Fathers and SonsIvan TurgenevOs Fathers and Sons explores generational differences and their tragic consequences. The story centers around Arkady and Bazarov, two young men who return home from college to a world that has remained static. They have changed but must now redefine old relationships, both their friendship with one another and their relationships with their fathers. The main conflict of the novel is between the nihilistic Bazarov, who espouses a strictly materialistic attitude toward life, and Pavel Petrovich Kirsanov, an uncle of ArkadyOs, who upholds the aristocratic tradition in the face of BazarovOs ridicule. |
Contents
CHAPTER I | 7 |
CHAPTER XIV | 60 |
CHAPTER XV | 64 |
CHAPTER XVI | 67 |
CHAPTER XVII | 74 |
CHAPTER XVIII | 82 |
CHAPTER XIX | 86 |
CHAPTER XX | 91 |
CHAPTER XXI | 98 |
CHAPTER XXII | 109 |
CHAPTER XXIII | 113 |
CHAPTER XXIV | 118 |
CHAPTER XXV | 130 |
CHAPTER XXVII | 144 |
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Common terms and phrases
afraid Anna Sergyevna answered Arkady answered Bazarov Arina Vlasyevna Arkady Nikolaitch Arkady's asked Arkady asked Bazarov began brother cried dear doctor door drawing-room dress droshky Dunyasha eau de cologne Enyusha Evdoksya everything expression eyes face fancy father Fedosya feeling felt Fenitchka friends frogs garden gave gentlemen glance hair hand head heard heart horses Katerina Sergyevna Katya Kirsanov kissed Kukshin lady laugh lips listen live look Madame Odintsov Maryino Matvy Ilyitch mazurka Mitya morning Moscow never nihilist Nikolai Petrovitch observed Arkady observed Bazarov once Pavel Petrovitch peasant Petersburg Piotr princess Prokofitch repeated Bazarov round Russian seemed silence Sitnikov sitting Slavophil smile sofa sort suddenly suppose talk tell there's thing thought Timofeitch to-day took trovitch turned uncon understand Vassily Ivanovitch voice walked What's whispered wife woman word Yevgeny Vassilyitch young