Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Dubrovsky (Russian: «Дубровский») is an unfinished novel by Alexander Pushkin, written in 1832 and published after Pushkin's death in 1841. The name Dubrovsky was given by the editor.

  2. In this book, in The Tales of Ivan Belkin (1830), Dubrovsky (1833) and The Captain’s Daughter (1836), Pushkin laid the foundation of Russian realistic prose, and established its democratic tendencies.

  3. 5 de ene. de 2018 · Meanwhile Troekurov’s daughter, Masha, falls in love with the son of Dubrovsky. To punish the couple, Troekurov decides to marry his young daughter to a 50-year-old man, despite her begging him not to condemn her. Overall, the novel touches upon important societal issues of the 19th century.

  4. Troekurov in the novel "Dubrovsky" showed himself as a man of pride, but at the same time afraid that Vladimir will come to him once to take revenge. Dubrovsky in the house of Troekurov . But our young hero was not so simple. He suddenly appears in the estate of Kirill Petrovich. But nobody knows him there - he was not at home for many years.

  5. 1 de ene. de 1987 · Fine, however, is typically not what readers look for in a novel. The fact is that this is a simple adventure story that lacks the narrative greatness of Tolstoy, the impeccable structuring of Turgenev, or the psychological insights of Dostoevsky. What makes this more important, as a novel, is that it is a highly-accessible way to read Pushkin.

    • Paperback
    • Alexander Pushkin
  6. Dubrovsky. by Alexander Pushkin. Premiere. 15 January 1895. ( 1895-01-15) Mariinsky Theatre, Saint Petersburg. Dubrovsky ( Russian: Дубровский) is an opera in four acts (5 scenes), Op. 58, by Eduard Nápravník, to a Russian libretto by Modest Ilyich Tchaikovsky after the novel of the same title (1832) by Alexander Pushkin .