- Hörbuch
- 2025
- 22 Min
- Strelbytskyy Multimedia Publishing
Titel
How a Muzhik Fed Two Officials
Beschreibung
How a Muzhik Fed Two Officials is not just a fable—it is a mirror, polished to a biting shine, reflecting the grotesque logic of power and servitude. In this brief yet mercilessly precise tale, Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin strips hierarchy down to its raw absurdity: those who consume and those who are consumed.
Two officials, stranded in a land without luxury, discover an ingenious solution to their predicament—one that requires neither effort nor skill on their part. Their savior? A humble muzhik, a man shaped by centuries of unquestioning toil. But necessity breeds invention, and soon, the line between duty and exploitation blurs beyond recognition.
With razor-sharp irony, Saltykov-Shchedrin lays bare a world where privilege thrives on passivity, and survival itself becomes a grotesque performance. The muzhik, nameless and tireless, embodies an entire class condemned to labor without recognition, while the officials, ludicrous in their entitlement, reveal the disturbing resilience of power, even in the face of absurdity.
Darkly comic yet chillingly relevant, How a Muzhik Fed Two Officials remains an unflinching satire on authority, dependence, and the silent mechanisms that sustain inequality. A story as brief as it is unsettling—one that lingers long after the last word.
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Produktdetails
Titel:
How a Muzhik Fed Two Officials
gelesen von:
Sprache:
EN
ISBN Audio:
4069828259591
Erscheinungsdatum:
20. März 2025
Schlagworte:
Laufzeit
22 Min
Produktart
AUDIO
Explizit:
Nein
Hörspiel:
Nein
Ungekürzt:
Ja
Über den Autor:
Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin (1826–1889)
Born into a noble but rigidly controlled family, Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin spent his early years under the shadow of strict discipline. His path led him through the Imperial Tsarskoye Selo Lyceum, the same institution that had once shaped Pushkin. But instead of poetry, Saltykov's pen turned to sharp-edged satire.
A bureaucrat by trade, he spent years serving in various provincial offices, witnessing firsthand the inefficiency, corruption, and absurdity of the Russian administrative machine. These experiences fueled his literary career, transforming him into one of Russia's most unrelenting critics of autocracy and social hypocrisy. His works—filled with grotesque allegory and biting irony—painted a system where incompetence thrived and the oppressed bore the weight of the privileged.
His appointment as the editor of Otechestvennye Zapiski brought him to the forefront of Russian literature, but also under constant scrutiny. Censorship, exile, and official pressure followed him throughout his life. Yet, his stories—whether it was a muzhik feeding parasitic officials or a provincial town drowning in its own bureaucracy—remained as unsettlingly relevant as ever.
By the time of his death in 1889, Saltykov-Shchedrin had become a literary institution in his own right, his name synonymous with satire that cut too close to the bone.