¶ … Death of Ivan Ilych by Leo Tolstoy. Specifically it will contain an analysis of alienation and the city in the short novella. Most people think Tolstoy is analyzing life and death in this story, but there are references to other aspects of society, as well. Tolstoy's use of symbolism in the story indicates how alienated Ivan really is from the world, and how alienated bourgeois society is from each other.
From the very opening of this short story, Tolstoy uses imagery to convey the idea of alienation and isolation. He uses the image of a stark coffin-lid, standing alone in an entryway, to give the reader a feeling of how isolated and alone Ivan was throughout his life. He writes, "Leaning against the wall in the hall downstairs near the cloak-stand was a coffin-lid covered with cloth of gold, ornamented with gold cord and tassels, that had been polished up with metal powder" (Tolstoy 365). This lonely symbol illustrates how disconnected all the characters are from each other, and how alienated they are from the real world. Even in death, they are cold, calculating, and selfish, thinking only about their own needs and wants, rather than the life of the man who has just died. This indicates Tolstoy's dim view of society, especially the bourgeois, and it shows how he felt people alienate themselves from each other.
Throughout his life, Ivan alienates and distances himself from anything unpleasant. Tolstoy illustrates this when he shows how Ivan attempts to "escape" his wife during her pregnancy. He writes, "At first Ivan Ilych hoped to escape from the unpleasantness of this state of affairs by the same easy and decorous relation to life that had served him heretofore: he tried to ignore his wife's disagreeable moods" (Tolstoy 376). He wants everything to be "pleasant" and "right" in his world, and cannot deal with discord or any kind of negativity. He has an unusual view of the world, and because of it, he cannot relate to anyone but himself. He is selfish and self-adsorbed, and that is Tolstoy's point. Later Tolstoy writes about playing bridge, his favorite activity, "He acknowledged that whatever disagreeable incident happened in his life, the pleasure that beamed like a ray of light above everything else was to sit down to bridge with good players" (Tolstoy 384-385). Again, when something unpleasant happens, he does not deal with it, he simply alienates himself from it. All of his friends are the same say, judging from their reaction to his death. They think, "Each one thought or felt, 'Well, he's dead but I'm alive!' But the more intimate of Ivan Ilych's acquaintances, his so-called friends, could not help thinking also that they would now have to fulfill the very tiresome demands of propriety by attending the funeral service and paying a visit of condolence to the widow" (Tolstoy 363-364). No one seems to really care about Ivan's death, another clue to their total alienation from one another.
Tolstoy pits the bourgeois of the city against the peasants of the country, and again, the bourgeois show themselves to be selfish and self-adsorbed, while the peasants are shown as more caring and human. For example, the peasant boy Gerasim is the only person who really seems to care about Ivan at the end of his life. Ivan's wife is only concerned with money, his friends are only concerned about their own ambitions, but Gerasim really seems to care about Ivan and his impending death. He writes, "Gerasim was a clean, fresh peasant lad, grown stout on town food and always cheerful and bright. At first the sight of him, in his clean Russian peasant costume, engaged on that disgusting task embarrassed Ivan Ilych" (Tolstoy 399). Gerasim, raised in the country, is the complete opposite of city dweller Ivan. He is healthy, hearty, unafraid of death, and completely content with his life.
Gerasim, beneath notice for all of Ivan's bourgeois friends, is one of the kindest people in the story, and Ivan begins to realize it. He continues, "Gerasim smiled again and turned to leave the room. But Ivan Ilych felt his presence such a comfort that he did not want to let him go" (Tolstoy 400). The values of the city and country dweller are different, Tolstoy seems to be saying, and the values of this country peasant are far higher and nobler than the wealthy city dwellers who surround Ivan.
Another illustration of Tolstoy's view of...
…there was light-heartedness, friendship, and hope…they were the memories of a love for a woman. Then all became confused and there was still less of what was good; later on again there was still less that was good, and the further he went the less there was. His marriage, a mere accident, then the disenchantment that followed it... (Tolstoy, 1886, 29-30). He realizes that all the while he thought he was
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