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  • Summary/Abstract
    Summary
    With the plays "Guilds" and "At the Bottom" a new stage in the work of Maxim Gorky begins, connected with the growing revolutionary upsurge in Russia with the first rumblings and the approach of the 1905 revolution. During this period, the author of the romantic hymns about the madness of the heroes" and about the flaming heart of Danko, the realist writer, revealed the tragic fate and spontaneous protest of the barefoot people against the corrupting influence of the guild, proprietary morality - he becomes more and more closely associated with the revolutionary movement, intervenes in political struggles against the Russian autocracy and gradually connects with the Leninist wing of Russian Social Democracy. He becomes a stormtrooper, the herald of the revolution, the first proletarian writer of world significance in whose work the principles of socialist realism are formed. It was at this time that he fully realized his long-standing dream - to create art that arouses heroic emotions, reaching the widest circles, calls for the reorganization of the social order. In the play "Guilds" Gorky for the first time in world literature created the image of a proletarian fighter - the train driver Nile with his optimistic life-affirming philosophy, which acts like thunder over the troubled guild swamp. In Nile's words "The owner is the one who works", "Rights are not given - rights are won", "There is no such train schedule that cannot be changed" speaks of a new proletarian class, which has gathered strength for decisive political battles. Gorky takes stock of his early work and in the play "The Bottom". He frees himself from any romanticization of the free and protesting barefoot people; now they are already unfortunate victims, having lost everything that can be lost, but remaining sensitive to the call for human dignity, for the greatness of man. The famous words "Man - this is magnificent! Man - this sounds proud!" spread with incredible speed all over the world and shake the packed theaters in European capitals. They are spoken by some pitiful fragments of the human race, sunk in rags, from the darkness of their pit - this temporarily emphasizes the active humanism of the play even more strongly. At the same time, as an outlet, Gorky rejects passive compassion, the comforting lie of heavy suffering, exposes the philosophy of powerlessness, which seeks reconciliation with reality as a means that helps the masters of power to plunder their victims even more cruelly.
    Keywords: Първите, пиеси, Максим, Горки, оценката, българската, критика

Free access
  • Summary/Abstract
    Summary
    In the 1890s, at the dawn of the workers' struggles in our country, two of the first socialist magazines appeared: "Den" (1891-1896, editor Ya. Sakazov) and "Delo" (1894-1896, editor V. Blagoeva). Serving the main task of the movement at that time - the dissemination of socialist ideas among the people, the magazines published translated and our materials on economic, socio-political and cultural issues, while conducting a polemic with bourgeois ideology and populism. "Den" and "Delo" also devoted a significant amount of space to literature. Particularly valuable are the articles and notes by D. Blagoev in the columns "Social Chronicle" and "Literary Notes". The literary works are mostly translated. With few exceptions, they are subordinated to the political and literary line of the magazines. In addition to excerpts from the Greek classics, the reader was able to get acquainted with Byron's poem "Manfred", with the play "An Enemy of the People" by Ibsen, with individual works by Lermontov, Schiller, Maupassant, etc. In the spirit of a sharp critical attitude towards bourgeois society, the translated stories by N. Shchedrin, V. G. Korolenko, Paul Ezi, G. Machete, Otto Jeanne Sigo, Eliza Ozheshko, V. Garshin, etc. are very widely represented.
    Keywords: Първите, стъпки, социалистическата, литература