Resurrection
Tolstoy's 1899 novel — Prince Nekhlyudov's repentance for his treatment of a young woman; major Christian-anarchist work
Tradition: Russian literature / Christian-anarchist literature
Tolstoy's 1899 novel — Nekhlyudov's repentance for Maslova, the indictment of state-criminal-justice institutions
Resurrection (Voskreseniye, 1899) is Tolstoy's third and last major novel, written across a decade in his Christian-anarchist period. Prince Nekhlyudov, sitting on a jury, recognises the defendant — Katyusha Maslova, a prostitute charged with murder — as the young housemaid he seduced and abandoned years before. The novel follows his attempt to repent: pursuing her through the prison system, the trans-Siberian exile-march, and finally to the religious-personal transformation that the novel's title names. Major Christian-anarchist indictment of the institutions of Imperial Russia.
Author
Editions cited
- Voskreseniye (Russian, 1899, with censored sections; uncensored eds. later); English: Louise Maude (1900); Rosemary Edmonds (Penguin Classics); Anthony Briggs (Penguin)
School Embodiments
Major Christian-anarchist novel — the institutional indictment, the religious-personal transformation as alternative.
"It was as if all those who had been about to perform their absurd legal-ceremonial functions felt that the simple-Christian alternative would dissolve their work into the unreality it actually was." (Resurrection)
Continued Tolstoyan-Christian pacifism — particularly in the indictment of state violence (prison, exile, execution).
"The state prison system — the trans-Siberian exile-march — is institutional violence on a scale that no Christian community can tolerate without complicity." (Resurrection)
Continued existentialist-religious framework — the demand for personal authentic-religious transformation.
"Nekhlyudov's transformation is not the consequence of intellectual conviction; it is the work of his existential-personal response to the wrong he has done." (Resurrection)
Major critical-theoretical work on institutional violence — the criminal-justice system, church-state collusion, social hypocrisy.
"Each institution — court, prison, church, government — depends on the production of unreality; the proper response is the dissolution of complicity." (Resurrection)
Liberal-religious-philosophical framework — proper Christianity opposed to institutional church.
"What the institutional church administers is not the religion of Christ; the proper religion of Christ would dissolve the institutional church." (Resurrection)
Continued mystical-religious framework — the personal-transformative encounter as religious-philosophical foundation.
"In the prison-yard among the condemned, Nekhlyudov encountered Christ — not the Christ of icons but the living Christ of the suffering." (Resurrection)
Continued naturalist-fictional method — close-realist attention to prison conditions, the exile-march, peasant life.
"The Tolstoyan naturalist method, here applied to the indictment of the institutions of Imperial Russia, has rarely been more effective." (Standard scholarly account)
Internal Tensions
Resurrection led to Tolstoy's 1901 excommunication by the Russian Orthodox Church; the novel has been variously assessed — defenders see major late-Tolstoy work, critics see thinly-fictionalised pamphleteering.
I. Time
The 1889-99 decade of composition; the contemporary 1890s Russian-Imperial setting.
Attributes
II. Space
Petersburg, the trans-Siberian exile-route, the Russian penal system.
Attributes
III. Matter
The embodied prisoners, the prince, the institutions whose violence the novel records.
Attributes
IV. Observer
Nekhlyudov as participant-observer-protagonist of his own conversion.
Attributes
V. Energy
The institutional-violent and religious-transformative energies of the novel.
Attributes
VI. Information
The narrative-political-religious content of the novel.
Attributes
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 Resurrection resolves each dilemma
51 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 29 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 6 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.
6 mainstream positions
Matter · 7 dilemmas · 4 distinctive
What stuff is — fundamental, relational, or appearance.
3 mainstream positions
Observer · 37 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Mind, agency, and the knower's relation to the known.