Life's Subjections: Changes To The Ways Of Life Found In Tolstoy's War And Peace
War and Peace is a truly epic novel in that details a number of important themes as well as major events in the lives of its characters. In this respect it actually uncovers some of the most major events that are bound to take place throughout a person's life -- birth, death, marriage, divorce, war and peace. What makes this particular novel so compelling is the fact that it largely depicts these life altering events through the fates of a couple of aristocratic Russian families during the time in which the usurper Napoleon Bonaparte is wreaking havoc on the European continent in the early part of the 19th century. As such, there is a certain romantic quality to this tale and to the life-altering events it depicts of people who in some cases are noble personages and in others simply represent the upper echelon of Russian society around this time frame. Therefore, it is of critical importance to witness the perception of life that many of the Russian aristocratic characters in this novel perceive during these events that are transformative, to say the least. In many ways, the invasion of Napoleon's army and the eventual occupation of Russia that the French army was able to effect signified an end of the conventional ways of life as many of these rich Russians depicted in the novel saw it. For some, the end of their lives was symbolized by a loss of social eminence, land, and capital goods that were associated with their families for long periods of time. For others, the end of their lives was symbolized by the loss of institutions that were regarded as both sacred and fundamental to life itself (such as marriage). For still more others, the end of their lives took place in a much more literal sense and was created by the presence of death. In any case, the "character to the times" (Tolstoy 126) was changing. The major thematic issue covered in War and Peace is the breakdown of life as it was known at the time, a fact which symbolized by Napoleon's invasion, religious connotations and denotations, and the conception of love and marriage.
Perhaps the most tangible representation of life as the aristocracy depicted in Tolstoy's novel was known for was Napoleon's advances across Western Europe and which inevitably brought him to Russia. What was perhaps most frightening about Napoleon's military progress was his "control of events" (Southgate 235) and the fact that he was perceived as bringing about a new order that would transcend virtually all aspects of life. Specifically, with Napoleon having conquered all of Europe, he would function as a sole tyrant of this part of the world -- a fact which was virtually inconceivable to those who had the most to lose from such a reality, the wealthy. As such, it is not surprising that the many wealthy Russian characters in Tolstoy's work viewed Napoleon not only as socially and militarily repugnant, but as morally repugnant as well. The following quotation which is found at the beginning of this novel in which Anna Pavlovna Scherer addresses one of the princes of Russia readily confirms this fact. "…so Genoa and Lucca are now just family estates of the Buonapartes. But I warn you, if you don't tell me that this means war, if you still try to defend the infamies and horrors perpetuated by that Antichrist -- I really believe he is Antichrist" (Tolstoy). The diction in this passage indicates the moral gravity which Scherer attributes to Napoleon and implies the wide sweeping, life-altering changes she believes his presence is capable of. There was an "underlying chaos, of which only subsequent rationalizations can make sense" (Southgate 235) that partly terrified those who lived through Napoleon's time. It is highly significant that Scherer describes a man with military and global ambition in religious terms, and extremely disparaging ones at that. By referring to Napoleon as the "Antichrist," Scherer is suggesting that he has the possibility of dooming all of existence. Thus, it is clear that she believes that his military actions will bring about the end of life as she knows it -- indeed she seems to think that his actions will engender the end of life itself. Tolstoy employs religious diction to illustrate the fact that one of the major themes of this novel is the eradication of life as it was known at the time.
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