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Oblomov

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La vita passa davanti al giovane, ricco Il'ja Il'ic Oblomov. Gli passa davanti il benessere, garantito dalla tenuta di Oblomovka, gli passa davanti la quotidianità sempre uguale, spesa spostandosi da un comodo divano all'altro in preda a sterili pensieri astratti. Gli passa davanti la possibilità di dar corpo ai sogni idealistici della gioventù, su sollecitazione del vitalissimo amico Stol'c. E gli passa davanti l'amore, incarnato dalla bella e sensibile Ol'ga. In un linguaggio che nulla ha da invidiare alla perfezione di Puskin o al feroce realismo di Gogol', Gonçarov dà forma a un universo apparentemente immobile ma in realtà freneticamente vivo di osservazioni, pensieri e annotazioni, sostanziando uno dei massimi capolavori della letteratura russa (e mondiale). Un capolavoro imprendibile, impossibile da catalogare e spiegare e, per questo, ancora più grande.

574 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1859

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About the author

Ivan Goncharov

286books447followers
Russian novelistIvan Aleksandrovich Goncharov(/ˈɡɒntʃəˌrɔːf, -ˌrɒf/; Russian: Ива́н Алекса́ндрович Гончаро́в), best known for his novels A Common Story (1847), Oblomov (1859), and The Precipice (1869). He also served in many official capacities, including the position of censor.

Goncharov was born into the family of a wealthy merchant, elevated as a reward for military service of his grandfather to gentry status. A boarding school, then the Moscow college of commerce, and finally Moscow State University educated him. After graduating, he served for a short time in the office of the governor of Simbirsk before moving to Saint Petersburg, where he worked as government translator and private tutor, while publishing poetry and fiction in private almanacs. People published A Common Story ,first novel of Goncharov, in Sovremennik in 1847.

Goncharov's second and best-known novel Oblomov was published in 1859 in Otechestvennye zapiski. His third and final novel The Precipice was published in Vestnik Evropy in 1869. He also worked as a literary and theatre critic. 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. Anton Chekhov is quoted as stating that Goncharov was "...ten heads above me in talent."

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,988 reviews
Profile Image for Vit Babenco.
1,604 reviews4,684 followers
December 12, 2023
There is a crustacean called a hermit crab that lives its entire life hiding from the world in a seashell… This is the way Ilya Ilyich Oblomov exists among other human beings…
He was a man of about thirty-two or three, of medium height and pleasant appearance, with dark grey eyes, but with a total absence of any definite idea, any concentration, in his features. Thoughts promenaded freely all over his face, fluttered about in his eyes, reposed on his half-parted lips, concealed themselves in the furrows of his brow, and then vanished completely – and it was at such moments that an expression of serene unconcern spread all over his face. This unconcern passed from his face into the contours of his body and even into the folds of his dressing-gown.

Inertia of the mind and fear of everything new don’t allow the hero to do anything or take any however small step forward… He is locked in a prison of his apathy, ennui and listlessness so lethargy is the way of his living from day to day…
‘Writes articles at night,’ Oblomov mused. ‘When does he sleep? And yet he probably earns five thousand a year. It’s his bread and butter. But to keep on writing, wasting his mind and soul on trifles, to change his convictions, sell his intelligence and imagination, do violence to his nature, be in a perpetual state of excitement and turmoil, knowing no rest, always rushing about… And write and write, like a wheel or a machine – write to-morrow, write the day after – the holidays, summer will come – always writing, writing! When is he to stop and have a rest? Poor wretch!’

But the novel is much wider than just a portrayal of the main hero –Ivan Goncharovpaints the whole gallery of the vivid characters that constitute the human fauna surrounding Oblomov.
When he meets a young intelligent girl, Oblomov seems to wake from his hibernation and he starts changing his ways of life but all in vain – inertness doesn’t let him go and he is pushed back into the mire of his inactivity for good.
‘Don’t talk rubbish! Man has been created to arrange his own life and even to change his own nature, and you’ve grown a big belly and think that nature has sent you this burden! You had wings once, but you took them off.’

Tranquility… Sometimes a snail or a slug would crawl across a green leaf and after it nothing would be left except a slightly glimmering trail of mucus.
If the meek inherit the earth, the world will be lying in ruins…
Profile Image for Ilse.
515 reviews4,026 followers
May 24, 2023
It was the moment of solemn stillness in nature, when the creative mind works more actively, poetic thoughts glow more fervently, the heart burns with passion more ardently or suffers more bitter anguish, when the seed of a criminal design ripens unhindered in a cruel soul, when….everhtying in Oblomovka is peacefully and soundly asleep.

The hero of this delightful 19th-century Russian masterpiece is the melancholy and slothful landowner Ilya Ilyitch Oblomov, who spends about half of the book in bed. Daydreaming about his childhood on Oblomovka, the family estate, he forges grand plans, more hindered than helped by his grumpy servant Zahar. When the adorable Olga appears on stage, singingCasta Diva,Oblomov's listless, lethargic life is turned upside down...

Heartwarming, moving, often funny and so recognizable. After all, isn’t there a little of Oblomov in all of us?

9

(Illustration N. Shcheglov)

Dit is het uur, waarin de weidse stilte van de nacht heel de natuur in zich opneemt, waarin de scheppende geest nieuwe kracht ontvangt, de dichtader rijkelijker vloeit, waarin het hart heftiger klopt van hartstocht of pijnlijk ineenkrimpt van een smartelijk begeren, waarin de kiem van de misdaad in het wrede gemoed tot welige bloei komt, en waarin in Oblomowka allen ongestoord slapen.

De held van dit heerlijke 19de-eeuwse meesterwerk is de melancholieke en aartsluie landeigenaar Ilja Oblomow, die zowat de helft van het boek doezelend in bed doorbrengt. Dagdromend over zijn jeugd op Oblomowka, het familielandgoed, smeedt hij grootse plannen, daarbij meer gehinderd dan geholpen door zijn knorrige huisknecht. Als de aanbiddelijke Olga op het toneel verschijnt, wordt Oblomows lusteloze leventje danig overhoop gegooid… Hartverwarmend, ontroerend, vaak grappig en heel herkenbaar, want zijn wij niet allemaal een béétje Oblomow?
Profile Image for Ahmad Sharabiani.
9,563 reviews396 followers
October 7, 2021
(Book 884 from 1001 books) - Oblomovka = Обломов = Oblomov, Ivan Goncharov

Oblomov is the second novel by Russian writer Ivan Goncharov, first published in 1859.

Ilya Ilyich Oblomov is the central character of the novel, portrayed as the ultimate incarnation of the superfluous man, a symbolic character in 19th-century Russian literature.

Oblomov is a young, generous nobleman who seems incapable of making important decisions or undertaking any significant actions. Throughout the novel he rarely leaves his room or bed. In the first 50 pages, he manages only to move from his bed to a chair.

The book was considered a satire of Russian nobility whose social and economic function was increasingly questioned in mid-nineteenth century Russia. It has been said that"no other novel has been used to describe the ever-so-elusive 'Russian mentality' or 'Russian soul' as frequently as Oblomov".

عنوانهای چاپ شده در ایران: «ابلوموف»؛ «آبلوموف»؛ نویسنده: ایوان گنچاروف؛ انتشاراتیها: (امیرکبیر، نشر چشمه، فرهنگ معاصر) ادبیات روسیه سده 19م؛ تاریخ نخستین خوانش: ماه می سال 1984میلادی

عنوان: ابلوموف؛ نویسنده: ایوان گنچاروف؛ مترجم: سروش حبیبی؛ در 495ص؛ چاپ دیگر تهران، امیرکبیر، 1363؛ چاپ دیگر 1369؛ چاپ پنجم سال1377؛ شابک 9640004227؛ چاپ دیگر تهران، نشر چشمه، 1380؛ در820ص؛ شابک 9643620123؛ باعنوان: آبلوموف؛ فرهنگ معاصر، سال1385؛ شابک 9648637342؛ در895ص؛ موضوع: داستانهای نویسندگان روسیه - سده 19م

عنوان: ابلوموف؛ نویسنده: ایوان گنچاروف؛ مترجم: محمدرضا خاکی؛ تهران، بیدگل، سال1388؛ در185ص؛ شابک9786005193305؛

ایلیا ایلیچ ابلوموف، دوران کودکی را، در املاک پدرش در روستا، در کنار خانواده و دوستش «آندرهٔ» میگذارند؛ در جوانی در «سن پترزبورگ» به استخدام دولت درمیآید؛ پس از سالها خدمت در کار دولتی، «ابلوموف» بازنشسته، همه ی روز در خانه، روی کاناپه میلمد؛ لمیدگی برای او، نه از روی خستگی یا کسالت، بلکه خو و عادت ایشانست؛ هر آنوقت که در خانه باشد، که همیشه هست، بر روی کاناپه لمیده یا در خواب است؛ دوستش «آندرهٔ» میکوشد «ابلوموف» را، با زندگی اجتماعی آشنا کند، و او را از سستی و خمودگی نجات دهد؛ اما تلاش او بی ثمر میماند؛ عشق «اولگا» هم نمیتواند او را از رخوت و سستی، به در آورد؛ «ابلوموف» همچنان به زندگی راحت، و خمودگی خود، ادامه میدهد؛ با بیوه ای ازدواج میکند، و تا آخر زندگی با تن آسایی خود، که «آندرهٔ» آن را «ابلوموفیسم» مینامد، به سر میبرد؛ فیلمی با اقتباس از این کتاب را کارگردان روس «نیکیتا میخایلکوف»، در سال 1979میلادی، با عنوان «چند روز از زندگی ابلوموف» ساخته است؛ نمایشنامهٔ «آبلوموف» اثر «مارسل کوولیه»، هم از همین رمان اقتباس شده است؛ این فراموشکار فیلم ساخته شده با اقتباس از این کتاب را سه بار، در سینما «شهر قصه» در سالها پیش از امروز دیده ام

نقل از متن: («زاخار» گفت: ــ چه نامه ای؟ من نامه ندیدم؛ ــ خودت آن را از پستچی گرفتی؛ یک نامه چرک و چپول بود؛ «زاخار» کاغذها و چیزهای دیگری را که روی میز بود با یک دست اندکی به هم زد و گفت: ــ کجا گذاشتیدش؟ من از کجا بدانم؟ ــ تو هیچوقت هیچ نمیدانی؛ آنجا توی آن زنبیل را نگاه کن؛ یا شاید پشت کاناپه افتاده باشد.؛ تماشا کن این پشتی کاناپه هنوز درست نشده؛ نمیتوانستی یک نجار صدا کنی تعمیرش کند؟ مگر خودت نشکستیش؟ فکر هیچ چیز نیستی! زاخار جواب داد: ــ من نشکستمش؛ خودش شکست؛ صد سال که عمر نمیکند؛ بالاخره یک روز باید بشکند؛ «آبلوموف» لازم ندید که خلاف گفته او را ثابت کند؛ فقط پرسید: ــ پیدا کردی؟ ــ اینجا یک مشت نامه ریخته! ــ نه، اینها نیست؛ «زاخار» گفت: ــ خوب، غیر از اینها چیزی نیست؛ «ایلیا ایلیچ» از سر تنگ حوصلگی گفت: ــ خوب، برو، خودم بلند میشوم پیدایش میکنم؛ «زاخار» به اتاق خود رفت؛ اما هنوز دستهایش را به روی بخاری درست روی سکوی آن تکیه نداده بود که فریاد ناشکیبای اربابش بلند شد: ــ «زاخار»، «زاخار»! «زاخار» غرید که: ــ وای خدای من، این چه مکافاتی است که نصیب من کردی؟ یکباره جانم را بگیر و خلاصم کن! و باز به اتاق اربابش رفت؛ یک دستش را بر در اتاق نهاد و به نشان غیظ چنان یک بر ایستاد که فقط از یک چشم اربابش را میدید و اربابش فقط یک شاخه از ریش پرپشت او را، که هر لحظه انتظار میرفت چند سار از لای آن بیرون بپرند میتوانست ببیند؛ گفت: ــ دیگر چه میخواهید؟ «ایلیا ایلیچ» به تندی گفت: ــ دستمال! زود باش! تو خودت نمیتوانی بفهمی چه لازم دارم؟ مگر چشم نداری؟)؛ پایان نقل

تاریخ بهنگام رسانی 18/09/1399هجری خورشیدی؛ 14/07/1400هجری خورشیدی؛ ا. شربیانی
Profile Image for Valeriu Gherghel.
Author6 books1,811 followers
September 10, 2023
Mi-e atît de lene să scriu o recenzie, e atît de bine în pat, n-are nici un rost să mă scol, să merg la birou, să deschid laptopul etc. etc., încît nu pot decît să vă îndemn să citiți romanul lui Goncearov...

***

După 3 ore. Cu un suprem efort de care sînt foarte mîndru, transcriu dintr-o recenzie mai veche de-a mea (sic!) acest șir de întrebări metafizice:

„Oare Oblomov, săracul, stînd toată ziua în pat, simțea că trăiește? De ce o tot amîna pe fermecătoarea Olga Sergheevna? De ce nu voia să aibă o soție? De ce nu se hotăra odată și odată să se ridice din pat și să se însoare? Se temea că posesiunea lui va sfîrși prin a-l poseda?”.

Mai pe seară am să meditez la chestia asta. Acum mă culc la loc s-o aprofundez.

***

M-am trezit provizoriu ca să beau un ceai rusesc. Pînă fierbe samovarul, transcriu acest minunat pasaj: „Pentru Ilia Ilici, a sta culcat nu era o necesitate, ca pentru un bolnav sau pentru un om care vrea să doarmă, nici ceva întîmplător, ca pentru unul obosit, dar nici o plăcere, ca pentru un leneş; erao poziție normală.Cînd era acasă – şi era mai întotdeauna acasă – stătea tot timpul culcat în aceeaşi odaie unde l-am găsit şi care-i servea în aceiaşi timp de iatac, de birou şi de salon. Mai avea încă trei odăi, dar intra rar în ele, numai câteodată dimineaţa, şi nu în fiecare zi, ci numai cînd servitorul mătura în birou, ceea ce nu se întîmpla zilnic. În încăperile acestea, perdelele erau trase şi mobilele acoperite cu învelitori de pînză”.

Cu ultimele puteri, stors, mă întind la loc pe canapea. Asta e poziția mea normală. N-am mai băut ceaiul, am preferat o vodcă. Face minuni înainte de culcare. Noapte bună! Pa!
223 reviews190 followers
November 24, 2012
I know I’m not going to do Oblomov justice: this is what happens when I’m in awe. I’m much better really at slagging books off. Masterpieces leave me ‘I’m not worthy’ tongue-tied.

Oblomov is so big he’s become a word in Russian: ‘oblomovschina’. As in, the Russian dictionary. To mean ‘Godot-ism’ or an existential couch-potato. The man is wedded to his couch: life bubbles all around him at super sonic speed, but Oblomov: well, he....reclines. He lays about 24/7, and then he dies. The end.

But. And yet. There are so many layers to this, the proverbial onion can but weep. A helicopter view lays bare a man too lazy and apathetic to emulate a Hamlet simulacra. If the latter debates the merit of ‘going on’, the former is merely ‘getting on’. Its not a question of ‘why live’, but one of getting the whole business of living over and done with. Oblomov is simply waiting to die: whether he realises it or not. Zoom in closer and Oblomov is a metaphor, a gynormous symbol. Here is what of:

How many times have I cradled a pint and reminisced with ‘auld acquaintance’ on the ‘what ifs�� of life. People locked into the mundane, informed of socially accepted barriers which separate them from a degree of greatness: the children, the mortgage, ailing parents they need to care for, health constraints, money woes; all of this and more is why they tread the hamster wheel and live the groundhog day and notch one same old after another. We clink glasses and toast and encourage each other in attaining even greater average-ness, for the sake of A’ that. Goncharev, as I see it, lays bare this lie, and promulgates Oblamov: who doesn’t have any of the above or other worries, but simply succumbs to the utilitarian without any excuse whatsoever.

Self limiting, inauspicious, unambitious, unadventurous, dispassionate, locked in analysis paralysis, passive, call it,sister: because thats what the bulk of us are, sheep! No, it wasn’t your momma what did it, nor the groping catholic priest, nor daddy whos sick in bed, nor the lack of moolah: its YOU. No excuses. One just wants movement in life, or one doesn’t. There is no point blaming circumstances in how we turn out: this is very much a nature over nurture battle-cry.

Oblomov, wallowing in utmost sloth, inability to act or live, in full knowledge of his dire circumstances, has this to say: ‘Yet no life but this do I wish, or have it in my power, to live’. Quite a brave introspection. Bottom line: we are all, EXACTLY, where we want to be. Regardless of what excuses we heap on our life-shit pile, we’re ultimately living the life we want. That this is so is intuitive: if we didn’t want our shit lives, we would do something about it. What we really mean is: ‘I ‘m living my life exactly how I want it, but this isn’t socially acceptable. Therefore, I’m going to conjure up a whole load of stock-pile excuses as to why I’m doing this’.

Oblamov is also a bit more than a dissection of individual human psyche. Goncharev also tackles ‘the Russian zeitgeist’. And how. In exploring the collective consciousness of Russia, he does something which I love, love, love, for personal reasons, being a multi-cultural product myself. He’s quick to spot the extreme backwardness and childishness and inutility of the apathetic, superstitious milieu, and he’s not afraid to show it. But. Yet. In vivisecting and laying bare the dross of Russian trope, he wields the scalpel with infinite care and love. Underlying his condemnation is a profound and unrevokable love for his motherland, a generous tolerance despite his misgivings, an acknowledgement that no matter how deep the scalpel delves, the body is still worth preserving. I adore that kind dichotomy. We are none of us so big for our britches that we can swipe away the qualia of our entire birth nation. Really, there can be no true negation by a native: he will always be a product. Goncharev knows this.

Oblamov is also a bit more than a dissection of individual and collective consciousness. It is also a riotous satire, a Massala of humour, so understated and elegant, its ephemeral in its delicacy. The scene with the arrival of a letter at Oblomovo surely must, must, rate as one of the virtuoso moments in literature, of any epoch.

Oblamov is also a bit more than a dissection of individual and collective consciousness and (take a deep breath) a riotous satire. Its a philosophical treatise on the meaning of life, and non so more touched me as Olga Segeivna. There is perhaps no other literary character I have come across so far who portrays my own conundrums and fears as she does; and its immensely comforting to see that I am not alone in the penumbra.

What a book. Really.

Profile Image for Maziyar Yf.
660 reviews433 followers
December 13, 2021
آبلوموف نوشته شده توسط ایوان گنچاروف رمانی ایست در باره کسی که هیچ کاری انجام نمی دهد ، هیچ هیچ ، حتی به زحمت از خانه بیرون می رود ، با پولی که از املاک خود می گیرد زندگی را نه به سختی و نه به راحتی ، بلکه به هیچ می گذراند. چه گونه نویسنده از چنین سوژه ای موفق به ساختن یک رمان عظیم شده است؟
قسمت عمده کتاب در اطاق خواب یا ناهار خوری اتفاق می افتد
از خودآبلوموفمهم تر فرهنگی ایست که با خود آورده: آبلومویسم نماد تنبلی کامل و ترسناک تر از همه این است که همه ما تا بخشی به آن مبتلا هستیم ، مثلا چه تصمیم هایی گرفتیم و به آنها عمل نکردیم ، حتی آن ها را فراموش کردیم ، چه قدر از وقت ما به خوابیدن و چرت زدن یا به یک نقطه زل زدن گذشت ، رویاهای سوخته شده ، کارهای نیمه تمام که برای انجام دادنشان هیچ قدمی برنداشتیم..
کتاب نقد منفی به مردم روسیه و در حالت کلی تر به مردم کشورهای توسعه نیافته از جمله ایران هم دارد: آنجا که زندگی دوست آلمانی آبلوموف را با زندگی خودش مقایسه میکند:اشتولتسبر خلاف ابلوموف از کودکی با استقلال و کشیدن سختی و کار سخت بزرگ شده ، همیشه با حقایق زندگی روبرو شده و تربیت سخت به روش آلمانی از او فردی سر سخت و مدبر ساخته ، کاملا بر عکس آبلوموف
اما کتاب یک شخصیت به شدت نفرت انگیز دیگر هم دارد:زاخارنوکر آبلوموف که نمادی از طبقه عامه روسیه در آن زمان است:کثیف ، تنبل و دله دزد ، در حالی که به شدت از شرایط ناراضی ایست فقط غر می زند و هیچ کاری نمی کند، چرا که خود زاخار همآبلومویسمزده است!
Profile Image for Guille.
873 reviews2,444 followers
February 15, 2020
Un libro de fino humor. Las escenas entre Oblomov y su mayordomo son geniales y, guardando las distancias, me recuerdan a las de Jeeves y Bertram Wooster del magistral Wodehouse. Ya saben, un clásico ruso de los que hay que leer, no porque sea un clásico, no porque sea ruso, solo por lo mucho que lo disfrutarán.
Profile Image for İntellecta.
199 reviews1,698 followers
March 25, 2021
Oblomov, by Ivan Goncharov

The novel shows the conditions in Russia before a long time. A declining nobility, harassed by energetic citizens. The characters in the novel represent the people we meet in our daily lives. Busy Stolz, lazy Oblomov, obstinate servant Sachar, false Tarantjew. The book is both magical and tragic. It also offers funny parts. Anyone who can get used to occasionally somewhat outdated formulations will find a real treasure here. It´s not only Oblomov that is remarkable here, but especially the design of Olga, which is plunged into a serious identity crisis as a result of her efforts to bring about Oblomov. In general, Goncharov's woman portrayal, his partisanship is extremely modern for her and one more reason to read this novel. It's really a classic. Very amusing with very fine humor. By the way, the book gets more and more exciting towards the end. So whoever keep going on it will be rewarded.
Profile Image for Jan-Maat.
1,617 reviews2,268 followers
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January 26, 2020
The novelOblomovwas written between Russia's defeat in the Crimean War and the Emancipation of Serfs. Between two profound shocks to a society which had been drifting along inertly, yet with profound self confidence, in the rut dug out by Peter the Great ().

Oblomov is the eponymous central character of the novel (hero in this case would be an entirely inappropriate choice of words). He is characterised above all by a ponderousness that is almost immobility. Wrapped about in his great oriental dressing gown he is at once mountain like and passive. Open to be led on or exploited. The plot sees Oblomov pushed out of his repose and stirred into action only to see him return to indolent corpulence at the end. His sofa and dressing gown suggestive of oriental laziness and inefficiency.

This is then a novel about Russia on the eve of change. It can't continue as it has done, yet lacks the motivation to move on. The price though of not changing is colonisation and exploitation by the nimble.

The core of the book is the chapter "Oblomov's Dream" a vision of an unchanging life on the family's country estate. Warm, cosy, perpetually well fed. Stable. This dream is Oblomov's fixed point. Oblomov moves in a spiral around that point dragged out of his place from time to time but springing back as soon as it has the opportunity.

His name comes fromOblom':a cloud. His nature lacks decisiveness and drive but rather drifts cloud like in contradistinction to his childhood friend, the half Russian-half German Stolz (Pride) who instead demonstrates German vigour and resolve which comes over as being un-Russian. Stolz drives forward. At one point determined to 'save' his friend and drag him, more or less, kicking and screaming in to a different way of life, away from the oriental dressing gown, away from the sofa and the daily struggle to move across the room from one piece of furniture to another.

The nuance in the portrayal of the potentially horrific Oblomov comes from his immobility. If he can't to motivated to get up and go, equally he can't be blown about by the fickle winds of popular enthusiasm (he is not going to entertain the idea that some flavour of the month poet is better thanPushkin!). He has cultural values that are immutable. This gives a strength to his otherwise unformed and unfocused life. Oblomov is never going to throw out the baby - but at the cost of forever keeping hold of the bathwater. As a result he is doomed to spiral downwards in ever tightening and restricting cycles towards an ultimate still point. His dream, a nightmare for others. The heavy symbolism of a country in need of change to remain a leading power in the world, is entirely intentional.Goncharov's Mendalian answer is that you need to cross Russian 'soul', by which is meant an emotional and poetic state of being, with German efficiency and drive in a mixture of 3:1, depending on where you stand on the spectrum of Russian nationalism you may find that optimistic, pessimistic, or entirely misguided.
Profile Image for MihaElla .
266 reviews477 followers
August 16, 2022
Life, and life only, and of course life does not follow logic, it has its own strange ways, keeps telling us in all the possible ways that there is a (big) difference between the male mind and the female mind, and their functioning is different, same as true polars. Although spiritually they are exactly the same, physiologically they are poles apart, and function in different ways. [for example, man is more physical and more extrovert than woman; the woman is more psychological and more introvert. Or, when a man and a woman are in deep, loving embrace, the woman immediately closes her eyes. He remains more or less an outsider, a spectator. He is more interested in watching than in being in it. The woman is more concerned with her inner being, what is happening there. Hence, for women their real interest is in their inner processes. These differences are so great that they make for different life-styles]

One thing that struck me greatly was to find out that men are happier being married than not because when they are not married they simply feel lonely. So, even if the marriage is miserable, it is better than to be lonely; at least there is something to keep you occupied. Misery also keeps you occupied and man always wants to remain occupied — something on the outside so that he need not go in, so he can keep his eyes open. On the other side, the woman is not so interested in the outside, so when a woman is unmarried she feels more alone than lonely. And she can enjoy her aloneness better than a man because she is more inner-directed — she is more selfish, but in a very positive meaning, she is self-centered. The man is other-centered; he is constantly thinking of others. The woman is thinking more about herself. At the most, she remains interested in the neighborhood — who is fooling around with whom. Hence, she can remain alone in a more healthy way than man; he feels very lonely. He has to know what is happening in the whole world. Even in his aloneness he will create some imaginary beings — God, angels — and imaginary problems: How many angels can stand on the point of a needle? And he will be really into the problem; he will waste his whole life counting the angels, and he will argue to no end! The woman simply laughs (well, I do laugh too 😉). The woman deep down knows boys are just boys — let them talk! They call it philosophy, theology — they are very skillful in giving great names to things. So, paradoxically the woman can be more happy alone than married, because she can make herself rooted without the man; the man is not such a great need. [and yes, there is a great need to be a mother in a woman, but there is no great need to be a wife.] She can be more independent than the man — she IS more independent. And, just because the woman is more independent, down the ages man has tried to make her dependent in other ways — economically, socially. Naturally, she is more independent and that hurts the man (his ego), so he has tried to make her dependent in some way (artificial dependence). Economically she has been paralyzed, she has to depend on man. This is a consolation for man: if he depends on her, she also depends on him. It is a compensation and a consolation. Politically, socially, she has been thrown out of the society (btw, nowadays even the company I am working for realized that it’s high time they should allow more women to take places in the middle and higher management…well, at least some change of perspective in the communication style…). Well, something that made me ponder over is that, perhaps, that’s why she looks more beautiful — her beauty has roots in her physiological balance.
Eventually, each man and each woman needs a great education about it — that they are different; their physiologies are different, their psychologies are different, and they have to understand each other’s psychology, each other’s physiology. They have to be taught. And, as the author clearly emphasized, ”Love is a most difficult school of life!”

Once upon a time I was a Stolz, but days and years passed by, many of them it seems so far, and I have realized that I am inclining towards growing into an Oblomov sort of type (I even bought myself a dressing-gown, of course not of Persian cloth, but Romanian made, still pretty comfortable, cosy and with a home-feel). My ‘Oblomov’ attitude is there for sure 2 days out of 7 - I feel, think and act as an original Oblomov. The other 5 days I am still perfectly adapted to Stolz model. I guess it’s in my nature too, I might be more masculine or male-oriented, although apparently and technically I am built to represent a feminine form and shape. Well, that can be misleading too, cannot it? 😉

I felt so much for Oblomov, he made me cry. Goodness! I didn’t know I could cry for such a male type. But I did. He truly didn’t deserve to waste his life like he did. What a pity!! I appreciated his inner struggle and intention to clear out the mental confusion. Despite his failure. Still that was so much worth it. ”Why am I like this? Oblomov asked himself almost with tears, hiding his head under the blanket again. Why?… But what am I? Oblomov- and nothing more!”

I do ask myself, too: Why am I like this? What am I? And, I do keep asking myself (well not so often, because my free time is less and less nowadays), but still I am not fully satisfied with the current answers. But again, I am so much “fragmented” – same like our darling hero, with dove-like tenderness, Oblomov. He is truly representing a fragmented man, like his name stands for.



Well, man – weak creature that he is, feels bewildered, and tries to find in his imagination, if mind cannot support or serve, the key to his own being and to the mysteries that encompass him. And, perhaps it was the everlasting quiet of a sleepy and stagnant life and the absence of movement and of any real terrors, adventures, and dangers that made man create amidst the real life another fantastic one where he might find amusement and true scope for his idle imagination or an explanation of ordinary events and the causes of the events outside the events themselves…

Oblomov is being justified. In his house/home, in the countryside, everything there was imbued with the same primitive laziness, simplicity of customs, peace, and inertia. The child’s heart and mind had been filled with the scenes, pictures, and habits of that life long before he set eyes on his first book. And who can tell when the development of a child’s intellect begins? How can one trace the birth of the first ideas and impressions in a child’s mind? Perhaps when a child begins to talk, or even before it can talk or walk, but only gazes at everything with that dumb, intent look that seems blank to grown-ups, it already catches and perceives the meaning and the connexions of the events of his life, but is not able to tell it to himself or to others.

Later on, in his mature years, he does have an explanation, too.
“…of course, I dreamed, whispered hopes of the future, made plans, developed ideas and-feelings, too. It all died, and was never repeated again! And where did it all disappear to? Why has it become extinguished? I can’t understand! There were no storms or shocks in my life; I never lost anything; there is no load on my conscience: it is clear as glass; no blow has killed ambition in me, and goodness only knows why everything has been utterly wasted!”

The only paragraph that puts a final conclusion is this one, which I keep returning once in a while, too:
“The trouble is that no devastating or redeeming fires have ever burnt in my life. It never was like a morning which gradually fills with light and colour and then turns, like other people’s, into a blazing, hot day, when everything seethes and shimmers in the bright noonday sun, and then gradually grows paler and more subdued, fading naturally into the evening twilight. NO! MY life began by Flickering out. It may sound strange but it is so. From the very first moment I became conscious of myself, I felt that I was already flickering out. I began to flicker out over the writing of official papers at the office; I went on flickering out when I read truths in books which I did not know how to apply in life, when I sat with friends listening to rumours, gossip, jeering, spiteful, cold, and empty chatter, and watching friendships kept up by meetings that were without aim or affection; I was flickering out and wasting my energies with Minna on whom I spent more than half of my income, imagining that I loved her; I was flickering out at parties- on reception days, where I was welcomed with open arms as a fairly eligible young man; I was flickering out and wasting my life and mind on trifles moving from town to some country house, and from the country house to Gorokhovaya, etc etc… and life in general by lazy and comfortable somnolence like the rest… Even ambition- what was it wasted on? To order clothes at a famous tailor’s? To get an invitation to a famous house? To shake hands with Prince P.? And ambition is the salt of life! Where has it gone to? Either I have not understood this sort of life or it is utterly worthless; but I did not know of a better one. No one showed it to me. You (his childhood and youth long life friend Stolz) appeared and disappeared like a bright and swiftly moving comet, and I forgot it all and went on flickering out…. “...

The End: A masterpiece of a book! A must read!
Profile Image for Paul Bryant.
2,324 reviews11.2k followers
May 29, 2020
If Oblomov was Hamlet the famous soliloquy would have been “To get off my arse or not to get off my arse, that is the question” but actually there wouldn’t have been a soliloquy because Oblomov wouldn’t have bothered with anything hard like that. There would just be the sound of light snoring. Never do today what you can put off till a week on Friday, he says.

It’s a fact that Oblomov spends the first 160 pages of this novel in bed or, having made a herculean effort to heave his body across the room, in a chair. Yes, 160 pages describing one day.
So we have here a fat-ass do-nothing couch potato who being a member of the property owning class has an estate with 300 serfs whose job it is to do backbreaking work all year long so that at regular intervals Oblomov can get lots of lovely free money. The estate is 1000 miles away from Petersburg and Oblomov never visits it, are you kidding? – so he has no idea what goes on there, all he wants is the free money so he can continue to eat heartily and doze, eat heartily and doze, eat heartily and doze.

In the novel Oblomov has a little group of people around him who love him, and many readers of the novel seem to share their views that he’s admittedly useless but kind of cute, he looks dimwitted but really he’s intelligent, he has a heart of gold and a pure soul, he’s an angel in disguise. I didn’t buy any of that. This is a guy, this Oblomov,who never combs his own hair. His servant does that for him.And yet his best friend says

he had no less intelligence than other people, only it was sleeping idly, hidden, covered over by all sorts of rubbish. Would you like me to tell you why he is dear to you, what it is in him that you still love?…. You love that in him which is worth more than any amount of intelligence: his honest, faithful heart! It is like pure gold in him from nature; he has preserved it throughout his life unharmed. He sank under difficulties, grew cold, dropped asleep, and finally, crushed and disappointed, lost the strength to live, but he has not lost his faith and honesty. His heart has never struck a single false note and nothing has sullied it…. Oblomov will never worship false idols and his soul will always be pure, honest, good.... His soul is clear as crystal; there aren’t many men like him, they are rare; they are like pearls among the crowd.

Sorry, no. He’s an enemy of the people is what he is, along with the rest of his class of leeches. He's an infantilised man who bats his puppydog helpless eyes at his friends and servants and they scurry about making sure he has enough larks tongues and champagne for his supper. As far as I was concerned, if he fell down an abandoned salt mine and died horribly it would have been no great loss.

Ivan Goncharov wrote a great novel about a guy who drives you into spasms of irritation. Not only that but it’s about this annoying guy not doing things. So there is no plot to speak about in these 500 pages. And yetOblomovis great. It is also true that Mr Goncharov could have done with an editor to tell him to chop out some really dull philosophising about marriage or another ten pages about meals being prepared

“Pickled cabbage and salmon,” she said. ‘‘There isn’t any sturgeon to be had: I’ve been to all the shops and my brother asked for it, but there isn’t any. Only, perhaps, if a live sturgeon is caught— a merchant from the Karetny Ryad has ordered one — the fishmonger promised to cut us some of it. Then there is veal and fried corn-meal.”

And yet in spite of all of these awkwardnesses and imperfections, this is a great novel. The hideous damaging life-withering vampirism that is Oblomov’s life is a steady dead-eyed devastating hatchet-job on Russian society as it was before the serfs got liberated. Along the way, Goncharev lobs in one liners

Cunning is like small coin with which one cannot buy much.

And brilliant page-long soft-voiced denunciations – here he is on the idle rich:

her thorough knowledge of house-keeping and of all home comforts, was for him the incarnate ideal of a life of boundless and unruffled repose, the picture of which had been indelibly stamped on his mind in childhood, under the parental roof. His father, his grandfather, the children, the grandchildren, the visitors, sat or lay in restful idleness, knowing that there were in the house unsleeping eyes that watched over them and never-weary hands that sewed their clothes, gave them food and drink, dressed them, put them to bed, and closed their eyes when they were dead; and now Oblomov, sitting still on the sofa, saw something quick and lively moving for his benefit, and knew that the sun might not rise to-morrow, whirlwinds might hide the sky, a storm might sweep the world, but his soup and roast would be on the table, his linen would be fresh and clean, the cobwebs would be taken off the wall, and he would not know how it was all done; that before he had taken the trouble to think of what he wanted it would be guessed and placed before him — not rudely and lazily, but by clean, white hands and arms bare to the elbow, with a cheerful and gentle glance and a smile of profound devotion.

Like Carl Douglas with "Kung Fu Fighting" or the Baha Men with "Who Let the Dogs Out?" Ivan Goncharov was a one hit wonder. His first novel is no longer read and his third and last,The Precipice(820 pages), is described by the translator here as "cumbersome and drearily tiresome". ButOblomovis, mostly, sharp, devastating and funny.

4.5 stars
Profile Image for فؤاد.
1,085 reviews2,067 followers
September 17, 2018
نمی دونم چرا حس می کنم آبلوموف بیماری جسمی داشت، یه چیزی توی مایه های نارکولپسی یا حملات خواب.
ولی همه طوری بی رحمانه بهش حمله می کردن که انگار دچار یه ضعف اخلاقی و اختیاریه.

حالا بیشتر می خونم و اگه چیزی پیدا کردم می نویسم.

راجع به کتاب صوتی
کتاب صوتی ای که گوش دادم، بر خلاف کتاب های صوتی معمول، به شکل نمایشنامه ای تنظیم شده بود. یعنی با حذف بخش زیادی از بخش های توصیفی، فقط دیالوگ ها رو باقی گذاشته بودن که توسط بازیگرهای مختلف مثل یه نمایشنامه خونده می شد. در حقیقت هم عنوان اصلی چیزی که گوش دادم کتاب صوتی نبود، بلکه نمایشنامه رادیویی بود.
خیلی برام لذت بخش بود و اجراها هم خیلی عالی بودن. با توجه به حجم زیاد کتاب قصد نداشتم حالا حالاها سراغش برم، ولی این نمایشنامه مدتش سه ساعت بود و خیلی راحت در طی چهار پنج روز تمومش کردم. البته جای داستان اصلی رو نمی گیره، ولی بهتر ا�� هیچیه.

اگه خواستید می تونید صوتش رو توی این کانال سرچ کنید و پیدا کنید:
@Taarikhaneh
Profile Image for Ian.
866 reviews62 followers
June 3, 2022
I remember reading some years ago about a category of modern Japanese men called, in English transliteration, Hikikomori. They are unable to cope with life and have become ultra-reclusive, rarely leaving even their bedrooms, let alone going outside. Thinking about it, I imagine such people have always been with us and in olden times were those known as hermits. You might say that Oblomov is a similar type of personality. He is though lucky enough to have been born into the aristocracy, so an inherited income from his country estate allows him to live with a degree of comfort.

Oblomov is the great procrastinator. I suppose many of us have a tendency to procrastinate - I certainly do - but Oblomov is a true master. His lawyer and hisstarostawrite constantly to tell him his estate is falling into rack and ruin. He reads the letters and ignores them, other than to tell people he is developing plans for the reform of the estate. He actually spends all day in bed, dozing or lolling about.

Poor Oblomov has a fear of life. He is a gentle and kind soul but the pressures of everyday life are too much for him. A natural pessimist, his reaction is to try and hide and to live in a Fool’s Paradise. In the first part of the book there are two long “dream sequences” during which Oblomov dreams of his youth. These are used to provide the reader with an explanation for his personality.

As a contrast to Oblomov we have his best friend Stoltz, an ethnic German whose father was Oblomov’s schoolteacher. Stoltz is an efficient, decisive man but a loyal friend to Oblomov. He introduces him to a young woman, Olga, and between them the two try to bring Oblomov back into the world. I liked the way Olga’s personality is developed during the book.

This isn’t really a plot driven novel, just a study of the lives of the main characters, but Oblomov will be an indelible character for me. I think most readers will feel a great sympathy for his plight.

I understand that the novel gave rise to an entire concept of “Oblomovism”.
Profile Image for Mohamadreza Moshfeghi.
98 reviews29 followers
June 25, 2022
1)واژه آبلوموفیسم در فرهنگ های لغت معانى زیر را می دهد:
سستی،خمودگی و بی رمقی،بی حسی و بی توجهی به زندگی، دوری از عشق و احساسات و پناه آوردن به خواب، خیالبافی غیرفعال.
خوب يا بد اکثر خوانندگان ایرانی این کتاب مثل من و دیگران،خصوصیات وویژگی های مشترکی با شخص آبلوموف داشته اند وبا این شخص به نوعی همزاد پنداری کرده اند که نشان می دهد اکثریت ایرانی ها مردمانی اهل حرف وخیال و رویا هستند تا تلاش وعمل،شاید مثل مردم روسیه زمان کتاب وبعضی جوامع دیگر.
2)گاهی در زندگی افرادی سر راهمان قرار می گیرند که می توانند و می خواهند ناجی و فرشته زندگی ما باشند وازظلمت وسیاهی درون،وجود عالی وانسانی ما را رشد و پر وبال دهند؛مانند آیدا برای شاملو شاعر،فروغ برای ابراهیم گلستان و...
الگا می خواست آیدا این ایلیا ایلیچ سقوط کرده در سیاه چال زندگی باشد ولی این بار شاملویی وجود نداشت.
قدراین فرصت ها وآدم ها را در این چرخه کوتاه زندگی بیشتر بدانیم،معجزات زندگی همیشگی نیست.
3)انسان تا به یک جایی از عمر می تواند به دنیال آرزوها وخواسته واهدافش در زندگی باشد و برای آن تلاش کند ودر زندگی جنگ کند.بعد از آن دیگر نه رمقی می ماند و ونه حسی و نه سری که روزگارى آن آرزوها را در خود داشت؛مثل آبلوموف در بخش پایانی کتاب وزندگی که دیگرشتولس هم نتوانست او را نجات دهد.
4)برای آبلوموف شدن فقط خود شخص آبلوموف به تنهایی کافی نیست،وجود وهمراهی اشخاصی مثل زاخار چه به عنوان مستخدم ونوکر وچه به صرف وجود داشتن با عناوینی دیگر دراین کرختی و سرد شدن وسستی در زندگی نقشی پررنگ واساسی دارند.
5)نقش جامعه ومحیط وکشور را هم برای آبلوموف شدن نباید نادیده گرفت.مانند خیلی از مردم که در این اوضاع نابسامان وسخت اقتصادی وتورم افسار گسیخته کشور،هزاران آرزو وفکر وخیال وزندگی را در خود کشته اند ودفن کرده اند وآبلوموف وار مشغول گذراندن سرنوشت خویش هستند؛ وقتی زحمت وتلاش وپشتکارشان ره به جایی ندارد؛به قول این بیت جناب شهریار:
بدتر از خواستن این لطمه نتوانستن// هی بخواهیم ورسیدن نتوانیم که چه
Profile Image for Riku Sayuj.
658 reviews7,397 followers
March 24, 2012
A slow, sad poem weaving through to an end that is left revealed to the reader from the beginning. To read this book is like watching the waves on a lonely beach, you know what will happen next, but it is beautiful to just sit and watch...

But, maybe it is best to let the book describe its own message? -

Yes; such is the payment exacted for the Promethean fire. You must not only endure, you must even love and respect, the sorrow and the doubts and the self-questionings of which you have spoken: for they constitute the excess, the luxury, of life, and show themselves most when happiness is at its zenith, and has alloyed with it no gross desires. Such troubles are powerless to spring to birth amid life which is ordinary and everyday; they cannot touch the individual who is forced to endure hardship and want. That is why the bulk of the crowd goes on its way without ever experiencing the cloud of doubt, the pain of self-questioning. To him or to her, however, who voluntarily goes to meet those difficulties they become welcome guests, not a scourge.
Profile Image for StefanP.
149 reviews116 followers
July 25, 2021
description

Jest, jest. Došli su posljednji dani, ustaće narod na narod, carstvo na carstvo, nastaće propast svijeta.

Često imućniji ljudi, da ne kažem aristokrate, kad se već govori o ovom romanu - žive životom koji poprište svog postojanja nalaze u letargičnosti i unutrašnjem spokojnom uzbuđenju. Nepokretnost, nadražaji izazvani dremežom i apatijom predstavljaju učestalu sliku njihovog, pa i života glavnog junaka ove knjige. Sve to predstavlja metaforu kraha feudalnog sistema. Sopstvena zapuštenost generiše zapuštenost imanja u vidu nakupljenog blata, pukotina, vlage i sličnog. Život Ilje Iljiča je prije svega unutrašnje, duševne prirode, poput šume u kojoj sve divlja, dok je spolja statična. Njegova volja je paralizovana za sve ono što dolazi spolja dok mu pričinjava zadovoljstvo za sve ono iznutra. On se kanio da započne novi život bez obzira na njegovo stanje i okolini u kojoj se nalazi. Sanjao je o slici svoje budućnosti, ali kako su godine prolazile djelići te slike su počeli blijediti; svaki put se nalazio novi razlog za popravljanje ili izmjenjivanje te slike. Gončarov zapaža sljedeće:,,Rus i danas, kad ga okružava ozbiljna stvarnost u kojoj nema izmišljotine, voli vjerovati primamljivim gatkama iz starine, i može biti neće se još dugo otresti tog vjerovanja.” Sva lijenost i tromost koja je neminovno sklona entropiji, iziskuje žrtvu koja će joj titrati. Gončarov ovdje pruža lakonski humor i ironiju, jer i nepokretnog i žrtvu na kraju čeka ista svijeća. On ne pravi veliki raskorak između tromog i žrtve, naprotiv, žrtva je u obmani, ubijeđena da ne postoji drugačije. Pojavljivaće se likovi koji će pokušati da izliječe Oblomovštinu, kao što su Štolc čije njemačko porijeklo predstavlja karakternu distinkciju, i Olga Sergejevna koja ljubavlju svojom pokušava da probudi i pokrene Oblomovljev život. Međutim, Oblomova više podstiču raspoloženja, nego događaji. Krevet će biti jedno idealno mjesto za takva raspoloženja.
Profile Image for EMMA.
253 reviews375 followers
January 3, 2021
با اینکه توصیفات زیادی داشت و واقعا هم کوچیکترین جزییات رو گفته بود ولی اصلا خسته کننده نبود و واقعا هم خودم تعجب کردم چطوری میشه؟که این بدون شک نشون دهنده قدرت نویسندگیه.
ولی یه مساله که اذیتم میکرد این بود که نویسنده همه مشکلات آبلوموف رو به پای تنبلیش گذاشته بود که بنظر من اصلا اینطوری نیست، البته خب انتظار زیادیه که دو قرن پیش در مورد بیماری های روح و روان کسی چیزی بدونه.
این رخوتی که آبلوموف دچارش بود طبیعی نبود و مطمینا فقط دلیلش تن پروری یا سبک زندگی بچگیش نبود.
اگه بخوام 5ستاره بدم بهش یجورایی مهر تایید به این قضیه میزنم که آره اگه یه نفر افسردست انتخاب خودش بوده و مثلا طرف بره ورزشش کنه و چه میدونم فعالیت های دیگه ایی داشته باشه خوب مبشه درحالیکه اصلا اینطور نیست و نیازمند کمک های حرفه اییه.
البته بازم میگم واسه 200سال پیش این انتظار زیادیه.
Profile Image for Tahmineh Baradaran.
544 reviews125 followers
September 4, 2023
وقتی درمهر 1356 کتاب ابلوموف راازیک کتابفروشی درمیدان "ژاله" برای تولدخواهرم خریدم و خواندم ، اولین برداشتم این بودکه قهرمان داستان مبتلای به تنبلی است. بعدها درسنین بالاتر دوباره آن راخواندم.فیلمی اقتباسی و روسی هم سالها بعدروی پرده سینماهای تهران به نمایش درآمد که طبیعتا "حق کتاب حجیم سراسر محاوره ونکته راادانمیکرد ولی خوب بود. اکنون که به این کتاب فکرمیکنم موضوع آن شاید نه تنبلی بلکه" ملال "است.خودش میگوید من خواب نیستم." بی بیدار "هستم. انتخاب او ، انتخاب بین رنج وملال است. رنج عاشق شدن ، رنج مهمانی ، رنج سفر ، رنج کار..وی ازآنهافرارمیکند و نتیجه ی سرکوب رنج ، ملال است.ملالی ویژه اشراف زادگان..
Profile Image for Bahar.
104 reviews49 followers
May 8, 2022
آبلوموف کتابیه که من خیلیییی دوستش داشتم و به جای ۵ ستاره باید ۵۰ ستاره بگیره، هرچند در ابتدا سیر کندی داره ولی کمی که دندان روی جگر بزاری و ادامه بدهی کتاب به قدری به دل میشینه که نمیتونی زمین اش بگذاری!
کاراکتر آبلوموف از آنهاست که به این زودیها از یاد نمیرود، هفتهها و گاه سالها کارهای سادهای رو به تعویق میاندازه و انقد تو را حرص میدهه که عرقی سرد روی تمام بدنت میشینه و من انگار همون بچه ۶، ۷ سالهای بودم که داشتم کارتون پینوکیو میدیدم که گربه نره و روباه مکار پول پینوکیو را چال میکردن و بعد گولش میزدن. همونطور، نگران حال آبلوموف هم بودم هر بار که مگسان گرد شیرینی سر کیسه اش میکردن،حتی گاهی برایش اشک میریختم به دلیل این سایهی سرد بی دردی ای که روی روح و روانش افتاده بود و نمیگذاشت به خوبی زندگی کند همان طور که در جایی از کتاب میگه:
"- چرا همه چیز خراب شد؟ ایلیا، چه کسی تو را نفرین کرده؟ تو چه کردهای؟ تو به این خوبی، هوشمندی، مهربانی و نجابت... چرا تباه شدی؟ چه چیز تو را نابود کرده است؟ این درد تو هیچ اسمی ندارد؟ آبلوموف با صدایی به زحمت شنیدنی گفت: ــ چرا اسم دارد... الگا نگاه پرسانش را از پشت پرده اشک به سوی او بالا آورد. آبلوموف آهسته گفت: ــ آبلومویسم..."
آبلوموف از آن آثاری است که میتوان با خواندنش مطمئن شد که کتابها فقط برای اظهار فضل و گذراندن زمان نیستن! بلکه میتوانن اثر عمیقی روی زندگی واقعی انسان بگذرانند در واقع میشود گفت آبلوموف یک مانیفست اخلاقی است که به تو می آموزد بهتر است چه طور بچه هایت را بار بیاوری که مثل آبلوموف پرهایشان نشکند و در واقع درست عکس او یعنی چگونه فرزندانی "شتولتس وار" بار بیاوری که زنده و پویا باشن و یا راه و رسم درست زندگی زناشویی را در رفتار الگا و همسرش میتوان دید و دانستن ای��که ترس از کار و آینده اولین قدم در راه آبلوموف شدن است! همان طور که در کتاب آمده است:
"به یاد داشته باش که زنده بودن و کار کردن خود هدف زندگی است!"
هرچند که کتاب آبلوموف را من د�� درست ترین زمان زندگیم خوندم و چه بسا اگر در زمان دیگری میخواندم تا این حد روی من اثر نمیگذاشت اما برای اینکه یادم نرود اینجا مینویسم که نام کتاب را چند سال پیش از یکی از اساتیدم در دانشگاه که مرد سخت گیری بود شنیدم در توضیح بیدردی ای که دانشجویان گرفتار آن میشوند که همان تنبلی است!
پ.ن: ترجمه کتاب هم فوقالعاده بود چون از اون کتاباس که اگه ترجمه خوبی نداشت خیلی بدفهم میشد:)
Profile Image for J..
452 reviews43 followers
November 17, 2017
I think this might be my favorite novel, at least think this might be the most perfect novel I have ever read. Yet, I am not surprised that this novel is not as popular as other Russian classics. Its merit and preciousness lie in its subtleties. This book has no sudden outbursts of emotion, no unbelievable plot twists, and that is precisely why it is so brilliant. The emotional and intellectual depth of this novel is something that one seldom encounters, but one is able to see that only when one gets past the superficial stereotypes surrounding this novel.
This novel is packed in layers with social commentary, humour, and philosophy, and one has to look past one layer to see the other. "Oblomov! Isn't that the novel about the lazy rich nobleman?" It seems so, but that is not the point. It seems to me that the people who regard this novel as a warning against laziness and idleness fail to grasp the full meaning of the work. When I saw Lenin's supposed remark about how "the Oblomovs should be whipped", I couldn't help thinking that maybe he too, didn't quite get it. Whipping Oblomov wouldn't do any good at all.
To me this book is mostly about the question of "what is one to do with oneself?" or "how does one live?" and "for what?", "Who and what should we value in our lives?". Beneath the supposed laziness of Oblomov lies the dilemma of his entire existence which he does not know how to resolve. Eventually this lack of resolution in his life, leads Oblomov into not quite a depression, but to a strange type of anhedonia, which is temporary lifted by certain people and events, but which ultimately remains with him until the end.
The other part of this work which is subtle and profound is the discussion between Stolz and Oblomov as respective representatives of German and Russian culture. Stolz is seemingly the model man, yet he is unable to answer Oblomov's simple question of why he works as much as he does, and for what purpose? Perhaps the point is that Stolz is never still enough to have an existential crisis, and is proof that if we stay just busy enough to not think seriously about our lives, we'll glide our way through one way or another.
I think this work captures every aspect of the Russian attitude, intellect, emotion, soul, and lifestyle from the most superficial level to the very deep.
I do not think this novel would appeal to everyone, however, I still think it is a literary masterpiece for all times.
Profile Image for Noce.
207 reviews344 followers
October 14, 2011
Finish Powerball brilla meno di Goncarov

Ho sprecato almeno dieci minuti della mezz'ora che ho a disposizione all'internet-caffè, a inventarmi un titolo accattivante per questa recensione. All'inizio avevo pensato aOblomoviglioso,poi ho alzato lo sguardo e i miei occhi si sono posati sui bicchieri fumanti che la banconiera toglieva dalla lavastoviglie con mani in apparenza ignifughe. E TA-DAAA... il plagio dello spot pubblicitario si era ormai compiuto.

Adesso viene la parte difficile: tener desta la vostra attenzione, sempre che il paragone col brillantante l'abbia effettivamente catturata.

Ciò che mi muove a volervi convincere, non è solo la grandiosità di questo romanzo, ma è soprattutto la profonda indignazione nel veder dimenticato il nome di Goncarov nel firmamento letterario. Contemporaneo di Turgenev e Dostoevskij, ospite del loro stesso mecenate, frequentatore dei loro stessi salotti, a detta loro persino “conversatore brillante, spiritoso e autoironico”, ha scritto la sua prima importante opera (Storia comune), a soli 33 anni. Quasi la stessa età della lettrice che in questo momento sta cercando i ridare prestigio all'illustre autore, mentre ordina il secondo caffè ristretto della giornata.

Eppure tra i celebri letterati russi, per non so quale conventio ad excludendum, Goncarov viene citato poco e niente. Sgomento assoluto!!

(In pratica sarebbe come fare un elenco dei recensionisti indecentemente frivoli, e non citare me! Sgomento inaudito!!)

In Oblomov, ciò che conta non è l'ambiente ma l'atmosfera, non è la staticità dei fatti, ma l'inossidabilità di certi meccanismi dell'anima che suonano più attuali di quelli che potete vedere in una puntata di “The Mentalist”.

Il'jà Oblomov è un uomo che ha fatto dell'apatia uno stile di vita; attorno al suo modus vivendi gravitano personaggi che alla fine della storia vi sembreranno “di casa”. E proprio perché “familiari” vi permetterete di giudicarli. E di trarne delle conclusioni.

Le mie sono le seguenti. E siccome personali, sono ovviamente anche soggettive.

1)” Chi si assomiglia si piglia”. I poli opposti si attrarranno pure, ma alla fine il meno si sposa col meno e il più col più.
2)E' inutile girarci attorno: noi donne, abbiamo indubbiamente un certo istinto materno, e possiamo anche divertirci a fare le crocerossine in qualche imprecisato periodo della nostra vita, ma chi seguiremmo in capo al mondo non è il “sensibilone” di turno, ma l'uomo pratico e di polso che ci tiene per mano nelle peripezie quotidiane, ma all'occorrenza ci smuove, ci strattona (ho detto “strattona”, non “tratta male”, lungi da me alimentare il falso mito del “Teorema” di Ferradini), ma soprattutto ci stimola. Allora ci sentiremo finalmente appagate, e siccome l'uomo di cui parlo non è né Indiana Jones,né Robocop, avrà sicuramente anche lui le sue debolezze e la sua sensibilità interiore, occasioni in cui potremo persino soddisfare il nostro istinto da chiocce.
In parole povere, possiamo anche avere memorabili storie con artisti, poeti, intellettuali, e aggiungerei anche i Nerd (che adesso van tanto di moda), ma quello che volgiamo inconsciamente e non, è un uomo all'altezza delle rogne giornaliere, che davanti a un problema di gestione pratica, non vada in paranoia o si rifugi in elucubrazioni filosofiche, scaricandoci la patata bollente. Naturalmente il tutto va condito con l'aroma inebriante della moderazione. Gli estremismi si sa, in amore come nel carattere non vanno mai bene.

3)Tutti quanti abbiamo vissuto un periodo in cui abbiamo perso tempo a“tracciare l'arabesco della nostra vita”senza però muovere un dito per dargli una forma compiuta. Comunque presto o tardi, nel bene o nel male, ci siamo mossi e scrollati l'inerzia di dosso.
Guardiamo a questo banale momento come a un successo e rallegriamocene. C'è chi non si muove, o non ha la forza di farlo, e si condanna a vivere comeuna pallottola di pasta arrotolata.
Si chiamaOblomovismo.

Adesso mi direte che non vi ho parlato del libro, ma quale miglior motivo potevo darvi per leggerlo, se non quello che qualunque testo vi porti a fare delle riflessioni sul vostro modo di vivere, è un'opera ben riuscita?

E non vi ho neanche parlato della rarità dei cuori nobili. Ma questo lo scoprirete da soli, qualora decidiate di accompagnare Il'jà nel suopiccolo mondo antico.

Ah, un'ultima cosa. Le prime 100 pagine servono da preselezione per scremare il pubblico paziente da quello che vuole tutto e subito. Superato il dubbio di esservi immersi nella lettura di un testo teatrale, dove i personaggi entrano in scena uno dopo l'altro al centro del palcoscenico, potrete sprofondare nella poltrona e godervi lo spettacolo, perché da quel momento in poi... silenzio! Parla Oblomov.
Profile Image for Ali Karimnejad.
327 reviews185 followers
December 2, 2020
آبلوموف ظریفترین و باریکبینترین کتابی بوده که تابحال خوندم. کتابی که ممکن بود با اندکی لغزش، به یک رمان مبتذل و آبکی بدل بشه اما واکاوی دقیق حالات و رفتارهای گنچاروف چیزیه که این کتاب رو از هر کتاب دیگهای متمایز میکنه. چیزی که نهایتا منجر به خلق مفهوم جدیدی به نام "آبلومویسم" شد.

همه ما در زندگیمون بنا به شرایطی که از محیط بر ما تحمیل میشه اهدافی رو در زندگیمون تعیین میکنیم و عمر رو در خدمت رسیدن به این اهداف سپری میکنیم. زندگی ما در تلاش ما برای رسیدن به اهدافمون تعریف میشه. انسان سالم، با رسیدن به یک هدف، بعد از حظ بردن از موفقیت، هدف جدیدی تعریف میکنه و بلافاصله دوباره به راه میافته. سکون و رخوت برای اون مرگه و تا زندست در تلاشه.

اما بیماری وجود داره به نام "آبلومویسم". بیمار در این فقره، در عین برخورداری از تمامی صفات یک انسان نیکسیرت، ذهنی بسیار پویا و خیالپرداز داره. به طوری که قبل از رسیدن به یک هدف، ذهنش شروع میکنه به پرداختن به اهداف بعدی، بعدتر و بعدتر تر! ذهنش آنچنان در عالم رویا و خیال غرق میشه که عاقبت از انجام کار فعلی غافل میشه و کاری جز خیالپردازی انجام نمیده. و نهایتا ذهن اونقدر با سرعت نردبان خیال رو بالا میره که کارهای پیشرو و روزمره همگی براش بیمعنا و کسالتبار میشن. اینجاست که میگیم به بیماری "آبلومویسم" دچار شده!بیماری مختص انسانهای متفکر و متمدن!ا

کتاب راجع به اربابزادهای به نامایلیا ایلیچ آبلوموفهستش که به همراه نوکرشزاخاردر شهر زندگی میکنه و به لطف پولی که از دِه، که سابقا پدر مرحومش ارباب اون بوده، براش میرسه گذران زندگی میکنه. منتها این پول نه اونقدر زیاده که لایتناهی باشه و نه اونقدر کمه که مجبور باشه کاری انجام بده. آبلوموف با همین مقدار گذران میکنه و دلیلی نمیبینه کاری انجام بده. رخوتی عمیق که تا عمق جان آبلوموف رسوخ کرده اونقدر که حتی هدف از زندگی کردن رو هم نمیتونه توضیح بده.
آبلوموفچنان ناتوانه که انسان رو در عین حال هم به خنده و هم به عصبانیت میاندازه. اون دارای یک "من آرمانی" در ذهنشه که به بهش میباله و اون رو عاری از هر عیب و محدودیتی میبینه. اونقدر جایگاه رفیعی برای این "من" در ذهنش قائله که خود را بالاتر از دیگران میبینه و همه چیز رو از دیده تحقیر نگاه میکنه. اما از طرف دیگه به خاطر بیماری حاد "آبلومویسم" ، آن چنان دچار رخوتی هستش که برای کوچکترین کارها نیازمند دیگرانه و خودش از انجام هر کاری قاصره. در واقع رخوت و سستی حاصل از "آبلومویسم" آنچنان در همه کارها( از پوشیدن لباس به تنهایی بگیر تا رسیدگی به حساب و کتابهای زندگی و کار و...) رخنه کرده که پیدا کردن اینکه تنبلی دلیل آبلومویسمه یا آبلومویسم عامل تنبلی، برای ناظر بیرونی به کاری غیرممکن بدل شده.

آبلوموف، آبلوموفه! شبیه هیچ چیز یا هیچ کس دیگهای نیست. مفهومی هستش که همه ما کمابیش به شکلی گنگ لمسش کردیم اما اینجا به شکلی زننده و افراطی تجلی پیدا میکنه و نامی بر اون گذاشته میشه. گنچاروف اونقدر در خلق این شخصیت مهارت بخرج داده، اونقدر رفتارها و احساسات با هم تطابق دارند که شاید اگر قصد میکردیم یک شخص واقعی رو در خلال این صفحات توصیف کنیم، اینقدر ملموس و واقعی از آب در نمییومد. صفحات طولانی این کتاب چیزی جز تشریح احوالات این بیمار در شرایط مختلف، و نقبهایی به گذشته و تربیت دوران کودکی اون نیست. از این جهت اگر حوصله خوندن رمانهای کلاسیک ندارید، نخونید که بدجور حوصله سربره!ا



پ.ن: با اینکه گفتم اگر کلاسیک دوست ندارید نخونید، اما بخونید چون انسانها دو دستهاند! اونها که آبلوموف رو میشناسن و اونها که آبلوموف رو نمیشناسن 🧐 ؛
Profile Image for Cherisa B.
604 reviews56 followers
July 22, 2024
How we choose to live our lives is a fundamental question for each human being, regardless of the resources at our disposal or the circumstances in which we find ourselves. Will we be a force for good, kind, curious, active? Will we lollygag around, get by doing as little as we can, hide from our responsibilities or obligations? These are the questions Goncharov raises inOblomov.He gives us two men - Ilya Ilyich Oblomov and Andrei Ivanovich Stoltz - who are good friends but complete opposites in all things except both are deeply good and decent.

The story is primarily about Ilya, the eponymous protagonist, considered the apotheosis of the Russian lit "superfluous man" archetype. This is a young man, usually educated and wealthy, but without aim or purpose, unable to successfully engage in life or with those around him. In this case, our superfluous man is benign - Ilya is trusting and good-natured and loveable, with a "dovelike tenderness" that endears him to those who look for good qualities in the people around them.

Like all good 19th century Russian writers (haha), Goncharov packs in a lot of big ideas, such as class and gender, master and servant, education and culture, us vs. them-ism (e.g. Russian vs European, urban vs rural, etc.), goodness and criminality, into a phenomenal literary work with a deeply moving story. He also creates a portrait of marriage that is one of my favorites in all literature.

A re-read 35 years apart. Well worth a revisit.
Profile Image for Evoli.
263 reviews103 followers
April 23, 2023
this was yet another emotional, heart shattering and devastating russian classic that teaches many great lessons... it left me emptily staring at the wall after finishing the story (in the best possible way)
totally in need of time to process everything, W.O.W
review will follow
Profile Image for Sana.
230 reviews112 followers
April 25, 2024
داستان درباره نجیب زاده ای به اسم ایلیا ایلیچ آ��لوموف هست که از کودکی در ناز و نعمت و توجه فراوان پرورش یافته و بعد از اتمام تحصیلات،کار اداری رو در پیش میگیره اما بعد از چندین سال کار رو رها می کنه و جز خانه نشینی و لمیدن و گذران زندگی از عایدی ملکی روستایی کاری انجام نمیده. آندره دوست دوران تحصیل آبلوموف سعی در کمک کردن به اون داره و هر کاری از دستش برمیاد انجام میده تا آبلوموف رو از خمودگی و بی حالی خارج کنه اما موفق نمیشه...

کتاب آبلوموف سعی داره رخوت زندگی اشرافی ملاکین قرن نوزدهم روسیه رو با شخصیت نمادین آبلوموف به تصویر بکشه.
در نقدهایی که در رابطه با این اثر خوندم و در متن کتاب به پدیده ای به نام آبلومویسم اشاره شده که شخصیت ایلیا ایلیچ به اون دچار هست. در واقع آبلومویسم نوعی بی حالی، ضعف نفس، خمودگی و تنبلی هست که شخص به اون دچار میشه و از انجام کارهای روزمره و حتی رسیدگی به امور مالی خود عاجز میمونه.
آبلوموف در عین تنبلی و بی حالی شخصیتی بسیار مهربان و ساده داره که به راحتی گول میخوره و برای اینکه کارها رو از سر خودش باز کنه حاضره اداره امور زندگیش رو به دست هرکسی بسپاره و قطعا این افراد دلسوز نیستند و سرش کلاه میگذارند.
با اینکه شخصیت اصلی کتاب آدمی تنبل و بی حوصله هست ولی از خوندن کتاب احساس خستگی نمیکنید و توضیحات اضافی و توصیفات کامل کتاب اصلا آزار دهنده نیست و درک بهتری از شخصیتها میده فقط احتمالا مثل من از دست شخصیت ایلیا ایلیچ آبلوموف خیلی حرص می خورید.

شاید بد نباشه که این کتاب رو به تنبلها پیشنهاد بدم تا با شیوه زندگی دیگر تنبل ها در قرن های گذشته آشنا بشن.
ترجمه آقای حبیبی هم که نیازی به تعریف نداره.👌
Profile Image for Marc.
3,259 reviews1,602 followers
July 16, 2023
“Oh my gosh! Life just won't leave me alone.”
I debated for a long time whether to give this a 3 or 4 star rating (yes, I know, my rating scale is low) but the further I got from the end of reading this book, the more I became convinced that only 4 stars could do justice to it. No, this is not a perfect novel, it even contains some fundamental weaknesses, but I can't help it, in the end Ilya Ilich Oblomov's tragicomic character captivated me. Even more than Prince Myshkin, Dostoyevsky's Idiot, he managed to convince me of his sincerity, truthfulness, and pure heart. The latter sounds very pathetic, I know, but apparently I have enough sentimental romanticism in me for people like Ilya Ilich to break my heart.

I am not going to analyze this book too much, that has been done so many times, with and without expertise. What particularly charmed me is that our poor Oblomov realizes all too well that he is an aberration, that his inherent lethargy has no place, especially in a society (Russia in the first half of the 19th century) that is undergoing rapid change. I was constantly struck by the passages in which Oblomov laments his fate and says he does not know who he really is, and why he is the way he is.
At the same time, he knows how to pinpoint the new, modern society that is about to dawn, to expose the emptiness of busy, industrious existence:“The perpetual running to and fro, the perpetual play of petty desires, especially greed, people trying to spoil things for others, the tittle-tattle, the gossip, the slights, the way they look you up and down. You listen to what they're talking about and it makes your head spin. It's stupefying... It's tedium. Tedium! Where is the human being in this? Where is his integrity? Where did it go? How did it get exchanged for all this pettiness?”

And I know it all too well: what Oblomov offers as alternative, his permanent inertia, is so unrealistic and even immoral (his friend Stolz rubs it in hard). But at the same time, Oblomov's representation of the ideal life touches me:“After that, I put on a roomy coat or jacket, put my arm around my wife's waist, and she and I take a stroll down the endless, dark allée, walking quietly, thoughtfully, silent or thinking out loud, daydreaming, counting my minutes of happiness like the beating of a pulse, listening to my heart beat and sink, seeking sympathy in nature, and before we know it we come out on a stream and field. The river is lapping a little, ears of grain are waving in the breeze, and it's hot. We get into the boat and my wife steers us, barely lifting her oar.”
Goncharov, through Oblomov, has perfectly succeeded in exposing the splits of modern man: the nervous drive towards constant change and improvement as opposed to the childish yearning for simplicity, security and bliss. 4 stars, well deserved.

PS. I read Maria Schwartz's English translation (2008), based on the 1862 version edited by Gontsharov himself, which is far preferable to the 1859 original.
Profile Image for Ümit Mutlu.
Author57 books338 followers
August 4, 2013
O kadar büyük ve doğru yazılmış bir eser ki. İçinde o kadar büyük ve isabetli tespitler var ki.

Sigmund Freud'dan önce, freudyen çıkarımlarda bulunma başarısını bile gösterebilen bir roman.

Asla üşengeçlik, tembellik falan anlattığı yok, zaten bu herkesin malumu. Oblomov'un "Oblomov" olmasındaki sebep, taa çocukluğunda yatıyor. Ailesinin hataları, aşırı koruyucu kollayıcı tavırları, vurdumduymazlıkları; İlya İlyiç'in kişisel çekingen ve kibar yapısıyla da birleşince, ortaya sosyal fobik, depresif (hatta manik depresif), amansız romantik, bipolar bir karakter çıkarıyor. Tembellik, erteleme hastalığı, hep bunların bir semptomu haline geliyor.

Hiçbir şeyi kendisi yapmamış, kendisi başarmamış birisi İlya İlyiç. 25 yaşına dek ailesiyle yaşamış. Onlar ölünce de tek başına, yapayalnız kalmış. Uzun süre aranmayan sevilen arkadaşlarla aranın ister istemez açılması gibi, hayatla olan bağları iyice esnemiş, sonunda kendisini karanlık odasına hapsetmiş. Çünkü orası güvenli, sıcak, gamsız, çözülmesi gereken problemlerden tamamen uzak. Tamamen antiagorafobik.

Zaten her şey, Oblomov'un evinden taşınması zorunluluğuyla başlıyor. Hayata hiçbir şekilde hazırlanmamış birisi, deyim yerindeyse kendisini çırılçıplak sokakta buluyor. En önemlisi ise sonra geliyor: Can dostu sayesinde zoraki tanıştığı Olga'ya âşık oluyor, oysa Oblomov bu aşka da hiç hazır değil. Belki de karşısına kim çıksa âşık olacaktı. "Awakenings" filmindeki gibi, kısa süreli bir uyanış yaşıyor Oblomov, bu uyanışın kendisini de, araç değil, amaç olarak kullandığı için, tekrar uykuya dalıyor.

Sonunda her şey beklenen noktaya varıyor elbette, "oblomovluk", Oblomov'un yakasını bırakmıyor zira. Oblomov ise bundan her zaman şikayetçi, bundan her zaman kurtulmak isteğinde olsa da (ki aslında bu da, hep başkalarından beklenen bir istek, zira kendisinin kurtulmaya da takati yok), hayatının son deminde kendisiyle tam anlamıyla barışıyor. huzuru, gerçek yaşama tercih ediyor ve huzurlu ama ezik bir biçimde yok olup gidiyor.

Oblomov'u suçlayabilir miyiz? Hiç sanmıyorum. Yaşanan hiçbir şeyde Oblomov'un hatası yok. Oblomov'dan başka bir şey beklenemezdi. Tüm çocukluğu, ergenliği, onu bu kaçınılmaz noktaya kadar getirdi. Gerçekten en az suçlu olan İlya İlyiç'tir; hele de ailenin, bir çocuğun karakterini şekillendirme gücü düşünülürse.

İşin psikolojik yönünden toplumsal yönüne kayarsak da, ortaya bu kez "Selim Işık" değil, "Züğürt Ağa" çıkıyor. Yeni ile eski arasında sıkışıp kalmış; yeniyi isteyen, oradaki sosyal statü ve güzelliklere iç çekerek bakan; ancak orada nasıl yaşanacağını, nasıl davranılacağını bilmediği için sürekli kaybeden, kazıklanan, çoğu zaman da iyiliğinin kurbanı olan bir adam. Tıpkı Yavuz Turgul'un tüm karakterleri gibi, mahkum bir yaşantı içinde, hayal dünyasında, eskiyle bağlarını koparamamış birisi. Dolayısıyla eski-yeni ayrımında, romantik ve hayalperest Oblomov'un hayatını bitirdiği nokta, yine rastlantı olmuyor.

Oblomov, hayatımda okuduğum en müthiş eserlerden birisi.
Profile Image for Dalia Nourelden.
633 reviews989 followers
July 17, 2023
رفيو الكتاب الأول


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"امتلك إدراكاً لا يقل عن الآخرين، لكنه مدفون تحت كومة من الأنقاض ونائم بكسل
......
أمتلك شيئا أكثر قيمة من إدراكه - إنه القلب النزيه المخلص! إنه الكنز الثمين الذي حمله معافى خلال حياته. لقد أسقطه الناس أرضاً ، فنهض غير مكترث وأخيراً ارتمى نائماً ومسحوقاً وخائب الأمل، وقد فقد قوته في العيش، لكنه لم يفقد نزاهته وإخلاصه. فقلبه لم يعزف أى نغمة زائفة ، ولم تكن ثمة شائبة في شخصيته. فلا الكذبة المبهرجة تخدعه ولا شئ يغريه ويحيده عن الطريق المستقيم. كان ثمة محيط مألوف من الشر والدناءة يجيش حوله ، وربما يكون العالم بأكمله مسموماً ومقلوباً رأساً على عقب - لن ينكس أبلوموف رأسه لصنم الزيف، وستكون روحه دائماً نقية ونبيلة ونزيهة.. روحه الشفافة والصافية كالكرستال. مثل هؤلاء الناس نادرون ، هناك قلة منهم ، إنهم مثل اللآلئ بين الحشود! لا يمكن لقلبه أن يرتشي ، فيمكن الاعتماد عليه في كل مكان وزمان "



اقتباس طويل عن أبلوموف لكني أحببته وأحببت مشاركتكم به وان ابدأ به مراجعتي للنصف الثاني والأخير من الرواية.

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لازلنا مع أبلوموف لنستكمل ما فعله في حياته. تساءلت في مراجعة الجزء الأول هل ستستطيع أولغا و شتولتس تغيير أبلوموف ؟

أنا أؤمن ان لا أحد يستطيع ان يقوم بتغيير أحد. أى شخص من الصعب تغيير شخصيته ، عاداته ، طباعه ربما تتغير طموحاته ربما تتغير مبادئه إن كانت خاطئة او كان إيمانه بها ضعيفاً لكن هناك أشياء من المستحيل أو فلنقل من الصعب جدا تغييرها. وحتى ما يمكن تغييره يجب أن ينبع من الشخص ذاته ومن رغبته وإصراره. قد يقوم شخص آخر بمساعدته على التغيير لكن من المهم ان تكون الرغبة في التغيير نابعة من ذاته.وان يمتلك الإصرار ليقوم بهذا التغيير

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مع اختلاف العصور والثقافات إلا ان هناك أمور تتكرر. المرأة تطلب من الرجل القيام بأشياء ضرورية والرجل يقوم بتقديم الوعود أنه سيفعل وسيقوم بكل ذلك ولا يفعل شيئا. هى تظل تظن انها تستطيع تغيره او تحفيزه للقيام بما يرغب هو بالأساس بالقيام به لكنه كسول وهو يظل يقدم وعوداً وتأكيدات أنه سيفعل ثم لا يفعل شيئا. يبدو أن هناك أشياء لا تتغير 😂.

كلاهما يضايقني في الواقع فأنا لا احب من يقدمون وعوداُ دون أى نية لفعلها وأتضايق أيضا من أن تكرار نفس الطلب من نفس الشخص وأراه يخذلني مرة بعض أخرى.

هل معني ذلك أن لا يحاول كلا الطرفين لإنقاذ وإنجاح العلاقة بينهما أيا كانت طبيعة العلاقة ؟

‏لا بالطبع لا اقصد ذلك لكن المهم أن يحاول كلا الطرفين ليس طرف واحد الوصول لحل وسط بينهما لإنجاح العلاقة لكن هناك حد لكل محاولة ويجب بعدها التوقف والإيمان بفشل إستمرار هذه العلاقة.

صديقتي بسمة لم تعجبها أن اولغا مصرة على تغيير أبلوموف لأنها تعرفه منذ البداية وتعرف طباعه وأنا اتفقت معها فكما قلت سابقاً لن يستطيع شخص تغيير شخص آخر وإما أن يقبله كما هو أو يتركه. لكن جاءت من أولغا هذه الجملة لتجعلني افكر قليلا "دعه يحث نفسه، دعه يقبل على الحياة - من أجلها وحدها ، باسم سعادتهما المستقبلية"
هذا ماكانت ترغب أولغا، ليس تغييره لكن أن يحاول أن يفعل شيئا من أجله ومن أجلها ومن أجل مستقبلهما معاً. كانت ترغب أن تراه يحاول أن يفعل شيئا من أجل سعادتهما معاً ، كانت ترغب أن تحثه وتشجعه على شئ كان هو شخصياً من يرغب به بالفعل ويخطط له لكنه كان لا يقوم به ، كان يخطط ويخطط في رأسه دون القيام بشئ فكانت تحاول أن تشجعه على الأمر.

"- إذا ما توجب على أحد أن يضحي بحياته من أجلك ، فانا سأكون سعيداً بأن أموت!
- لكن ذلك ليس ضرورياً، لا احد يطلب منك! لماذا احتاج حياتك ؟ فقط أفعل ماهو ضروري. إنها حيلة قديمة من الناس غير النزيهين لتقديم التضحيات غير الضرورية التي لا يمكن القيام بها إلا لكي يتم تفادي التضحيات الضرورية. "

-
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هل توصلت اولغا لذلك ؟؟ هذا ما ستخبره لك الرواية
وهل سيساعدها شتولتس ؟
وماذا عن الشخصيات الأخرى التى ستدخل حياة ابلوموف ؟ ماذا سيكون تأثيرها عليه ؟ وتأثيره عليهم ؟

لكن أيا كانت الأحداث لقد لمستنى أشياء كثيرة مع ابلوموف وكانت قريبة مني ومن حياتي جدا خاصة خوفه وألمه مع فكرة أى تغيير. الرغبة والخوف الذي يصل لدرجة الرعب.والرغبة التامة في الانعزال عن الناس والحياة بهدوء بعيداً عن مشاكل وصراعات البشر.

الأدب الروسي بالنسبالى هو أدب المشاعر الجياشة والفوران الداخلي والتخبطات النفسية بامتياز. أكتر أدب مع اختلاف كتابه إلا أنى بحس معاهم بلخبطة الإنسان وصراعاته الداخليه ومع اللى حواليه ومع الحياة. من أكتر أنواع الأدب اللى في الغالب بتقدر تخترقني واعيش مشاعر أبطالها.

من أحد أسباب حبي وإعجابي بالرواية واللى كانت بتزيد مع كل جزء هى انى دخلت جواها ، كنت شبه بتقمص مشاعر كل شخصية وبعيشها.هناك اجزاء عجزت فيها عن التفريق بين مشاعرى الشخصية ومشاعر الشخصية في الرواية ، ليس لتشابه حالتي معهم لكن لهذه الدرجة وصلت أفكارهم ومشاعرهم لي وأندمجت مع التفاصيل. بحب الروايات اللى بتقدر تلمسني سواء لقربها مني شخصياً أو لأن الأسلوب دخلني جوه الشخصيات وحياتهم. ودى أكيد حاجة نسبية وبتفرق من شخص للتاني. و ده كان أحد أسباب أن الرواية تاخد بالنسبالى الخمس نجوم كاملين.

الامير ميشكين ( الأبله لدوستويفسكي) ثم أبلوموف الآن من اكثر الشخصيات التي أثرت بى في قراءات هذا العام. كلاهما يحمل براءة وقلب نقي ، كلاهما يتم إستغلاله وكثيرا ما استهزئوا بهما ، كلاهما يحمل جزء منى بداخله. وكلاهما شخصيات روائية روسية. وفي النهاية كلاهما شعرت بألم في قلبى من أجلهما وربما من أجلي معهما.
وداعا أبلوموف.

معلومات من المقدمة:

ظل غونتشاروف يكتب رواية أبلوموف لمدة إحدى عشرة سنة.
اسم أبلوموف يعني في اللغة الروسية ( حُطام )

قراءة مشتركة مع احمد نور وصديقتي بسمة ❤❤ومفروض كان اسراء معانا 😂

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Profile Image for Homo Sentimentalis.
56 reviews58 followers
March 16, 2020
Oblomov je definitivno jedan od najupečatljivijih, najsvevremenijih, a meni lično i najsimpatičnijih junaka ne samo ruske, nego i čitave svjetske književnosti. Glavni junak najpoznatijeg Gončarovljevog romana jeste "suvišan čovjek" koji reprezentuje duh i bolest svoje epohe, a najviše ga se može pronaći među višim slojevima ruskog društva.
Ilja Iljič Oblomov je jedan od njih, tridesetdvogodišnjak koji ne radi ništa. Nije zaposlen, nema ciljeve, nema hobije, ne izlazi nikud i po cijeli dan leži. Pomislio bi čovjek da onda mora biti da je on nekakav čudak, umjetnik ili možda filozof. Ali Oblomov nije ništa niti od toga. On doduše neprestano razmišlja, ali o potpuno banalnim i uvijek istim stvarima i nikada ne dolazi do bilo kakvog konstruktivnog rješenja. Ništa ga ne može pokrenuti, stalno nešto planira, ali na kraju uvijek odgađa. U pitanju je lijenost, ali ne prirodna, nego lijenost posebne vrste, lijenost "suvišnog čovjeka". Na to nam autor ukazuje već na samom početku djela: "Ležanje nije bilo Ilji Iljiču ni prijeka potreba, kao bolesniku, ili kao čovjeku, koji bi da spava, ni slučajnost, kao onomu, koji je sustao, ni naslada, kao lijenčini: to mu je bilo normalno stanje."
Negdje u dubini Oblomovljeve duše naziru se Oblomov putnik, Oblomov ljubavnik, Oblomov preduzetnik, ali u još većoj dubini njega konstantno vreba oko besmisla, tihi ubica u ruhu "oblomovštine". U tim rijetkim trenucima kada se bar na trenutak počne nazirati Oblomovljevo izbavljenje, u tunelima njegove duše nastaje borba koja se svodi na jedno: ustati ili nastaviti ležati, sad ili nikad! Na kraju uvijek pobjeđuje oblomovština, inače pojam koji je ušao u svakodnevni ruski jezik. Oblomovštinu bih ja definisao nekako ovako: Urođena apatičnost koja čovjeka neprestano drži u stanju pasivnosti i kolikogod on pokušavao da je se oslobodi, da se pokrene i da nađe smisao u bilo čemu izvan nje, ona kao dominantna sila na kraju uvijek uspije izvojevati pobjedu nad svim ostalim, njoj protivnim, a životu naklonjenim silama.
Evo i nekih ključnih odlomaka za razumijevanje Oblomova i oblomovštine:
"Ta nisu me snalazile ni bure ni potresi; nisam gubio ništa; nikakvo mi breme ne tišti savjest: čista je kao staklo; nikakav udarac nije u meni ubio samoljublje, nego tako, bog bi znao zašto, propada sve!"
"Meni nije nikad u životu buknuo nikakav ni spasonosan ni razoran plamen. Život mi nije nalikovao na jutro, na koje postepeno padaju boje, svjetlo, a onda se prevraća u dan, kao u drugih, te plamti žarko, i sve vri, kreće se o žarkom podnevu, i onda je sve tiše i tiše, sve blijeđe, i sve se prirodno i postepeno prema večeru gasi. Nije, život mi se je otpočeo gaseći se."
"Ja sam trošan, star, pohaban kaftan, ali niti od klime niti od rada, nego od toga, što je dvanaest godina u meni zatvoreno bilo svjetlo, koje je težilo da izbije, ali je samo palilo svoj zatvor, nije se istrglo na slobodu i ugasilo se."
U drugom i trećem dijelu romana se Oblomovljev lik dalje razvija zahvaljujući njegovom jedinom iskrenom prijatelju, preduzimljivom Štolcu. Uz pomoć mlađahne Olge Štolc pokušava da pokrene Oblomova i u tome i uspijeva. U Oblomovu se konačno razbuktavaju strasti, počinje napuštati svoj brlog. Roman postaje ljubavni. Na neki način me podsjeća na "Bijele noći" Dostojevskog. Oba lika su duševno razorena, samo na različite načine. Obojici se svjetlo na kraju tunela javlja u poznoj mladosti, i kod jednog i kod drugog to svjetlo donose mlade, duševne djevojke. I na kraju ni jedan ni drugi ne uspijevaju da se izbave iz svojih ponora i vraćaju se u svoje stare habituse: junak Dostojevskog u usamljenost i zanesenjaštvo, a Oblomov u čamotinju, u kojoj na kraju i umire od kapi.
Iako po karakteru i senzibilitetu nisam pobornik realizma, ovaj klasik me uistinu oduševio! Zaista je nenadmašna sposobnost ruskih pisaca da kroz dubinsko psihološko seciranje likova analiziraju akutne probleme Zeitgeist-a. Kroz sve to opet provejava neka toplina, oduhovljenost, ljubav prema čovjeku, prema istini, istinsko proživljavanje onoga što pišu. To je ono što mi katkad nedostaje kod zapadnih pisaca.

P.S. Mislim da je "Oblomov" danas aktuelniji nego ikad!
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