Showing posts with label War and Peace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label War and Peace. Show all posts

Saturday, December 28, 2024

War and Peace begins

Today was meeting 2 of my meetup group on War and Peace. It's going to be a long slog effort, it's probably more than a year, every 2 weeks.

So far, having a bit of difficulty getting into it, but getting great tips from the group to help me settle in.

Advice for far:

  • Tolstoy is just setting the scene for us 
  • Don't worry about going to back to re-read what I didn't 'get' already. 
  • We are just meeting the three main families
  • We are being introduced to different settings: the aristocracy, in a home, at a formal dance, a dinner party, at a deathbed
  • Tolstoy is revealing how human the aristocracy is: they are petty, acting out, showing off, judging others
  • The setting in time is being revealed: the time of Napoleon (he has been Emperor for only a year, lots of differences about how people felt about him)
  • Write a list of characters as they appear, and draw the relationships as I discover them
  • Download character maps (I have done this already)

I'm coming to think I might start a large doodle that I build on over time. This will need a large piece of paper, or separate journal!

We are using the Pevear and Volokhonsky translation for this Meetup series. I have been listening to Audible, with a free Kindle version to mark where I am in the book. Fortunately the parts and chapters line up with the printed book. I used this approach with Anna Karenina, and it worked well, but am starting to think the physical book might be called for....

In our first meeting, I wondered out loud whether it would help me to study more Russian history... and I received the suggestion that French history would serve me better (!). The setting is 1805

Learnings about French/Russian in the book:
  • Some are speaking French, some are speaking Russian (during 1805 French was the predominant language amongst the aristocracy)
  • Why this is:
    • the influx and influence of the French on Russian culture
    • people would speak French to hide what they are saying from servants
  • Catherine the Great imposed French as the language of the court in Russia
  • Conflict between Eastern and Western thought is important here 

This book is part of a longer journey for me - read about My Tolstoy Adventure here. The good news is that I have learned to love Tolstoy's writing.