Baron Ungern in the Literature of the 1920s: The Two-Sided Optics of the Civil War
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Baron Ungern in the Literature of the 1920s: The Two-Sided Optics of the Civil War
Annotation
PII
S160578800019450-1-
Publication type
Article
Status
Published
Authors
Leonid V. Dubakov 
Affiliation: Shenzhen MSU-BIT University
Address: No. 1, International University Park Road, Dayun New Town, Longgang District, Shenzhen, Guangdong Province, 518172, PRC
Pages
48-53
Abstract

The article analyzes the image of Baron R. Ungern von Sternberg, which was created in the 1920s by writers, who were standing on different sides during the Civil war. In the works of A. Nesmelov and P. Krasnov, adherents of “white idea&8j1;, it is romanticized and apologized. Nesmelov in “Ballada about Daurian Baron&8j1; (1927) embeds him in the Daurian and Mongolian myths. The negative qualities in this person, when touched by mysteriousness, somehow gain in attractiveness. Krasnov in the novel “For the Thistle&8j1; (1922) turns Baron Ungern into the savior of the Fatherland and the Romanov dynasty; his hero is a Eurasian in outlook, who came into contact with Buddhism, with Asia, and it was there that he found a new support for the revival of Russian statehood; his image in the novel reflects martial righteousness and Tibetan mysticism. Soviet writer S. Markov in his novel “Red Buddha” (1929, publ. 1989), in turn, ornaments the image of Ungern, focusing on the diversity of Asian reality that captured and transformed the baron: Ungern is terrible, he is an enemy of Soviet power, but he is not worldly, zoomorphic and ornithomorphic features appear in his image. Markov’s Ungern is like a fake Buddhist, the baron took from Buddhism an exotically perceived mysticism and filtered Buddhist ethics in his own interests. Despite the difference in ideological views, these writers, creating the image of Baron Ungern, speak less about politics. At the center of their works is, first of all, his religious choice – a Westerner who converted to Buddhism.

Keywords
R. Ungern von Sternberg, P. Krasnov, A. Nesmelov, S. Markov, Russian literature abroad, Soviet literature, Civil War, Buddhism, mysticism.
Received
02.02.2022
Date of publication
25.04.2022
Number of purchasers
12
Views
788
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0.0 (0 votes)
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S160578800019450-1-1 Дата внесения правок в статью - 30.03.2022
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References

1. Mihalev, A.V. Bog vojny, ili Pamyat o “chernom baroneˮ v pravom diskurse sovremennoj Rossii [The God of War, or the Memory of the “Black Baronˮ in the Right Discourse of Modern Russia]. Politicheskaya nauka [Political Science]. 2018, No. 3, pp. 129–146. (In Russ.)

2. Sobolevskaya, O.V. Vvedenie v daurskuyu gotiku [Introduction to the Daurian Gothic]. URL: https://iq.hse.ru/news/286418877.html (In Russ.)

3. Nesmelov, A.I. Sobraniye sochinenij v 2 t. T. 1. [Collected Works in 2 Vols. Vol. 1]. Vladivostok, 2006. 560 p. (In Russ.)

4. Yuzefovich, L.A. Samoderzhec pustyni. Baron R.F. Ungern-Shternberg i mir, v kotorom on zhil [Autocrat of the Desert. Baron RF. Ungern-Sternberg and the World in Which He Lived]. Moscow, 2019. 588 p. (In Russ.)

5. Krasnov, P.N. Za chertopolokhom [For the Thistle]. Moscow, 2002. 352 p. (In Russ.)

6. Krasnov, P.N. Vypash [Depleted Field]. Moscow, 2011. 512 p. (In Russ.)

7. Neapolitansky S.M., Matveev S.A. Enciklopediya buddizma [Encyclopedia of Buddhism]. St. Petersburg, 2007. 928 p. (In Russ.)

8. Markov, S.N. Ryzhij Budda [Red Buddha]. Moscow, 1992. 160 p. (In Russ.)

9. Zolotcev, S.A. Polynnaya gorech istorii [Wormwood Bitterness of History]. Markov S.N. Ryzhij Budda [Red Buddha]. Moscow, 1992, pp. 144–157. (In Russ.)

10. Markov, S.N. Obmanutyie skitalcy. Kniga stranstvij i priklyuchenij [The Deceived Wanderers. The Book of Wanderings and Adventures]. Moscow, 1991. 208 p. (In Russ.)

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