Friday, July 19, 2019
Idle Minds and Wagging Tongues: Conversation in Anna Karenina :: Essays Papers
Idle Minds and Wagging Tongues: Conversation in Anna Karenina Perhaps one of the most striking scenes in Anna Karenina is that of Kitty and Levinââ¬â¢s silent declarations of love to each other, etched out cryptically in chalk on a card table, with each understanding innately the exact words the other was saying (362). With the relationship between Kitty and Levin serving as Tolstoyââ¬â¢s model for a strong and successful love, it appears odd that such a relationship should be founded on silence, and in such sharp contrast to the chatter of Society surrounding the couple at the party. How then are we to understand the significance of conversation in the novel, if the most sincere relationships and understandings are not founded upon dialogue, but on unspoken knowledge? Entire subplots and themes are conveyed through conversations between the charactersââ¬âthe peasant problem and farm management, religion, marriage and faithfulness. Everyone is trying to grasp what a good life is, but the ideas expressed in conversation, however, appe ar quite often to contradict both the inner monologue of the characters and their actions, or fall pathetically short of expressing the power of the feelings of characters. For most of the characters, neither Society banter nor intellectual discourse does justice to their real passions, and even personal exchanges are steeped in insincerity. Unless they find a means to express their passions some other way, they are doomed to a life of dissatisfaction at best, or a tragic end at worst. Within the opening conflict of the novelââ¬âStivaââ¬â¢s affair with the French governess and his wifeââ¬â¢s reaction when learning of itââ¬âTolstoy first presents this tension between honesty and speech. Before Dolly and Oblonskyââ¬â¢s exchanges, Tolstoy interposes a short confrontation between Oblonsky and his son, Grisha. Oblonsky is ââ¬Å"conscious of not caring as much for the boy as for the girl, but [does] his best to treat them both alikeâ⬠(7). Although he says, ââ¬Å"Good morningâ⬠to Grisha, Oblonskyââ¬â¢s words are insufficient to mask his inner feelings, and his actions betray him through a ââ¬Å"cold smileâ⬠(7). Grisha, significantly, does not reply. To reply with some pleasantness would be to pretend that Oblonsky was sincere in his greeting, and Grisha is too naà ¯ve to use speech to do anything but to tell the truth. Short of accusing his father of not loving him, which he is already old enough to understand would be entirely i nappropriate, he can only remain silent.
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