Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

The Fool (novel)

1880 novel by Raffi From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Fool (novel)
Remove ads

The Fool (Armenian: Խենթը, Khent’ë, Armenian pronunciation: [χɛntʰə]) is an 1880 Armenian-language novel by the Armenian writer Raffi, one of the best-known novels by one of Armenia's greatest novelists.[1] Set during the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78, the plot tells a romance set against the background of the divided Armenian nation.

Quick Facts Author, Original title ...
Remove ads
Remove ads

Publication

The novel was first serialized in the Tiflis newspaper Mshak in 1880, then published as a separate edition in Shusha in 1881.[2]

Setting and structure

The novel is set in three districts near the border between the Russian and Ottoman Empires: Bayazit, Alashkert, and Vagharshapat.

The novel opens with four fast-paced chapters describing the Turkish siege of Bayazit, an historic episode from the last Russo-Turkish war.[3] After a harrowing depiction of the battle, its outcome is left in suspense as chapter five suddenly shifts the focus to an earlier time to tell the story of a village in Alashkert and a romance caught in the treacherous sociopolitical crosscurrents of the war. The succeeding twenty-nine chapters present a rich ethnographic account of country life in this particular region of Western Armenia, while depicting the ideological themes that dominated Armenian life at the time through a set of powerful, competing actors. The novel concludes in Vagharshapat (Etchmiadzin).

Remove ads

Translations

The Fool has been translated into English three times: by Jane Wingate in 1950;[4] by Donald Abcarian in 2000;[5] and by Kimberley McFarlane and Beyon Miloyan in 2020.[6] It has been translated into French,[7] Russian (twice),[8][9] Spanish,[10] and other languages.[2]

References

Loading content...
Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads