrya 2006 g a b Stalin s secret love affair with The White Guard Stalin s secret love affair with The White Guard Lesley Milne Mikhail Bulgakov A Critical Biography Cambridge University Press 2009 p 5 Ermishin O T Pravoslavnaya enciklopediya Tom 6 2003 http www pravenc ru text 153625 html in Russian Bulgakova Varvara Mihajlovna Bulgakova Varvara Mihajlovna in Russian Bulgakov ru Retrieved 21 September 2013 Edythe C Haber Mikhail Bulgakov The Early Years Harvard University Press 1998 p 70 a b c d e f Mikhail Bulgakov Biography www homeenglish ru Retrieved 10 October 2011 a b c d e f Bulgakov timeline Kratkaya hronika zhizni i tvorchestva M A Bulgakova www m a bulgakov ru Archived from the original on 9 October 2011 Retrieved 10 October 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l Katherine Konchakovska and Bohdan Yasinsky 1998 Mikhail Bulgakov in the Western World A Bibliography Library of Congress Retrieved 10 October 2011 Vilensky Yu G Bulgakov s doctor 1991 T I Borisova ed Kiev Zdorovie pp 99 103 ISBN 5 311 00639 0 Simon Sebag Montefiore p 110 swedish edition of Stalin The Red Tsar and His Court Mikhail Bulgakov s biography on britannica Bulgakov s first work was Belaya gvardiya The White Guard Mihail Afanasevich Bulgakov Pismo pravitelstvu SSSR in Russian lib ru Novyj mir 1987 N8 Retrieved 10 October 2011 Batum Kommentarii lib ru Retrieved 10 October 2011 Zilberstein Gleb Maor Uriel Baskin Emmanuil D Amato Alfonsina Righetti Pier Giorgio 2016 Unearthing Bulgakov s trace proteome from the Master i Margarita manuscript Journal of Proteomics 152 102 108 doi 10 1016 j jprot 2016 10 019 PMID 27989937 Coulehan Jack 9 November 1999 Literature Annotations Bulgakov Mikhail A Country Doctor s Notebook Literature Arts and Medicine Database New York University Retrieved 11 February 2009 Inna Konchakovskaia 1902 85 a daughter of the owner who had become a hero of Bulgakov s novel and niece of composer Witold Maliszewski preserved the house during hard soviet times 1 Stephen Chris 5 February 2005 Devil worshippers target famous writer s Moscow flat The Irish Times Page 9 Galtseva Elina About the museum Museum M A Bulgakov Schmadel Lutz 2003 Dictionary of Minor Planet Names Springer ISBN 9783540002383 Lesley Milne ed 1995 Bulgakov the novelist playwright Routledge p 232 ISBN 978 3 7186 5619 6 Harkins Thomas Corbett Bernard 2016 Pearl Jam FAQ All That s Left to Know About Seattle s Most Enduring Band Hal Leonard Corporation Soviet box office leaders at KinoPoisk Vladimir Bortko about The Master and Margarita interview to the MIGNnews com website in Russian Ukraine Bans Russian Films for Distorting Historical Facts by Moscow Times 29 July 2014 Johnson A B 1911 Surgical Diagnosis Vol 1 D Appleton p 570 Retrieved 6 January 2017 Milne L 1990 Mikhail Bulgakov A Critical Biography Cambridge University Press p 136 ISBN 9780521227285 ReferencesVoronina Olga G Depicting the Divine Mikhail Bulgakov and Thomas Mann Studies In Comparative Literature 47 Cambridge Legenda 2019 Townsend Dorian Aleksandra From Upyr to Vampire The Slavic Vampire Myth in Russian Literature Ph D Dissertation School of German and Russian Studies Faculty of Arts amp Social Sciences University of New South Wales May 2011 SourcesBiographies of Bulgakov Michalopoulos Dimitris 2014 Russia under Communism Bulgakov his Life and his Book Saarbruecken Lambert Academic Publishing ISBN 978 3 659 53121 7 Drawitz Andrzey 2001 The Master and the Devil transl Kevin Windle New York Edwin Mellen Haber Edythe C 1998 Mikhail Bulgakov the early years Harvard University Press Milne Leslie 1990 Mikhail Bulgakov a critical biography Cambridge University Press Proffer Ellendea 1984 Bulgakov life and work Ann Arbor Ardis Proffer Ellendea 1984 A pictorial biography of Mikhail Bulgakov Ann Arbor Ardis Wright Colin 1978 Mikhail Bulgakov life and interpretation University of Toronto Press Letters memoirs Belozerskaya Bulgakova Lyubov 1983 My life with Mikhail Bulgakov transl Margareta Thompson Ann Arbor Ardis Curtis J A E 1991 Manuscripts don t burn Mikhail Bulgakov a life in letters and diaries London Bloomsbury Vozvdvizhensky Vyacheslav ed 1990 Mikhail Bulgakov and his times memoirs letters transl Liv Tudge Moscow Progress Vanhellemont Jan 2020 The Master and Margarita Annotations per chapter Vanhellemont Leuven Belgium 257 pp ISBN 978 9 081853 32 3 https www masterandmargarita eu en 10estore bookse html External links Wikiquote has quotations related to Mikhail Bulgakov Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mikhail Bulgakov Works by or about Mikhail Bulgakov at Internet Archive Full English text of The Master and Margarita Full English text of The Heart of a Dog Full English text of The Fatal Eggs Full English translation of Future Prospects and In the Cafe Master and Margarita profile and resources Chris Hedges Welcome to Satan s Ball Truthdig 10 March 2014 A comparison of the Soviet society described in Master and Margarita and modern society in the United States and Russia Mikhail Bulgakov in the Western World A Bibliography Library of Congress European Reading Room Remembering Gudok by M Bulgakov from SovLit net Mikhail A Bulgakov at IMDb Mikhail Bulgakov at Library of Congress Authorities with 180 catalogue records Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mikhail Bulgakov amp oldid 1132280308, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.