
Der „Ssanin“ und seine Schicksale in Deutschland
Vorwort
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VIII
The story opens with the arrival of a controversial Russian novel in early‑1908 Germany, a work whose author is barely known here but already causing a stir back home. As literary critics scramble to assess its daring vision, the book is suddenly seized by the authorities, sparking a tense clash between the press, the publishing house, and the police. The ensuing legal battle reveals a web of investigations, confiscations in Munich and Leipzig, and a bewildering courtroom drama that pits artistic freedom against state censorship.
Listeners are drawn into the frantic atmosphere of newspaper feuilletons, heated protests from cultural societies, and the bewildering testimony of a reluctant expert who admits he cannot even read Russian. The narrative captures the palpable anxiety of a society confronting a foreign voice that threatens to upend its norms, while the fate of the novel’s copies hangs in a limbo of secrecy and intrigue. This early act sets the stage for a compelling exploration of art, law, and the power of a book to ignite public debate.
Language
de
Duration
~14 hours (848K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jens Sadowski and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net. This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.
Release date
2018-09-15
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1878–1927
Known for fiction that shocked and fascinated early 20th-century readers, he wrote with a stark, unsentimental eye about desire, violence, and moral unrest. His best-known novel, Sanin, made him one of the most controversial Russian writers of his day.
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