Serapion Brothers

Serapion Brothers

▪ Russian literary group
Russian  Serapionovy Bratya,  

      group of young Russian writers formed in 1921 under the unsettled conditions of the early Soviet regime. Though they had no specific program, they were united in their belief that a work of art must stand on its own intrinsic merits, that all aspects of life or fantasy were suitable subjects, and that experiments in a variety of styles were desirable.

      The writers were admirers of E.T.A. Hoffmann, the German Romantic storyteller who wrote a series of exotic tales supposedly exchanged by a group gathered around a hermit, Serapion. Consequently, the Brothers adopted this name as indicative of their interest in the art of storytelling. Though they could not entirely eliminate social themes from their work, the Serapion Brothers introduced to them a fresh use of intricate plots, surprise endings, and techniques of mystery and suspense. They regarded much of the escapist literature of the West, such as the romantic adventure stories of Alexandre Dumas, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Rider Haggard, as superior in technical artistry to traditional Russian realism.

      The Serapion Brothers met in the House of Arts, a cultural institute established in Petrograd (now St. Petersburg) by Maksim Gorky. They learned their craft in the literary workshop of the innovative elder writer Yevgeny Zamyatin (Zamyatin, Yevgeny Ivanovich). The members, most of whom were in their early 20s, included Mikhail Zoshchenko (Zoshchenko, Mikhail Mikhaylovich), Vsevolod Ivanov (Ivanov, Vsevolod Vyacheslavovich), Veniamin Kaverin, Konstantin Fedin (Fedin, Konstantin Aleksandrovich), Lev Lunts, Nikolay Nikitin, Nikolay Tikhonov (Tikhonov, Nikolay Semyonovich), Vladimir Pozner, Mikhail Slonimsky, and Viktor Shklovsky (Shklovsky, Viktor Borisovich). Their influence extended beyond their nuclear group and affected most of the other writers who remained aloof from political orthodoxy and dominated the literary scene in the early Soviet period.

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Universalium. 2010.

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