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The Ruler in the Garden

Politics and Landscape Design in Imperial Russia

by Andreas Schönle (Author)
©2007 Monographs 398 Pages

Summary

This monograph examines the contributions of landscape design to authority and to organization of public life in imperial Russia. Analyzing how tsars and nobles inscribed their political aspirations in the gardens they designed or inhabited, this study maps out a distinct trajectory in the meaning of landscape design. Based partly on archival documents, it explores the reasons for Catherine the Great’s keen interest in landscape design. It reconstructs Grigorii Potemkin’s attempts to transform the Crimea physically and symbolically into the garden of the empire. And it reveals the centrality of the garden for noblemen such as Andrei Bolotov and Alexander Kurakin, who expressed their political philosophy and their anxieties about unstable social relations through landscaping. The book follows the destiny of western aesthetic categories, notably of the picturesque, as they are first adopted, then transformed, and ultimately rejected. It analyzes the historical role and mythological representations of the country estate, along with Leo Tolstoy’s fraught commitment to Yasnaya Polyana and his critique of estate mythology in War and Peace. Finally, this study exposes how the current fashion for gardening in Russia, in particular among New Russians, alludes to imperial landscaping culture in order to justify a retreat from the public sphere.

Details

Pages
398
Year
2007
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039111138
Language
English
Keywords
Russland Gartenkunst Geschichte 1700-1900 Imperialism Symbolic garden Design Organised public life Landscaping
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2007. 398 pp.

Biographical notes

Andreas Schönle (Author)

The Author: Andreas Schönle is Professor of Russian Studies at Queen Mary, University of London. His main research is in eighteenth and nineteenth-century Russian literature and culture, in modern literary and cultural theory, and in comparative literature.

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