• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Reading Novels at the Winter Palace under Nicholas I : From the Tsar to the Stokers
  • Contributor: Rebecchini, Damiano
  • imprint: Cambridge University Press, 2019
  • Published in: Slavic Review
  • Language: English
  • ISSN: 0037-6779; 2325-7784
  • Keywords: ARTICLES
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <p>How did the reading material enjoyed by Nicholas I differ from that of one of his stokers? This article focuses on the novels enjoyed by a broad spectrum of readers at the court of Nicholas I, from the tsar himself and the members of the imperial family to their servants, shedding new light on certain mechanisms of court culture. Based on archival sources such as the loan registers and the correspondence of the tsar’s and the palace staff’s libraries, this paper shows how, despite social and cultural differences, these two communities of readers actually often ended up reading the same authors and novels. What distinguished them was less their consumption of different texts than the way in which they read and interpreted the same books and, more generally, the different purpose that they attributed to reading. Based on their position at court and what they experienced in the Winter Palace—a political cabinet in which state ideology was discussed, a place in which courtiers felt suffocated by hierarchies and etiquette, or a place where servants could find otherwise unobtainable books—reading novels could constitute either a form of social control, escapism, or a school of good taste and proper behavior.</p>