The Death of Ivan Ilyich

The Death of Ivan Ilyich (also Romanized Ilich, Ilych, Ilyitch; Russian: Смерть Ивана Ильича, romanizedSmert' Ivána Ilyicha), first published in 1886, is a novella by Leo Tolstoy, considered one of the masterpieces of his late fiction, written shortly after his religious conversion of the late 1870s.

The Death of Ivan Ilyich
First Russian edition
AuthorLeo Tolstoy
Original titleСмерть Ивана Ильича
TranslatorAylmer and Louise Maude
Constance Garnett
Rosemary Edmonds
Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky
Kirsten Lodge
LanguageRussian
GenrePhilosophical fiction
Publication date
1886
Publication placeRussia
Published in English
1902
891.733
LC ClassPG3366.S6
Original text
Смерть Ивана Ильича at Russian Wikisource
TranslationThe Death of Ivan Ilyich at Wikisource

Considered to be one of the finest examples of a novella,[1] The Death of Ivan Ilyich tells the story of a high-court judge in 19th-century Russia and his sufferings and death from a terminal illness.

Plot

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Characters

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  • Ivan Ilyich Golovin (Ilyich is a patronymic, his surname is Golovin) is a highly regarded official of the Court of Justice, described by Tolstoy as, "neither as cold and formal as his elder brother nor as wild as the younger, but was a happy mean between them—an intelligent, polished, lively, and agreeable man."[2] As the story progresses, he becomes more and more introspective and emotional as he ponders the reason for his agonizing illness and death.
  • Praskovya Fyodorovna Golovina is Ivan's unsympathetic wife. She is characterized as self-absorbed and uninterested in her husband's struggles, unless they directly affect her.
  • Gerasim is the Golovins' young butler. He takes on the role of sole comforter and caretaker during Ivan's illness.
  • Pyotr Ivanovich is Ivan's longtime friend and colleague. He studied law with Ivan and is the first to recognize Ivan's impending death.
  • Vasia is Ivan's son.
  • Lisa is Ivan's daughter.
  • Petrishchev is Lisa's fiancé.

Plot summary

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Ivan Ilyich lives a carefree life that is "most simple and most ordinary and therefore most terrible." Like everyone he knows, he spends his life climbing the social ladder. Enduring marriage to a woman whom he often finds too demanding, he works his way up to be a magistrate, thanks to the influence he has over a friend who has just been promoted, focusing more on his work as his family life becomes less tolerable.

While hanging curtains for his new home one day, he falls awkwardly and hurts his side. Though he does not think much of it at first, he begins to suffer from a pain in his side. As his discomfort grows, his behavior towards his family becomes more irritable. His wife finally insists that he visit a physician. The physician cannot pinpoint the source of his malady, but soon it becomes clear that his condition is terminal (although no diagnosis is ever stated by the physician.) Confronted with his terminal condition, Ivan attempts every remedy he can to obtain a cure for his worsening situation, until the pain grows so intense that he is forced to cease working and spend the remainder of his days in bed. Here, he is brought face to face with his mortality and realizes that, although he knows of it, he does not truly grasp it.

During the long and painful process of dying, Ivan dwells on the idea that he does not deserve his suffering because he has lived rightly. If he had not lived a good life, there could be a reason for his pain; but he has, so pain and death must be arbitrary and senseless. As he begins to hate his family for avoiding the subject of his death, for pretending he is only sick and not dying, he finds his only comfort in his peasant boy servant, Gerasim, the only person in Ivan's life who does not fear death, and also the only one who, apart from his own son, shows compassion for him. Ivan begins to question whether he has, in fact, lived a good life.

In the final days of his life, Ivan makes a clear split between an artificial life, such as his own, which masks the true meaning of life and makes one fear death, and an authentic life, the life of Gerasim. Authentic life is marked by compassion and sympathy, the artificial life by self-interest. Then "some force" strikes Ivan in the chest and side, and he is brought into the presence of a bright light. His hand falls onto his nearby son's head, and Ivan pities his son. He no longer hates his daughter or wife, but rather feels pity for them, and hopes his death will release them. In so doing, his terror of death leaves him, and as Tolstoy suggests, death itself disappears.

Interpretation

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In 1984, philosopher Merold Westphal said that the story depicts "death as an enemy which:

(1) leads us to deceive ourselves,

(2) robs us of the meaning of life, and

(3) puts us in solitary confinement."[3]

In 1997, psychologist Mark Freeman wrote:

Tolstoy's book is about many things: the tyranny of bourgeois niceties, the terrible weak spots of the human heart, the primacy and elision of death. But more than anything, I would offer, it is about the consequences of living without meaning, that is, without a true and abiding connection to one's life ... (384)[4]

Indeed, the mundane portrayal of Ivan's life coupled with the dramatization of his long and grueling battle with death seems to directly reflect Tolstoy's theories about moral living, which he largely derived during his sabbatical from personal and professional duties in 1877. In his lectures on Russian literature, Russian-born novelist and critic Vladimir Nabokov argues that, for Tolstoy, a sinful life (such as Ivan's) is moral death. Therefore, death, the return of the soul to God, is, for Tolstoy, moral life. To quote Nabokov: "The Tolstoyan formula is: Ivan lived a bad life and since the bad life is nothing but the death of the soul, then Ivan lived a living death; and since beyond death is God's living light, then Ivan died into a new life – Life with a capital L."[5]

Death permeates the narrative in a realistic and absorbing fashion, but the actual physicality of death is only present in the early chapters during Ivan's wake. Instead, the story leads the reader through a pensive, metaphysical exploration of the reason for death and what it means to truly live. Tolstoy was a man who struggled greatly with self-doubt and spiritual reflection, especially as he grew close to his own death in 1910.[6] In his book A Confession, Tolstoy writes:

No matter how often I may be told, "You cannot understand the meaning of life so do not think about it, but live," I can no longer do it: I have already done it too long. I cannot now help seeing day and night going round and bringing me to death. That is all I see, for that alone is true. All else is false.[7]

This personal epiphany caused significant spiritual upheaval in Tolstoy's life, prompting him to question the Russian Orthodox Church, sexuality, education, serfdom, etc.[8] The literature Tolstoy composed during this period is some of his most controversial and philosophical, among which falls The Death of Ivan Ilyich and other famous short stories such as The Kreutzer Sonata and The Devil. From a biographical standpoint, therefore, it is possible to interpret The Death of Ivan Ilyich as a manifestation of Tolstoy's embroilment with death and the meaning of his own life during his final years.[9] In other words, by dramatizing a particular sort of lifestyle and its unbearable decline, Tolstoy is able to impart his philosophy that success as it is judged by society, such as Ivan Ilyich's, comes at a great moral cost and if one decides to pay this cost, life will become hollow and insincere and therefore worse than death.[8]

Martin Heidegger's magnum opus, Being and Time (1927), refers to the novella as an illustration of Being towards death.[10]

English translations

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Adaptations

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Film

Opera

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Tolstoy, Leo". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Ultimate Reference Suite. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, 2014.
  2. ^ Tolstoy, Leo (1886). The Death of Ivan Ilyich. The Story and Its Writer. Ed. Ann Charters: Bedford/St. Martin's (2011). pp. 794–833.
  3. ^ Westphal, Merold (1984). God, Guilt, and Death: An Existential Phenomenology of Religion. (1984); 1987. Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press. p. 90. ISBN 0253204178.
  4. ^ Freeman, Mark (July 1997). "Death, Narrative Integrity, and the Radical Challenge of Self-Understanding: A Reading of Tolstoy's 'Death of Ivan Ilyich'". Ageing & Society. 17 (4): 373–398. doi:10.1017/S0144686X97006508. S2CID 145498926.
  5. ^ Nabokov, Vladimir Vladimirovich (1980). Lectures On Russian Literature. Harcourt. p. 237.
  6. ^ Merriman, C. D. (2007). "Biography of Leo Tolstoy". The Literature Network. Jalic Inc. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  7. ^ Tolstoy, Leo (1882). A Confession. Mineola: Dover Publications. p. 18. ISBN 0-486-43851-1.
  8. ^ a b "The Death of Ivan Ilyich: About the Author". The Big Read (2006–2011). {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  9. ^ Podgorski, Daniel (October 20, 2015). "Proximity to Death: Authentic Living and Authentic Dying in Leo Tolstoy's The Death of Ivan Ilyich". The Gemsbok. Your Tuesday Tome. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  10. ^ Kaufmann, Walter (Summer 1959). "Existentialism and Death". Chicago Review. 13 (2): 75–93. doi:10.2307/25293517. JSTOR 25293517.
  11. ^ Waxberg, Greg (February 17, 2021). "The Meaning of Life & Death – How John Young & Alan Olejniczak Reconnected to Create 'Death of Ivan Ilych' for Opera Orlando". operawire.com. Retrieved March 4, 2021.
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