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This essay is an attempt to apply some of the notions of ecology to the imagined worlds of Dostoevsky and Tolstoy. The premise is that each writer’s choice of physical settings has an important effect on his less tangible themes and concepts. The effects examined in this essay are not primarily social and conventional (systems of meaning), but rather quasi-physical. Tolstoy tends to set his stories along horizontal (though often somewhat irregular) planes, whereas Dostoevsky relies more on vertical planes (walls). These tendencies are reversed in scenes with a strong religious component, as if the authors required a foreign spatial orientation to convey otherworldly themes.
June 2003: Born in Tucson, Arizona, Tim Langen is Co-editor of Eight Twentieth-Century Russian Plays; author of The Stony Dance: Unity and Gesture in Andrey Bely's "Petersburg" (forthcoming). Current fields of interest: Russian literary and intellectual history.