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  1. Vissarion Grigoryevich Belinsky ( Russian: Виссарио́н Григо́рьевич Бели́нский) (June 11 [O.S. May 30] 1811 – June 7 [O.S. May 26] 1848) was a Russian literary critic of Westernizer persuasion and critic of the Russian government. He was an associate of Alexander Herzen, Mikhail Bakunin (he at one time courted ...

  2. Belinsky, Vissarion [Belinskij], b 11 June 1811 in Sveaborg, Finland, d 7 June 1848 in Saint Petersburg. (Portrait: Vissarion Belinsky .) Leading Russian literary critic of the 1830s and 1840s, who considered Ukraine to be culturally and historically a part of Russia .

  3. Letter to N. V. Gogol. Written: July 3, 1847; Source: V.G. Belinsky: Selected Philosophical Works Foreign Languages Publishing House, Moscow, 1948; Transcribed: Harrison Fluss for marxists.org, February 2008. You are only partly right in regarding my article as that of an angered man: that epithet is too mild and inadequate to express the state ...

  4. 18 de nov. de 2021 · Russian literature developed as a social grace for elites, and their disdain for professional writing helped them retain control. Genuine literature, they insisted, was unsullied by commerce. Money destroys an author’s principles, keen thinking, and good taste. Dostoevsky’s plan was not just an “imprudent risk.”.

  5. The Selected Philosophical Works of V. G. Belinsky comprise the authors more important articles, reviews, letters and excerpts from essays dealing with philosophical and sociological problems. All these works give a clear idea of Belinskys philosophical and political evolution to materialism and revolutionary democratism, and reveal his role as ...

  6. Vissarion Grigor'evich Belinskii (1811 - 1848) - Born on May 30 (June 11, New Style), 1811 - died on May 26 (June 7, New Style), 1848 Literary critic, social thinker, essayist, known as "furious Vissarion" ( neistovyi Vissarion ), often called the father of the Russian radical intelligentsia.