Anna Karenina
Tolstoy's 1878 novel of love, marriage, and Russian social life
Tradition: Nineteenth-century Russian realist novel
Tolstoy's 1878 novel — "All happy families are alike; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way"
Anna Karenina is Leo Tolstoy's 1878 realist novel, opening with the famous line "All happy families are alike; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way." Two principal narrative strands: Anna Karenina, the wife of a senior government official, falls in love with Count Vronsky, leaves her husband and son, and is gradually destroyed by social ostracism and her own despair; Konstantin Levin, an aristocratic landowner, works through doubts about life's meaning toward a hard-won religious vision. A masterpiece of realist narrative and one of the greatest novels ever written.
Editions cited
- Anna Karenina, tr. Constance Garnett (1901); tr. Louise and Aylmer Maude (1918); tr. Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky (Penguin, 2000)
School Embodiments
Russian Orthodox Christian moral vision.
"Orthodox vision." (Anna Karenina)
Pragmatic-realist depiction of agriculture and society.
"Pragmatic-realist." (Anna Karenina)
Critical of aristocratic-bureaucratic society.
"Critical of society." (Anna Karenina)
Internal Tensions
Anna Karenina: a touchstone of realist fiction and a moral-religious meditation on love, family, faith, and Russian society.
I. Time
The seasonal and social time of nineteenth-century Russia.
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II. Space
Moscow, St Petersburg, country estate.
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III. Matter
The embodied loving and suffering self.
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IV. Observer
Multiple narrative consciousnesses.
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V. Energy
Energies of passion, doubt, and faith.
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VI. Information
The texture of social and moral life.
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Personas with the nearest attribute fingerprint
Historical figures whose own classification on the same six-dimensional grid lands closest to this work's. Computed by attribute-agreement on coordinates both address.
Computed school proximity
The work's attribute fingerprint scored against all schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated embodiments above.
How Anna Karenina resolves each dilemma
34 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 3 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 23 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 3 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.