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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Virgin_SoilVirgin Soil - Wikipedia

    Political novel. Publisher. Vestnik Evropy. Publication date. 1877. Virgin Soil ( Russian: Новь, romanized : Nov') is an 1877 novel by Ivan Turgenev. It was Turgenev's sixth and final novel as well as his longest and most ambitious.

  2. Virgin Soil, novel by Ivan Turgenev, published in Russian as Nov in 1877. Its focus is the young populists who hoped to sow the seeds of revolution in the virgin soil of the Russian peasantry. Turgenev presents realistic and somewhat sympathetic portraits of the many different types of characters.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Soil and environment: Initial plantations were planted out in virgin soil with plenty of humus with optimum soil reaction, clearing out the dense forests. Consequently, the soil was rich with high organic carbon, enriched with microbes, with adequate nutrients to sustain the plant growth for sustained productivity.

  4. Virgin soil theory combines these older narratives, replacing a virgin, vacant land with a land filled with virgin, vulnerable people. It presents American Indians as weak, defenseless, susceptible, female.

  5. 23 de jun. de 2015 · Virgin Soil, Turgenev’s last novel, is about the Populist movement in Russia in the late 1860s and 1870s, a hundred years before my experiences in the social movements of the 1960s and 1970s. Turgenev's idealistic revolutionaries want to awaken the slumbering people and help them take back their country from the ruling classes.

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  6. 1 de ene. de 2001 · But in Virgin Soil he is easy and almost negligent master of his instrument, and though he is an exile and at times a sharply embittered one, he gathers experience round his theme as only the artist can who has enriched his art by having outlived his youth without forgetting its pangs, joys, mortifications, and love-songs.

  7. The novel stands as both a historical record of the beginnings of the radical movement in Russia and as a perceptive and subtle novel of human conviction and idealism. Complete summary of Ivan ...