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  1. Towards the end of his life Goncharov wrote a memoir called An Uncommon Story, in which he accused his literary rivals, first and foremost Ivan Turgenev, of having plagiarized his works and prevented him from achieving European fame. The memoir was published in 1924. Fyodor Dostoyevsky, among others, considered Goncharov an author of high stature.

  2. Iván A. Goncharov. Hijo de un próspero comerciante de granos de Simbirsk, una pequeña ciudad del Volga, «un completo panorama –según el propio autor– de soñolencia e inactividad», nació en 1812. Huérfano de padre a los siete años, y ocupada la madre por entero en el negocio familiar, ingresó en un internado donde estudiaban los ...

  3. 10 de mai. de 2017 · Because 19th-century Russia abounds in stupendous literary figures, Ivan Goncharov (1812-1891) can be easily overlooked, though his masterpiece, "Oblomov," should sound vaguely familiar, if only ...

  4. 11 de mai. de 2018 · The Russian novelist Ivan Aleksandrovich Goncharov (1812-1891) is one of the great realists of Russian literature. His novel "Oblomov" is a classic of Russian fiction. Ivan Goncharov was born of a well-to-do family. Although the family background was of the merchant class, he was brought up in the patriarchal atmosphere of Russian manor life.

  5. Goncharov's aesthetics seem to have more bearing on some of his works than on others. Nevertheless, they provide an invaluable (and little studied) guide to the mind of the artist. Of Goncharov's several aesthetic positions his conviction that uncon­ scious creation is inherently superior to conscious craftsmanship received particular emphasis.

  6. Ivan Goncharov. Born in 1812 in Simbirsk (now Ulyanovsk), Russia, to a prosperous family of grain merchants, IVAN GONCHAROV was raised by his godfather, an aristocratic liberal who would serve at least in part as the model for Goncharov’s most famous character: the ineffectual dreamer Ilya Ilyich Oblomov. Although he came of age at the height ...

  7. A Common Story is a debut novel by Ivan Goncharov written in 1844–1846 and first published in the 1847 March and April issues of Sovremennik magazine. The novel is about a young Russian nobleman named Aleksander Aduev, who arrives in St. Petersburg from the provinces and loses his romanticism amidst the rampant pragmatic commercialism.