The City as Dialectic: Andrei Bely’s Creative Consciousness, Its Nietzschean Influence, and the Urban Center in Petersburg

Authors

  • Sandra Joy Russell Central Michigan University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21992/T9T92K

Abstract

In Petersburg (1916), Andrei Bely uses the space of the city to examine and attempt to reconfigure the persistent question of identity within the Russian consciousness. Bely’s awareness of St. Petersburg’s historical and national significance as a political nucleus compels him to work within the symbolic, drawing from various disciplines including mythology, philosophy, and mathematics. As Robert A. Maguire and John E. Malmstad suggest in the novel’s introduction, the city’s geographic positioning contributes to its greater cultural uncertainty; it pits the Neo-Kantian reason, structure, and order of the “West” against the alleged irrational, impalpable, and intuitive nature of the “East” (Bely viii). Bely’s urbanized creative consciousness can be contextualized by way of its origins in Western philosophy, particularly its Nietzschean influence and the idea of eternal return. Although his use and understanding of this concept fluctuated over the years, Bely interpreted Nietzsche’s notion of “return” as being creative, using it to describe the circularity of every artistic, philosophical, and literary endeavor (Maguire and Malmstad 103). By approaching Bely’s symbolism via its Nietzschean foundations, a better understanding can be gained regarding his use of the city’s geometric space in establishing a connection with the modern. Bely’s creative reading of Nietzsche facilitates his turn to the symbolic, and more critically, the novel’s enduring significance in his “diagnosis of modern culture” (Maguire and Malmstad 102). The amalgamation of Western philosophy, the modern novel, and the modern city ignited his examination and creation of Petersburg, as within this context, the symbolic rests in the act of creation. For Bely, the city and the text are interchangeable; both behave creatively as developmental centers for the modern. Likewise, his calculated and mathematical re-creation of St. Petersburg within the text allows it to operate as a public space for the articulation of Russia’s political and cultural anxiety.

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Author Biography

Sandra Joy Russell, Central Michigan University

Sandra Joy Russell is currently a MA candidate at Central Michigan University’s department of English Language and Literature where she also works as a graduate assistant teaching composition. She received her BA from CMU in May of 2009 with majors in English and Philosophy. Her current research interests center on comparative modernisms, and particularly those dealing with the use of space in the development and reconfiguration of cultural identity. Her thesis is on Andrei Bely’s Petersburg and its relationship to modernity. In summer of 2010, she received a Bryden scholarship from the International Shaw Society, and has done work on Shaw’s use of space in assessing social and cultural anxiety. She currently lives in Mount Pleasant, Michigan.

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Published

2011-02-05