← Back to search
Dubrovsky
Content levels
ViolenceNot rated
Sexual contentModerate
LanguageNot rated
Trigger warnings
Not yet taggedPositive tags
Not yet taggedTropes
Not yet taggedThemes
Class Differences
Synopsis
In The Tales of Ivan Belkin (1830), Dubrovsky (1833) and The Captain’s Daughter (1836), Pushkin laid the foundation of Russian realistic prose, and established its democratic tendencies. Dubrovsky gives a sweeping picture of the life and habits of the landed gentry in Russia in the first quarter of the 19th century. The tragedy of the Dubrovsky family, ruined by the rich landowner Troyekurov, is unfolded against a background of peasant risings, called forth by the oppressive rule of the serfholders, and the cruelty and tyranny of the landlords and corrupt officials of the time.