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Nikolai Dobrolyubov : ウィキペディア英語版
Nikolay Dobrolyubov

Nikolay Alexandrovich Dobrolyubov (; February 5, 1836 – November 29, 1861) was a Russian literary critic, journalist, poet and revolutionary democrat.
==Biography==
Dobrolyubov was born in Nizhny Novgorod, where his father was a priest. He attended school at a seminary from 1848 to 1853. He was considered a prodigy by his teachers in the seminary, and at home he spent most of his time in his father's library, reading books on science and art. By the age of thirteen he was writing poetry and translating verses from Roman poets such as Horace.〔The Encyclopedia Americana, Vol 9, The Encyclopedia Americana Corporation, NY, 1918.〕 In 1853 he went to St. Petersburg and entered the University. Following the deaths of both of his parents, in 1854, he assumed responsibility for his brothers and sisters. He worked as a tutor and translator in order to support his family and continue his studies. His heavy workload and the stress of his position had a negative effect on his health.〔Russian Literature, Peter Kropotkin, McClure Phillips, NY, 1905.〕
During his years at the University he organized an underground democratic circle, issued a manuscript newspaper, and led the student's struggle against the reactionary University administration. His poems ''On the 50th Birthday of N. I. Grech'' (1854), and ''Ode on the Death of Nicholas I'' (1855), copies of which were distributed outside the University, showed his hostile attitude toward the autocracy.〔〔The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc.〕
In 1856 he met the influential critic Nikolay Chernyshevsky, and the publisher Nikolay Nekrasov. He soon began publishing his works in Nekrasov's popular journal The Contemporary. In 1857, after his graduation from the University, he joined the staff of The Contemporary as head of the critical department. Over the next four years he produced several volumes of important critical essays. One of his best known works was his essay ''What is Oblomovism?'', based on his analysis of the novel ''Oblomov'' by Ivan Goncharov.〔〔〔Anthology of Russian Literature, Part 2, Leo Weiner, G.P. Putnam's Sons, NY, 1903.〕
In May 1860, at the insistence of friends, he went abroad in an effort to treat incipient tuberculosis, which had been exacerbated by overwork. He lived in Germany, Switzerland, France, and for more than six months in Italy, where the national liberation movement, led by Giuseppe Garibaldi, was taking place. The situation in Italy provided him with material for a series of articles.〔
He returned to Russia in July 1861. He died in November 1861, at the age of twenty five, from acute tuberculosis. He was buried next to Vissarion Belinsky at Volkovo Cemetery in St. Petersburg.〔

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