TEMPLE
OF MAXIM GORKY
| Gorkiy, Maksim or Gorki, Maksim, pseudonym of ALEKSEI MAKSIMOVICH PESHKOV
(1868-1936), Soviet novelist, playwright, and essayist, who was a founder
of socialist realism. Although known principally as a writer, he was also
prominent in the Russian revolutionary movement. Gorkiy was born March
16, 1868, in Nizhniy Novgorod (renamed Gorkiy in his honor from 1932 to
1991), into a peasant family. He was self-educated. Compelled to earn his
own living from the age of nine, Gorkiy worked for many years at menial
jobs and tramped over a great part of European Russia. During this time
he shot himself through a lung in an attempted suicide, later developing
tuberculosis, which left him in ill health for the rest of his life. His
pen name means "the bitter one" in Russian. Gorkiy's first short
story was published in a T'bilisi newspaper in 1892, and thereafter he
wrote stories and sketches frequently for publication in various newspapers.
His collected Sketches and Stories (1898) was an instantaneous success
and made him famous throughout Russia. He had thrown off his earlier romanticism
and wrote realistically although optimistically of the harshness of the
life of the lower classes in Russia. He was the first Russian author to
write knowledgeably and sympathetically about workers and such people as
tramps and thieves, emphasizing their courageous fight against overwhelming
odds. "Twenty-six Men and a Girl" (1899; trans. 1902), a tale
of sweatshop conditions in a bakery, is considered by many his finest short
story. In 1899 Gorkiy became associated with the revolutionary activities
of the Marxists, and in 1906 he went abroad to raise funds for the Russian
Social Democratic Labor Party. In 1907, because of failing health, he settled
on the Italian island of Capri. He returned to Russia in 1915. Gorkiy supported
the Russian Revolution of 1917 and was active in Soviet literary organizations.
Compelled by illness to leave the country in 1922, Gorkiy spent six years
in Sorrento, Italy. On his return to the Soviet Union he was received with
official honors. It is supposed that Gorkiy's sudden death on June 18,
1936, was ordered by the dictator Joseph Stalin. Gorkiy's novels include
Mother (1907; trans. 1929), an influential piece of propaganda about the
revolutionary spirit of an old peasant; and the tetralogy The Life of Klim
Samgin (1927-36; trans. 1930-38), a series on Russian history from 1880
to 1917. His best-known play is The Lower Depths (1902; trans. 1912), which
depicts men reduced to the ultimate depths of degradation but retaining
positive qualities. Among Gorkiy's best works are his autobiographical
and literary memoirs. The trilogy consisting of Childhood (1913-14; trans.
1915), In the World (1915-16; trans. 1917), and the ironically titled My
Universities (1923; trans. as Reminiscences of My Youth, 1952), is considered
a major artistic achievement because it lacks the excessive philosophizing
of his earlier works and because it contains numerous memorable characterizations.
Reminiscences of Tolstoy, Chekhov and Andreyev (1920-28; trans. 1949),
which avoids the worshipful approach to famous writers common among Russian
literary critics up to that time, has been hailed as Gorkiy's masterpiece.
"Gorkiy, Maksim," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 97 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1996 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. |