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The White Guard

The White Guard (Russian: Белая гвардия) is a novel by Mikhail Bulgakov, first published in 1925 in literary journal Rossiya. It was not reprinted in the Soviet Union until 1966.

This article is about the novel. For the 2012 TV series, see The White Guard (TV series). For the Canadian documentary film, see The White Guard (film).

Author

Белая гвардия

Rossiya (serial)

1925

1971

Print

Background[edit]

The White Guard first appeared in serial form in the Soviet-era literary journal Rossiya in 1925,[1] but it was closed down before the serial was completed. The complete book was published in Paris in 1927. The censored version was published in the Soviet Union in 1966. The complete version was published in 1989.


After the first two parts of The White Guard had been published in Rossiya, Bulgakov was invited to write a version for the stage. He called the play The Days of the Turbins. It was produced at the Moscow Art Theatre, to great acclaim. According to some sources, Stalin saw it no fewer than 20 times.[1]


In fact, the play completely overshadowed the book, which was in any event virtually unobtainable in any form.

Plot[edit]

Set in Ukraine from late 1918, the novel concerns the fate of the Turbin family as the various armies of the Ukrainian War of Independence (the White Army, the Red Army, the Imperial German Army and Ukrainian nationalists) fight over the city of Kiev. Historical figures such as Pyotr Wrangel, Symon Petliura and Hetman Pavlo Skoropadsky appear as the Turbin family is caught up in the turbulent effects of the October Revolution.


The novel's characters belong to the sphere of Ukrainian and Russian intellectuals and officers in the army of Skoropadsky and participate in defending the city from the Ukrainian nationalist forces, led by Petliura, in December 1918. The character Mikhail Shpolyansky is modelled on Viktor Shklovsky.[2]


The novel contains many autobiographical elements. Bulgakov gave the younger Turbin brother some of the characteristics of his own younger brother. The description of the house of the Turbins is that of the house of the Bulgakov family in Kyiv. (It is now preserved and operated as the Mikhail Bulgakov Museum.)

Alexey Vasilyevich Turbin, a physician

Nikolai Turbin (Nikolka), his younger brother

Elena Vasilyevna Talberg, their sister

Sergei Ivanovich Talberg, her husband

Viktor Viktorovich Myshlaevsky, lieutenant

Leonid Yuryevich Shervinsky, aide to Prince Belorukov

Fyodor Nikolaievich Stepanov, nicknamed Carp (Karas)

Father Alexander

Vasily Ivanovich Lisovich, nicknamed Vasilisa

Larion Larionovich Surzhansky (Lariosik)

Colonel Nai-Turs

The White Guard

ISBN

White Guard, translated by Marian Schwartz, introduction by . New Haven: Yale University Press, 2008. ISBN 978-0-300-15145-9

Evgeny Dobrenko

The White Guard, translated by Roger Cockrell. Richmond: Alma Classics, 2012.  978-1-84749-245-6.

ISBN

Bulgakov's widow had The White Guard published in large part in the literary journal Moskva in 1966, at the end of the Khrushchev era. It was the basis for the English translation by Michael Glenny, first published in 1971, which lacks the dream flashback sections. In 2008, Yale University Press published a translation by Marian Schwartz of the complete novel, an edition that won an award.

a 1925 stage adaptation written by Bulgakov.

The Days of the Turbins

a 1976 3-part television adaptation of the play.

The Days of the Turbins (film)

a 2012 mini-series adaptation of the book.

The White Guard (TV series)

(full text in Russian), RU: Lib.

The White Guard

(in Russian and English), Get parallel translations.

The White Guard