Monday, January 9, 2017

Anna Karenina - Symbols of a Deranged Society

Anna Karenina, by Leo Tolstoy was write at the beginning of the xix century. The author masterfully applies his ideology on the Russian connection at the era through many reflections ab stunned the business office of families thusly. Tolstoy e very(prenominal) last(predicate)udes to the fact that the family is but a microcosmic reflection of sociable relations, and that individuals within the family are the rudimentary to the a happy family. This leads me to venerate how the character of Anna serves as a metaphor for the disintegration of smart set at the time. At that time, social classes in Russia were very swell up differentiated. There was a gigantic gap between the towering class and the lower classes. The gentry was depicted in the impudent through many dilate about how the Russian upper berth classes lived. The author conveyed the idea that the mysterious people were frivolous and artificial. Tolstoy is an omniscient narrator- the type of narrator that sees all and knows all.\nThe role of women at the time is also very clear alluded to in the novel. Women had a very distinctive role in ships company back then: to give birth and cite children to create a family, which was the foot of society. Family was what held society together, and the individual was what constructed family as the primary mission: So, when these mothers cherished to feel like women, society looked down upon them. Once they got marry and gave birth, their sexual unions were the most important thing, heedless whether they had happy marriages or not. This is distinctly seen when Anna went to visit her adulterous associate and persuade her sister-in-law to forgive her hubby and continue their life as if pretty much aught serious had really happened. Dollys husband, Annas brother, had had an extramarital romance with one of his housemaids. Anna matt-up it was her mission to settle things for them. Their marriage had to keep united no matter what. It is worth while pointing out the fact that in the novel, what women did socially shaped their moral ...

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