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The Hero in Three Russian Novels

changes in the personality of one man. Pushkin's Grinyov illustrates through his confusion the general state of the era which the author explores. As such, Grinyov is far more a bewildered character than a hero or anti-hero. However, in this context, he is more anti-hero than hero.

Lermontov's novel is mainly about one man---Pechorin. Pechorin himself is a complex man, thoroughly an anti-hero, as Lermontov makes clear when he writes that the novel is a portrait "not of a single person" but "of the vices of our whole generation in their ultimate development" (Lermontov 19).

Lermontov has created Pechorin to show not only what is villainous about one man, but what is villainous about a whole society. To Lermontov, Pechorin is a symptom of a sick society. It is a society without direction or purpose, and Pechorin represents that society as he goes about doing whatever he wants to do without concern for the disastrous results of his selfishness.

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The Hero in Three Russian Novels. (1969, December 31). In LotsofEssays.com. Retrieved 13:04, May 06, 2024, from https://www.lotsofessays.com/viewpaper/1707196.html