On Andrey Muravyov’s ‘Reading’ of Venice Cover Image
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Andrieja Murawjowa „czytanie” Wenecji
On Andrey Muravyov’s ‘Reading’ of Venice

Author(s): Anna Kościółek
Subject(s): Russian Literature, Eastern Orthodoxy, Theory of Literature
Published by: Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II - Instytut Jana Pawła II, Wydział Filozofii
Keywords: Muravyov; Constantinople; Venice; St. Mark’s Basilica; St. Mark; Orthodoxy; relics;

Summary/Abstract: The present study, using semiotic method, is an attempt to present the image of Venice in Pribavleniya k “Rimskim pis’mam” (1847) by Andrey Muravyov as a space experienced, felt, and also written down and thus preserved. The author seeks to demonstrate that, in his reflections, the Russian writer adopted the Orthodox perspective, pointing to the presence of the Byzantine heritage in Venice and emphasizing that Venice in a way exploited Constantinople. Although Muravyov thoroughly described the most characteristic places of the “pearl of the Adriatic,” as Venice was then called, simultaneously studying its peculiarities, he looked at them with the eye of a pilgrim rather than that of a tourist. The presentation of Muravyov’s image of Venice incorporates a specific ‘dictionary’ which can be reconstructed based on his works. The analyses are based on the semiotic theory put forward by Vladimir Toporov and on the concept of the city’s signature symbols, as proposed by Tat’yana Tsiv’yan. Muravyov’s descriptions of the characteristics of Venice are considered in relation to, respectively, the city’s landscape, its culture and symbols, and the stylistic devices he used.

  • Issue Year: 34/2021
  • Issue No: 4
  • Page Range: 147-167
  • Page Count: 21
  • Language: Polish