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Christo Manolakev
“Choice” and “Responsibility” - The Modern Liberal Project
of XVIII Century and “Female Suicide” in Russian Literature
Summary
The paper studies the constituting European liberal
project “choice” and “responsibility” in 18-th century Russian
Literature through the problem of female death, as been referenciated
in N. M. Karamzin’s short novel “Poor Liza”. The heroine’s
suicide is interpreted in the author’s complex intertextual dialogue
with such emblematic novel as Richardson’s “Clarissa Harlowe”,
Russo’s “Julie, ou La Nouvelle Héloïse”, Goethe’s “Die
Leiden des jungen Werther”; “Poor Liza” is an important part of
this European context and is seen as one of the first Russian’s “European”
literary works, as far as Karamzin changes in that dialogue the code
of female suffering. The suicide (interpreted as a gender opposition
between women and men) transforms the sign of female body from a
victim into a moral victor.
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