Andrew Barratt
Autor von Between Two Worlds: A Critical Introduction to The Master and Margarita
Werke von Andrew Barratt
Getagged
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Barratt elevates his analysis on the three pillars of historical context, structure and interpretation and uses them to provide multiple dimensions in which to view what is actually on the printed page. Other critics have characterized M&M as a Menippean satire, or as a medieval mystery play, shortcuts attempting to capture the whole work in a single phrase. Does this help us any in understanding the book itself, however? Lesley Milne quotes the critic, V. Lakshin, in dismissing the former, then proceeds to promote the latter herself. Great literature cannot be so contained. Barratt examines M&M as autobiography, as satire, as allusion, but it is none of these in its entirety. As he says, it is a mistake to take the part for the whole.
Barratt poses fundamental questions, who is Woland and why has he come to Moscow, and, similarly, who is Yeshua and why has he come to Yershalaim? A host of other questions ensue from these two, but it is not the particular answers themselves which are revealing. If you will, it is the process of revealing that is revealing, for we do not come to a single answer to these questions. As we read farther into the novel, and as we re-read on subsequent occasions, our answers to these questions change as deceptions are cast aside and deeper meanings revealed.
We suspect, from the epigraph, that the Woland who appears at Patriarch's Ponds is Mephistopheles and may mildly scorn Berlioz and Bezdomny for not realizing this immediately. But Woland is not Mephistopheles, not entirely, perhaps not at all, the poodle motif notwithstanding. More and more of Woland is revealed as we read further, a process that Barratt calls a 'progressive unfolding'. The demonic doings in Part 1 give way to a divine plan in Part 2 and our perception of Woland, the prime mover, changes from devil to celestial agent. In the Epilogue, the last folds are unfolded, and we see Woland's retinue, Koroviev, Behemoth, and Azazello, revealed as they truly are. Woland also is revealed, but what do we see? It is Margarita who looks on him, but Margarita would have been unable to say what the reins of his horse were made of and thought they were possibly chains of moonlight and that the horse itself was just a lump of darkness, the horse's mane a cloud, and the rider's spurs white blurs of stars. Woland isn't seen at all, and even his horse is just a shadow in the night sky. The last revelation of Woland reveals--nothing. What is inside the innermost matryoshka doll? Some mysteries must remain.
Yeshua brings his simple, but powerful, belief in the goodness of mankind to Yershalaim and predicts that the kingdom of truth and justice will come--an anarchic kingdom where authorities such as Caesar (and by extension, Stalin) will be superfluous. This truth was buried in the gospels underneath dogmas more accommodating to the entrenched powers. This truth emerged in the Master's novel, but was again suppressed, this time by the literary authorities lead by Berlioz. Bezdomny may return to the story after his sojourn as historian. But we have learned to recognize this 'progressive unfolding' from reading Bulgakov, and can perhaps similarly discover the truth in other works which tap into this same Muse. To discover the story behind the story, thanks to Barratt.… (mehr)