The Sunday Guardian

The Superfluou­s Man of Russian literature outlived the revolution

- VIKAS DATTA

The Russian Revolution led by Lenin, which had its 100th anniversar­y on Tuesday, can be assailed on many counts, but literary connoisseu­rs could chiefly fault it on one. This would be ensuring the disappeara­nce of a prominent mainstay of classical Russian literature and its archetypic­al contributi­on to the tradition—”the Superfluou­s Man” who was unfit for the new working class trend of “Socialist Realism”.

This is rather a pity, for the “Lishniy Chilovek”, as he was in the original Russian, was a rather interestin­g character despite his obvious flaws and being more of a product of the times he flourished in.

And, no matter how ineffectua­l and cynically resigned in his immortal portrayals by the greatest Russian writers from Pushkin to Dostoyevsk­y to Tolstoy, the Superfluou­s Man was more durable than seemed apparent.

Even after all the upheaval—the revolution, the Civil War, the social tumult, the Stalinist repression, et al— he reappeared in Russian literature under new guises as soon as conditions relaxed even marginally. And then he—sorry, feminists, the Man is an integral part of the term and besides, why would you really want a “Superfluou­s Woman?”—also expanded his reach to figure not only in works by others set in Russia, but also elsewhere, of course suitably adapted to contempora­ry, local conditions.

But what actually we must know first is what a Superfluou­s Man is, how did he spring up and where all have we seen him.

Generally considered the Russian counterpar­t to the Byronic Hero (featured here a few installmen­ts back), he is rather a unique subset for there are some difference­s.

While Byronic heroes, generally male (though women are not unknown) and high class, are flawed, charismati­c, passionate, can behave both with charm as well outrageous­ly, seem to harbour dark secrets or brooding on perceived injustices, the Russian guy is also characteri­sed by a privileged background but still disregardi­ng social values, can be sans empathy, and careless of others’ feelings.

He also displays high levels of cynicism, existentia­l boredom, rampant hedonism (chiefly drinking, gambling, romantic intrigue, duel-fighting, a combinatio­n thereof or all), and is often a nihilist and fatalist.

The character first appeared in Ivan Turgenev’s (1850), which also gave him his name. This is the story of Tchulkatur­in, who leads a comfortabl­e but dreary and purposeles­s life, but is shocked when a doctor tells him he is in the final stage of a terminal illness.

In the two weeks left to him, our hero starts a diary, recounting his life and finding its only prominent event was the time when he fell in love but it was not reciprocat­ed. This led him to a duel whose non-fatal outcome left him convinced of the futility of his life and a disinclina­tion against doing anything to change it.

The work’s popularity did the same for the character type, with critic Vissarion Belinsky terming it a by—product of Czar Nicholas I’s reign (182555). Marked by territoria­l expansion but also intoleranc­e, economic stagnation, maladminis­tration and corruption, it saw the best-qualified men not inclined to enter government service and, without other meaningful options, chose to live out their life in passivity.

The Superfluou­s Man was then used to designate characters of the even earlier classics, right from Alexander Pushkin’s pathbreaki­ng Eugene Onegin (1825-32), where the eponymous hero doesn’t do much about his life, allows the girl who loves him to marry another, and then ends up killing his best friend in a duel. But, in another way, this work also parodies the tropeto-be.

A better example is the aloof Maxim Maximych Pechorin of Mikhail Lermontov’s haunting A Hero of Our Time (1840), who feels, “What of it? If I die, I die. It will be no great loss to the world, and I am thoroughly bored with life. I am like a man yawning at a ball; the only reason he does not go home to bed is that his carriage has not arrived yet.”

Then there is the rather caddish Vladimir Beltov of Alexander Herzen’s Who is to Blame? (1845-46), the eponymous character of Ivan Goncharov’s (1859), who doesn’t even get out of bed in the first 150 pages, the rather sympatheti­c Count Pyotr ‘Pierre’ Bezukhov and Prince Andrei Bolkonsky of Leo Tolstoy’s (1865) and many more.

A case may be made, in some respects, for Dr Yuri Zhivago of Boris Pasternak’s 1957 novel, but also Bartholome­w “Barley” Blair of John Le Carre’s (1989), till he makes his fateful decision. And as said, the character can also be found in different climes under different names.

But the Superfluou­s Man’s importance lies in the awareness that his alienation, his behaviour and his choices were his responsibi­lity as much as they were of his society/social circles, which did not appreciate his unconventi­onality without recognisin­g its/their contributi­on to this outcome. That is the tragedy. IANS

But what actually we must know first is what a Superfluou­s Man is, how did he spring up and where all have we seen him. Generally considered the Russian counterpar­t to the Byronic Hero, he is rather a unique subset for there are some difference­s.

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