In terms of Russian influences, likely candidates are the fantastical humor of Nikolai Gogol and the unflinching moral complexity of Fyodor Dostoevsky. Its influences are many and its own subsequent influence is worldwide. The Master and Margarita is a remarkably wide-ranging novel that mixes elements of political satire, dark comedy, magical realism, Christian theology, and philosophy into a unique whole. When it eventually was published, after a concerted and determined effort by Bulgakov’s third wife, Yelena, the book became an enduring example of how powerful and vital literature can be. With censors quick to ban any work criticizing the state and its leadership, it never looked likely that The Master and Margarita could be published at the time. Ultimately, this top-down approach had grave consequences as the state over reached and Stalin’s leadership became increasingly punitive, resulting in the deaths of millions of Russians and in the erosion of individual freedom (a definite target in Bulgakov’s novel). Continuing Vladimir Lenin’s Communist project, Joseph Stalin rapidly increased the collectivization and nationalization of Russian agriculture and industry in an attempt to offer a riposte to the success of capitalism in the United States and elsewhere. Russia underwent almost unfathomable changes during Bulgakov’s lifetime, shifting from monarchic empire at the time of his birth to the Soviet era at the time of his death. Though the text never openly acknowledges that it’s set in Stalinist Russia, the clues are certainly there. The novel is consistently-and comically-critical of authorities and shows up the follies of a state exerting too much of an interfering influence on its people. The Master and Margarita was a risky book for Bulgakov to write, which ultimately explains why it wasn’t published during his lifetime. He died in the Spring of 1940 from kidney problems, almost thirty years before this novel would first be published (thanks to the efforts of Yelena). During these years he worked away on his “sunset” novel, The Master and Margarita, veering between confidence in its worth and hopelessness. In the late 1930s, Bulgakov worked as a librettist and consultant at the Bolshoi Theater, but faced the same frustrations that had plagued him before. He married his third wife, Yelena Shilovskaya, in 1932 she was the inspiration for much of the “Margarita” character in The Master and Margarita. Around 1924, Bulgakov married again by the end of the decade he almost left Russia, depressed by the poor critical reception of his work and ongoing battles with Soviet censorship. Stalin did, however, procure Bulgakov work at a small Moscow theater and even personally enjoyed Bulgakov’s The White Guard. Most of his plays in the 1920s were banned from production, considered too controversial and provocative by Stalin’s censors. In 1919, Bulgakov began writing for theater and also honed his skills by writing “feuilletons”-short and witty satirical pieces-for newspapers. He then served in the Russian Civil War, during which he contracted typhus the disease nearly killed him and made him decide to abandon his career as a doctor. Bulgakov also trained as a medical physician at Kiev University and, shortly after marrying his first wife, Tatiana Lappa, served with the Red Cross in World War One. Looking beyond the religious environment in which he grew up, Bulgakov developed an early interest in theater and did well in his education, especially drawn to literature by writers such as Gogol, Pushkin, and Dostoyevsky. Mikhail Bulgakov was one of seven children born to Afanasiy Ivanovich Bulgakov, a prominent Orthodox theologian, and Varvara Mikhailovna Bulgakov, a teacher.
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