This is Why Chekhov was a Genius

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 27 гру 2022
  • Support the channel
    ► Monthly donation with perks on Patreon: / fictionbeast
    ► One-time donation on Ko-Fi: ko-fi.com/fictionbeast
    WHERE TO FIND ME:
    ► Instagram: / fiction_philosophy
    ► E-mail: fictionbeastofficial@gmail.com
    ► Audio Podcast: redcircle.com/shows/c101a9a1-...
    Chekhov and chill
    chekhov.and.chi...
    #chekhov
    #fictionbeast
    #russianliterature

КОМЕНТАРІ • 295

  • @33Donner77
    @33Donner77 11 місяців тому +62

    We need more authors like Chekhov for today's life. We have the billionaires who think they have the answers for governing the world just because they have a talent for making and manipulating money, and then there are others who consider themselves victims, people unable to escape from their cases.

    • @rylandpeters8982
      @rylandpeters8982 9 місяців тому +4

      Write it then. Don't be a sheep. Do something

    • @33Donner77
      @33Donner77 9 місяців тому

      I write in websites, and have demonstrated and spoken in a local environmental concern. Everyone should support their beliefs. What have you done?@@rylandpeters8982

    • @squamish4244
      @squamish4244 6 місяців тому +3

      @@rylandpeters8982 Hahaha this person could be a brain surgeon for all you know. They just don't have Chekhov's talent with words. YOU write something to match his abilities before you insult someone you know nothing about.

    • @rylandpeters8982
      @rylandpeters8982 6 місяців тому

      @@squamish4244 prove hes a brain surgeon. go on

    • @mainstreet3023
      @mainstreet3023 3 місяці тому

      @@rylandpeters8982I will write a banger of a book

  • @user-ql3yj3zm2y
    @user-ql3yj3zm2y 11 місяців тому +29

    I’d like to emphasise that in Russia Chekov is known for his mastery of sarcasm and satire first and foremost. That’s why he is never hard to read unlike some other famous Russian writers. His tongue is cheeky and his stories are bittersweet.

    • @squamish4244
      @squamish4244 6 місяців тому +3

      He is renowned as a master of these qualities and tragicomedy everywhere in the Western world. If you google 'greatest playwrights', Shakespeare comes up first - obviously - but Chekhov is right after him. Which is even more remarkable considering he only wrote a fraction of the plays Shakespeare did.
      Of course, you are also referring to his short stories, and Shakespeare didn't write any of those or any books of any kind.

  • @pharaohakhneton9553
    @pharaohakhneton9553 Рік тому +106

    Chekhov is my favorite writer. The three short stories ,which left inedible mark on my mind are Chekhov's 'Lady with the Dog' and other short stories and Gogol's Government Inspector and Maupassant's 'Necklace'.

    • @lorenzomizushal3980
      @lorenzomizushal3980 Рік тому

      I think most short stories are inedible for me, or people in general. 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @stuartwray6175
      @stuartwray6175 11 місяців тому +3

      ​@@lorenzomizushal3980 you mean unedifying? - I disagree with your unsubstantiated deprecation.

    • @lorenzomizushal3980
      @lorenzomizushal3980 11 місяців тому

      @@stuartwray6175 no, I mean inedible.

    • @powbobs
      @powbobs 11 місяців тому

      @@lorenzomizushal3980
      Explain please.

    • @lorenzomizushal3980
      @lorenzomizushal3980 11 місяців тому

      @@powbobs in a literal sense.

  • @laetitiavisagie-gg6kk
    @laetitiavisagie-gg6kk 11 місяців тому +21

    I grew up with Anton Chekhov's work translated into my native tongue. To this day I love the stories of Uncle Wanja, the Seagull, the Cherry Orchard and the Three Sisters (and other stories)

  • @JustinFisher777
    @JustinFisher777 Рік тому +89

    This is my favorite video of yours so far. Chekhov had a huge influence on me through the years. I'm an avid gardener and didn't know about Chekhovs gardening. The point you make about that is very good. Chekhov was a hard worker but he seemed to know what gives most pleasure in life, at least on the serotonin way over the dopamine way. It's very rare to fins a work that is truly chekhovian. Most people focus on the psychology and the sociology. For me it was always the naturalist details he had. The wind in the trees. These sorts of details can give one peace with life, even after suffering. Like the end of Uncle Vanya. Like so so so many of his short stories. You've done a very good job with this video. Chekhov really comes through.

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Рік тому +11

      Really appreciate it, Justin! I apologise, I have not had the time to reply to your awsome comments. But I always love reading them. So thanks a heap!

    • @squamish4244
      @squamish4244 6 місяців тому +1

      He died quite young, but in his short life displayed incredible insight into the human condition.

  • @sanjaya718
    @sanjaya718 Рік тому +18

    Wow! Stunning life! Almost unbelievable what he did in 44 years

  • @janestones323
    @janestones323 Рік тому +198

    “Ward No.6” is the most talked about and quoted story in Russia by many generations. If someone wants to criticise someone’s way of life or the path of their ideas they say “Are you from the ward number 6?”

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Рік тому +29

      That’s a cool fact.

    • @snick0o0
      @snick0o0 Рік тому +18

      not ones in my 30 years that came up

    • @thierryalbert2228
      @thierryalbert2228 11 місяців тому +4

      Ward No. 6 is one of my favourite short story by Checkow

    • @marcinkene
      @marcinkene 11 місяців тому +13

      Hahaha that's not really true, I'm Russian speaker for 36 years

    • @varvarvarvarvarvar
      @varvarvarvarvarvar 11 місяців тому +15

      Not at all. It's a rather fringe saying in Russian. If anything, it would be mostly used by uncultured Russians, Belarussians and Ukrainians who would get it from mandatory school reading as a funny sounding insult. Which is how you correctly describe it being used. Before the internet and TV, memes came from school programmes. "Ward No. 6" was typically taught and interpreted by teachers as a brilliant social parody of the stupid, repressive czarist regime. Curiously, the Soviet state produced nobody who comes close to the greats of Russian literature. I guess that life under the red banner was so great that there was nothing to parody anymore.

  • @ReligionOfSacrifice
    @ReligionOfSacrifice Рік тому +93

    BOOKS was the theme of 2022. I read 52 books in 52 weeks.
    1) "The Way We Live Now" by Anthony Trollope
    2) "Can You Forgive Her?" by Anthony Trollope
    3) "Never Let Me Go" by Kazuo Ishiguro
    4) "Mark Twain: A Life" by Rom Powers
    5) "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court" by Mark Twain
    6) "The Innocents Abroad" by Mark Twain
    7) "The End of the Affair" by Graham Greene
    8) "Clarissa, or, the History of a Young Lady" by Samuel Richardson
    9) "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" by Muriel Spark
    10) "Breakfast at Tiffany's" by Truman Capote
    11) "What We Talk About When We Talk About Love" by Raymond Carver
    12) "Anna Karenina" by Leo Tolstoy
    13) "Resurrection" by Leo Tolstoy
    14) "Master and Man" by Leo Tolstoy
    15) "A Confession" by Leo Tolstoy
    16) "The Death of Ivan Ilyich" by Leo Tolstoy
    17) "The Raid" by Leo Tolstoy
    18) "A Princess of Mars" by Edgar Rice Burroughs
    19) “In the First Circle" by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
    20) "The Hunchback of Notre-Dame" by Victor Hugo
    21) "Clara Militch" by Ivan Turgenev
    22) "Mumu" by Ivan Turgenev
    23) "Kassyan of Fair Springs" by Ivan Turgenev
    24) "The Portrait Game" Ivan Turgenev
    25) " Punin and Baburin" by Ivan Turgenev
    26) "The Inn" by Ivan Turgenev
    27) "The Watch" by Ivan Turgenev
    28) "Acia" by Ivan Turgenev
    29) "Home of the Gentry" by Ivan Turgenev
    30) "On the Eve" by Ivan Turgenev
    31) "Rudin" by Ivan Turgenev
    32) "Smoke" by Ivan Turgenev
    33) "First Love" by Ivan Turgenev
    34) "The Torrents of Spring" by Ivan Turgenev
    35) "How Russians Meet Death" by Ivan Turgenev
    36) "Sketches from a Hunter's Album" by Ivan Turgenev
    37) "Volodya" by Anton Chekhov
    38) "Ward No. 6" by Anton Chekhov
    39) "The Lady with the Dog" by Anton Chekov
    40) "The Tale of Tsar Saltan" by Alexander Pushkin
    41) "The Captain's Daughter" by Alexander Pushkin
    42) “Le Grand Meaulnes, or the Lost Domain” by Alain-Fournier
    43) "Poor Folk" by Fyodor Dostoevsky
    44) "White Nights" by Fyodor Dostoevsky
    45) "Flipped" by Wendelin Van Draanen
    46) "Kolyma Tales" by Varlam Shalamov
    47) "An Island Hell" by S. A. Malsagoff
    48) "The Return of the Native" by Thomas Hardy
    49) "Jude the Obscure" by Thomas Hardy
    50) “Strait is the Gate” by André Gide
    51) “And Every Morning the Way Home Gets Longer and Longer” by Fredrik Backman
    52) “Middlemarch” by George Eliot
    It amounted to reading around 1,500 pages per month. Many months were over 2,000 pages.
    Samuel Richardson's book was from 1748 A.D. and was over 1,800 pages when written. I read the 808 page abridged edition and it was amazing. One of the first writers of English novels wrote one that can be loved today. I almost desire to look up the unabridged to read two of the letters near the end which I missed. The whole story was in letters like "Poor Folk" or "Les Liaisons Dangereuses."
    20 of my top 100 books of all time I read this year. I am thinking this year was the best year of reading I've ever had. Neither of Mark Twain's books made the top 100, but they were amazing reads. I was reading him because of a biography by Ron Powers of Mark Twain and I plan to read another biography this year coming up.
    This is the year I found out Ivan Turgenev from Russia is my favorite author of all time and will never be surpassed. I plan on reading more of him next year too.

    • @ReligionOfSacrifice
      @ReligionOfSacrifice Рік тому +2

      Anton Chekhov is probably the best author in terms of skill but I have some problems with him, which are best said by critics of his time. E. J. Dillon thought "the effect on the reader of Chekhov's tales was repulsion at the gallery of human waste represented by his fickle, spineless, drifting people" and R. E. C. Long said "Chekhov's characters were repugnant, and that Chekhov revelled in stripping the last rags of dignity from the human soul."

    • @janestones323
      @janestones323 Рік тому +3

      Studying in Russia, in year 5 at school Mumu was the most discussed about storyline for a long long time. The students would even start fighting defending their opinions and principles over was Gerasime right or wrong

    • @whawkins8636
      @whawkins8636 Рік тому +4

      You are clearly a fast reader

    • @ReligionOfSacrifice
      @ReligionOfSacrifice Рік тому

      ​@@whawkins8636, not as fast as my friend in high school or my nephew who are speed readers. I just read steadily throughtout life.

    • @goswamigeeta
      @goswamigeeta Рік тому +5

      Full of admirations for you. This is an inspiration!

  • @goswamigeeta
    @goswamigeeta Рік тому +29

    Wonderful! As a lover of literature (a retired English language teacher) this was necter to my ears.

    • @smkh2890
      @smkh2890 Рік тому +2

      Nectar

    • @pjmlegrande
      @pjmlegrande 10 місяців тому

      What a wonderful mixed metaphor. Thank you

    • @smkh2890
      @smkh2890 10 місяців тому

      @@pjmlegrande Mellifluous , derived from meli, 'honey'

  • @morningstar6577
    @morningstar6577 11 місяців тому +15

    In addition to the authors you mentioned, Tennessee Williams really admired Anton Chekhov, and even wrote an adaptation of The Seagull which he entitled, "The Notebook of Trigorin"

  • @alyonavam9040
    @alyonavam9040 Рік тому +36

    I am so happy to have found your channel! Thank you so much for all your content and as a Russian, special thank you for covering Russian literature, Chekhov is my favourite, although the does bring a bitter sweet depression on me every single time 😅🎉❤

  • @markspano3468
    @markspano3468 Рік тому +18

    Thank you so much. Chekov is one of my favorites. Both the short stories and plays, I read again and again. I’ve probably seen seagull in the theater five times.

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Рік тому +3

      Glad you enjoy it! Thanks Mark for sharing your experience of Chekhov!

  • @cheri238
    @cheri238 Рік тому +18

    Fiction Beast, I love all your lectures on writers. (All!!) You always capture the essence of them. I love Russian writers. Anton Chekhov, of course he is one of the finest writers' of short stories and plays. The explanation why he was different was perfectly put by your analysis. He saw what was in every day mundane life as lived by the serfs. Captured its realness and what was hidden as in all human beings.
    My favorite early short story by Chekhov is "The Kiss," which is in the presence of Chekhov, which is to be simpler, more truthful. He always prevails in his short stories. "The Lady with a Dog," a later one in 1899. All of his plays are brimming with subtlety of existence.
    Again, thank you for all your lectures and a very happy 2023. Respectfully and with affection. 💖

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Рік тому +3

      Thank you, Anna! You always leave some great thoughtful comments. Really appreciate it.

    • @cheri238
      @cheri238 11 місяців тому

      ​@@Fiction_Beast
      My name is Cheri, don't tell anyone. I LOVE YOU!!!❤

  • @baxtermaxtor
    @baxtermaxtor Рік тому +7

    The Virginia Wolfe quote reminds me of an video essay on David Lynch's final Twin Peaks season where it is asserted that the longing for closure tends to eclipse the more pressing need for balance.

  • @zhanna7307
    @zhanna7307 Рік тому +5

    Your Russian pronunciation is really good in the beginning, I'm impressed

  • @ReadADayClub
    @ReadADayClub Рік тому +9

    Truly one of the best videos on your channel. Unfortunately, I have not read a lot of Chekhov but after watching this, I'm sure that's going to change. Thank you for putting out such amazing and insightful content! :)

  • @austinmorris981
    @austinmorris981 11 місяців тому +2

    I did not know anything, anything at all, about Anton Chekhov. Thank you very much for this video!

  • @alkaloitongbam6684
    @alkaloitongbam6684 Місяць тому

    Just got myself a book of compiled short stories by Chekhov and now, I am motivated to read it ; thanks dear friend for making this beautiful, insightful and compelling video❤️

  • @haydenwalton2766
    @haydenwalton2766 Рік тому +5

    thank you for making this video.
    Chekhov is one of my favourites.
    I've always loved the saying that Chekhov's writing is like lace - it's the missing pieces that give it it's beauty.

  • @alexhindes3861
    @alexhindes3861 Рік тому +4

    You’re making me grow broke by adding to my book purchases…and I love it

    • @42976675
      @42976675 Рік тому

      Library near?

    • @johannsebastianbach3411
      @johannsebastianbach3411 2 місяці тому +1

      😂😂😂 same over here. Joking aside, a trick that I use to be economical is, that I look out for huge compilation volumes, so that I can have all the works of an author in two or three huge books, and try to find those in second hand

  • @davidlee6720
    @davidlee6720 Рік тому +20

    brilliant as usual, am always waiting in anticipation of the next, you have the gift of brevity without sacrificing detail and meaning. that makes you a poet I suppose!

  • @yuukihoffner8433
    @yuukihoffner8433 Рік тому +4

    Chekhov knew exactly what should be done in order to improve our miserable, low lives and he says it too: We have to continue to do our duty and do that as well as we can. The last words of his Uncle Vanya express this openly. And he opposes narcissistic figures who only talk and talk, like the professor in Uncle Vanya, but never DO anything. Chekhov was into the philosophy of the stoics, they do also teach this. In a letter to his brother Anton Chekhov gives him the same advice.

    • @evinnra2779
      @evinnra2779 11 місяців тому +1

      Yes , moreover, one could argue that Chekhov was more a philosopher than any of his famous compatriots. For instance, he did give a very definitive answer as to what he actually thought of the Stoics in 'Ward No. 6', (which answer disappointed me somewhat since I personally do appreciate the Stoics philosophy.) My favorite short story by Chekhov is 'The Ravine', which , on the face of it ends in tragedy, loss and despair, but the way Chekhov written it, the story feels excruciatingly real and even hopeful that no matter what, justice will prevail. Chekhov reminds me of Plato's writing style, so concise and generously full of meaning it is quite breath taking. What I wondered, though , is why would a master of eloquence, who's every short story is like a master piece of Impressionist painting would allow his prose to be played in theatres, where the accurate meaning of these short stories are objectively impossible to bring forth. The Chekhov plays I have seen I found dreadfully boring, but his short stories I became addicted to.

    • @yuukihoffner8433
      @yuukihoffner8433 11 місяців тому +1

      @EvInnra Ad Chekhov plays and boring: This reminds me of my own reaction to Proust's Lost Time many years ago. I could not perceive the inner drama of the little boy waiting for his mother in volume 1 e.g. Now, many years later I felt it. Of course this completely dependent child was desperate, there alone in Normandy. Do not condemn yourself because you do not like these plays yet. As you love the stories your understanding of his theater will come. Uncle Vanya is my favorite play. In assoluto! It displays the Stoic philosophy: An overworked country doctor is secretly in love with the beautiful but ignorant wife of an ignorant landowner. This self possessed individual, an incompetent university professor, nearly destroys the lives of his employees on the land estate. Opposing him, they succeed in rescuing house and land, knowing that "they have to continue working." An allusion to the Roman and stoic VIRTUS. Take care!

  • @cerealkiillar
    @cerealkiillar Рік тому +2

    I am so glad I found your site! This is just like sitting in on an Ivy League seminar in Literature. Thank you!

  • @betweenprojects
    @betweenprojects 11 місяців тому +1

    'Condemned as I was to a life of idleness'. My favourite opening line!

  • @aashutosh9285
    @aashutosh9285 2 місяці тому

    This was narrated so well!!! Such a great video!! Loved it!

  • @rowrysang4053
    @rowrysang4053 Рік тому +2

    Fiction Beast, I absolutely adore your content. Keep it up! They're my favorite, and I always feel a bit more productive after learning about those stuff!

  • @fildefaite2449
    @fildefaite2449 Рік тому +10

    Thank you, you do an amazing job of analyzing complex people, stories, human topics and explaining or distilling them into snack-size ways of understanding them. I love your channel. Bless you and please keep the coming.

  • @jaclyntehyazi2734
    @jaclyntehyazi2734 Рік тому +2

    I enjoy your philosophical videos very much. I listen to them while working. Keep it up, love from Malaysia.

  • @bert.hbuysse5569
    @bert.hbuysse5569 Рік тому +4

    Thanks Fiction Beast!

  • @Melissa-he3lo
    @Melissa-he3lo 11 місяців тому +3

    Spasibo bolshoi! Thank you for your insightful and thorough presentation! Im glad I found your channel! I am looking forward to your other videos. You have inspired me to read and re-read the Russians and others.

  • @oto9164
    @oto9164 4 місяці тому

    3 minutes in and im already in love with your style you are so fun to listen to!

  • @anjummadani
    @anjummadani 11 місяців тому +3

    What a superb condensed analysis of - to me - the most humanist Russian writer in a country steeped with great Humanist writers! No wasted words (you followed Chechov's minimalist style) but you have made his life and Art glow as few others have.
    Thank you for your excellent contribution to this great man.

    • @hughjass6646
      @hughjass6646 11 місяців тому

      Speaking of humanist writers. 0:15 Dostoevsky was also an ideologist of Russian Orthodox fascism, along with a number of Slavophiles during that time. They were united by the ideas of Russian nationalism and the cultural and spiritual significance of the Russian people, such as the concept of the "God-bearing nation" and the belief in a "special path" for Russia. Dostoevsky specifically believed that Western Europe was doomed to collapse. He envisioned that after this collapse, Russia, together with the Russian Orthodox Church, would establish the kingdom of God on Earth, thereby fulfilling the promise of the Book of Revelation. Being a devoted follower of political philosopher Ivan Ilyin and Alexandr Dugin - Putin is considering the use of nuclear weapons to achieve this goal. Ironically, we are talking about the nuclear weapon, which Ukraine peacefully conceded to Russia in exchange of the security guarantees from Russia, UK and the USA.

  • @jeanettecook1088
    @jeanettecook1088 11 місяців тому +1

    Fascinating material! Thank you for posting. I'm a new subscriber. 🎉

  • @ryokan9120
    @ryokan9120 Рік тому +19

    Interestingly Chekhov's humanism and atheism were his strengths and you can see these traits in his short stories.

    • @uncle_julius5743
      @uncle_julius5743 8 місяців тому

      «Между «есть Бог» и «нет Бога» лежит целое громадное поле, которое проходит с большим трудом истинный мудрец. Русский же человек знает какую-либо одну из этих двух крайностей, середина же между ними не интересует его; и потому обыкновенно не знает ничего или очень мало».
      А. Чехов, 1897

  • @gamatogo
    @gamatogo 11 місяців тому +1

    Thanks for sharing!

  • @persimon6803
    @persimon6803 11 місяців тому +3

    That was very refreshing. I have never thought about the difference between Russian authors just enjoyed them. Now that I think about it, Anna Karenina's crowd, for instance, were all very privileged and that state of wealth held me, the reader, apart from being able to participate in the story. I am going to revisit Chekhov. thanks so much

  • @hestadickeos6043
    @hestadickeos6043 Рік тому +2

    The ganre of the short story gripped me many years ago. A good short story encapsulates human experiences by condensing it in a way that makes it an emotional or cerebral experience which can leave you breathless! I feel that I have learned a lot about human nature through the reading of masters of the short story. Your lecture on Checkof was very informative and interesting.... Funny enough, 'The Lady with the dog' is one of my most remembered stories... There was so much complexity of human behavior which is dictated by their perception of morality. It was fascinating to follow their actions and emotions throughout the tale of this love story.
    The beauty of it was greatly due to the fact that I didn't have to read an entire novel to be moved in such a way.

  • @myragroenewegen5426
    @myragroenewegen5426 Рік тому +6

    Yes, Chekov is a key seed of the realist impulse, caring deeply about presenting what he saw, but there's contradiction in that genious which is key to the magic of the writing. As we get more distance on early realists it's far clearer that their plays do have things to say to society. There is, after all an inherent contradiction to the instinct to write a play in which nothing is superfluous to the telling of a particular story, while trying to present life as it is. Since life is full of things the writer is trimming away, what and who falls under the lens of writing and what is defined as worthy real human experience necessarily expresses a perspective.
    Watching "The Seagull", it is truly difficult not to judge the morality of the renown writer who uses his fame and privilege to intentionally bring down the universally loved aspiring actress Nina and it's hard not to root for her, enduring as much of an acing career as she can build at the play's end, even in her disillusioned and broken state. And even if you think Constantine's plays are pretty bad, as you are given ample room to think throughout The Seagull, it's hard not to be similarly enraged at the willful blindness and denial in Constantin's famous actor mother of the harm she is doing her suicidally depressed son by not allowing him enough money to grow as in artist in literally ANY environment more conducive to finding and accepting who he is than one in her shadow and the shadow of other famous artist she seems to keep by her side purely to support her own former-fame-inflated ego.
    Things like this wouldn't hit the way they do if there wasn't opinion baked into the play, but after it's tragedy the "what now" is less obvious as most of the remaining characters sit around a table confronted by their reshaped reality. It's almost a convention by now to try to make plays do this, so that what will or should happen is left to the audience. Plays and short stories, being so short, often seem better served when they aim to open discussion by presenting a reality with compelling moral stakes that drive us to do business with things that otherwise don't get talked about.

  • @MrPakstons
    @MrPakstons 11 місяців тому

    love it! ❤ thank you for this

  • @zellipa
    @zellipa 11 місяців тому

    was in love since i read "The Bet" (in english) in junior high
    Thank you so much for your work!

  • @passionateprogressive4445
    @passionateprogressive4445 11 місяців тому +2

    I LOVED this presentation!

  • @perk478
    @perk478 Рік тому

    Great! Thank you FB - perhaps your best video so far. Looking forward to more.

  • @WilhelmGuggisberg
    @WilhelmGuggisberg 11 місяців тому +3

    Best biography of Chekhov that really makes justice to his genius.

  • @lilyghassemzadeh
    @lilyghassemzadeh Рік тому +1

    Thank you very much for the wonderful introduction to Chekhov. You pronounce 'kh' very well😊 Have a happy 2023 🎊

  • @bshakespeare100
    @bshakespeare100 11 місяців тому

    Thank you. Beautiful telling of these interesting things.

  • @erikkr.r.m7380
    @erikkr.r.m7380 Рік тому +4

    My favourite short stories made by this man are Rothschild's violin and The kiss. They hit so hard is scary

  • @Clubsandwichchav
    @Clubsandwichchav Рік тому +1

    HAPPY NEW YEAR FICTION BEAST 🎉

  • @Me-We1985
    @Me-We1985 Рік тому +2

    Thank you for the video from ethiopia

  • @albertocalerolugo3248
    @albertocalerolugo3248 3 місяці тому

    Muchas gracias. Thank you very much. I enJOYed this video very much. You also has a great voice too.

  • @drewcampbell8555
    @drewcampbell8555 Рік тому

    Excellent summary. Thank you.

  • @julietaaboka3285
    @julietaaboka3285 11 місяців тому

    Thank you for this excellent lecture! What I like most is that you make brief comparison with other Russian authors and also you quote others opinion about Chekhov. I also find your point about joy vs happiness thought provoking. Болшое спосибо из Болгарии!

  • @UsmanAli-tj2oo
    @UsmanAli-tj2oo Рік тому +1

    very precise and informative!

  • @mainstreet3023
    @mainstreet3023 3 місяці тому

    Thank you so much. A favourite from your videos.

  • @bernadettemcenteehart5901
    @bernadettemcenteehart5901 11 місяців тому

    Thank you for these thoughts

  • @putnanji
    @putnanji 11 місяців тому +1

    thanks for the video :)

  • @margaretphlipsak8973
    @margaretphlipsak8973 10 місяців тому

    I loved your telling. Beautiful. Thank you.

  • @tamarajasinski820
    @tamarajasinski820 Рік тому

    Wonderful documentary. Thank you. My favorite story is " The Duell".

  • @doyle6000
    @doyle6000 11 місяців тому

    Great video - thanks! Keep 'em coming!

  • @TheWhitehiker
    @TheWhitehiker Рік тому

    great analysis--thanks much!

  • @pjmlegrande
    @pjmlegrande 10 місяців тому +1

    He sounds like such a humane and insightful person, not to mention highly intelligent. I have read a bit of Gogol (laugh out loud funny in a darkly humorous way) and a bit of Dostoyevsky, but have not gotten round to reading Checkov although have always meant to. Now is a good time for me to do it. I’m convalescing from surgery and I’m older and wiser (hopefully), so perhaps I will be able to appreciate this great man’s writing. Thanks for this lesson.

  • @srothbardt
    @srothbardt Рік тому

    A very great one. Read “Heartache “. He doesn’t tell you what to think or feel but makes you feel through his style.

  • @sugarsenpai8432
    @sugarsenpai8432 Рік тому +4

    Great content. Keep it up!

  • @ecovolved
    @ecovolved Рік тому +1

    Your vids are really great. You're very well informed and charming

  • @timber750
    @timber750 11 місяців тому

    Thanks for this admirable presentation.

  • @thumbtack40
    @thumbtack40 3 місяці тому

    Thank you✨✨✨🎭

  • @anv.4614
    @anv.4614 5 місяців тому

    Thank you. well appreciated.

  • @riledmouse4677
    @riledmouse4677 11 місяців тому

    Beautiful essay. I learned so much. I loved it. Thank you.

  • @Cherylcoder
    @Cherylcoder Рік тому

    Well done!

  • @kailuakidd1512
    @kailuakidd1512 10 місяців тому

    Excellent presentation, thank you

  • @kingfisher9553
    @kingfisher9553 Рік тому

    So glad I discovered your channel.

  • @ocoeepicture
    @ocoeepicture 10 місяців тому +1

    Thank you for making this! Anton Chekhov might have been a rarely used minor league hockey player for all i knew, until i enrolled in an acting class. we had a 2 week period where we studied his work so that we could act in a play of his. I was the doctor in Uncle Vanya, I believe I was the doctor at least. It's been years. But I completely remember being hungover, reading the play for the first time, and crying from laughing at his brutal brilliant way of describing how awful some folks had it- i wasn't laughing at the characters (or the people he may have based them on), but by the outrageous situations they go through. He made my hangover a little better, even meaningful because i guess i felt as shitty as the characters should, but in Chekhov's way of dialogue the characters didn't feel shitty about how shitty their lives could be.

  • @noras.9774
    @noras.9774 Рік тому

    Simply brilliant! Like always!

  • @susanneill7142
    @susanneill7142 5 місяців тому

    Hello! I’ve just discovered your channel & your episode on Chekhov, my fav writer. I found your critique very interesting. My one major quibble is that C mostly left his own personal philosophy & politics out of his stories. As you point out, he was well aware of human suffering. I believe he was also angered by the injustice of human suffering. I suggest you re-read the scene in Uncle Vanya when Sonya orders Maria to answer the door when the peasants come knocking & how the 2 women react. It’s Chekhov’s brief & subtle inclusion of his on-going anger over Russian society’s treatment of the poor. I believe he frequently included scenes like these in his writing, some much less subtle than others, such as his story The Steppe which you mention briefly. Thanks!!

  • @ananouar81
    @ananouar81 Рік тому

    Truly a beast!
    thank you for this video 🤝

  • @mixerD1-
    @mixerD1- Рік тому

    Excellent as usual

  • @Haydenthemaker1000
    @Haydenthemaker1000 Рік тому +1

    Great vid

  • @anonymousanon4043
    @anonymousanon4043 Рік тому +4

    Anton Chekhov is my favorite storyteller!

  • @middlewaypsychology
    @middlewaypsychology Рік тому +2

    Just love this, could you please make more on him? Anything else you observed about him and would like to share?

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Рік тому +3

      Thank you! I love Chekhov so I might make another video in the future.

  • @liltick102
    @liltick102 5 днів тому

    19:26 important. Why I love Werner Herzog more than any other person. 21:05 doing either thing is valid and needed imo

  • @calvingrondahl1011
    @calvingrondahl1011 Рік тому +3

    I only remember the name Chekhov from a character on Star Trek back in the 1960s. As a newspaper cartoonist I only had to keep up with American pop culture. I was surrounded by writers but know nothing of literature. Thanks for your insights, FicBst.

    • @margaretgoodheart4167
      @margaretgoodheart4167 Рік тому +1

      As in Calvin and Hobbs?
      There was a sweetness in their relationship that made the strip memorable.

  • @thescythian321
    @thescythian321 Рік тому

    First Class. Большое спасибо.

  • @HannaARTzink
    @HannaARTzink 11 місяців тому

    I had to fast forward a little, but i followed the narrative with pleasure.
    I will read more Chekhov. Thank you.

  • @olegviernik4518
    @olegviernik4518 Рік тому +3

    I hope that Maxim Gorky would be next. He is my favourite writer.

  • @user-bg9ws7ys4k
    @user-bg9ws7ys4k 11 місяців тому

    Thank you 🙏

  • @RudeGoldberg
    @RudeGoldberg Рік тому

    Thank you for this

  • @Sachie465
    @Sachie465 Рік тому +3

    I would like to know where his altruism came from and what really motivated him for ‘the self exile’ to Sakhalin coughing blood. Also, I’m glad that I’m not alone in often feeling left behind by his short stories. But I do like his plays. By the way, my favourite novel ‘The Setting Sun’ by O. Dazai is based on The Cherry Orchard with a pinch of The Seagull. 良いお年を🎍

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Рік тому +1

      That’s a good question. I guess his own family background and misfortunes must have motivated to explore social misfortunes. He knew humans were flawed so punishing them in Sakhalin was a reality but also cruel.

  • @Reza090
    @Reza090 Рік тому

    Thank you👌

  • @jasemalhammadi4228
    @jasemalhammadi4228 Рік тому +6

    can you please make a video about the egyptian writer, Naguib Mahfouz. he won the 1988 Nobel prize for literature. this will be a beautiful addition to your collection as it will make it more diverse and inclusive.

    • @mateoneedham6807
      @mateoneedham6807 Рік тому

      He has one on the Cairo Trilogy: ua-cam.com/video/TybRtlX_BoE/v-deo.html

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Рік тому +1

      As others have pointed out, I did a while back.

  • @Caperhere
    @Caperhere Рік тому

    Thank you.👋

  • @mateoneedham6807
    @mateoneedham6807 Рік тому +1

    Love your videos, Matt...especially the bits of humor you throw in. Merci. Our dear Salman Rushdie in hiding with a price on his head began to use "Joseph Anton" as a pseudonym to honor writers Joseph Conrad and Anton Chekhov. I have to go slow with your videos, Matt, because I'm super engrossed in what I'm reading. Yes, Anton, I will get back to you...eventually.

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Рік тому

      Glad you like them! I always love reading your comments. Much appreciated.

  • @thomaslehman6676
    @thomaslehman6676 11 місяців тому +1

    Very Good! Thank you! Spawseebeh!

  • @user-dr3ru4pe4q
    @user-dr3ru4pe4q 11 місяців тому

    Thanks!

  • @goodyyy6171
    @goodyyy6171 Рік тому +2

    Good work! Thank you very much.
    I have one question. Where it was emphasized that Anton Chekhov read Artur Schopenhauer's works? Is it study or what? I'm really interested in, could you answer, please.

  • @austinmccook8352
    @austinmccook8352 8 місяців тому

    Thanks for this lovely analysis of Chekhov. I am a slow reader and have been reading An Anonymous Story for several months now. You assert that Chekhov is a minimalist, but how do you reconcile that with the almost breathless descriptions of his characters on introduction, that extend to minute detail about their appearance, behavior, philosophy, predispositions, etc.?

  • @tasneemali4970
    @tasneemali4970 11 місяців тому +1

    A,great writer indeed!

  • @shambaradkar8694
    @shambaradkar8694 3 місяці тому

    Excellent vedio. Some of the stories are also available in my mother tongue Marathi. Some of the drama directors has presented his stories. Your write up will help to understand Chekhov. Thanks for it.

  • @NJIT22
    @NJIT22 Рік тому

    My favorite is “grasshopper”. It’s so relevant today

  • @shuaigege12345
    @shuaigege12345 10 місяців тому

    Ive just read Ward No. 6 and loved it. Which other stories of Chekov’s would u recommend?

  • @cristinaalexandru8958
    @cristinaalexandru8958 10 місяців тому

    Thank you . .

  • @christopherbriscoe8665
    @christopherbriscoe8665 11 місяців тому

    Great Video, Sir, on what was a very hard-working and genius mind of Mr. Chekov. Can I give you some advice? Your pronunciation of the word, "estate" sounds like "state" , instead of "eeee-state".