British literature-I will die for honour. American literature-I will die for freedom. French literature-I will die for love. Russian literature -I will die.
Oh, goosebumps...never heard of such definitions of spirits. How true though . I always say - smth kills me every day, it can anything if it evokes a strong emotion, I die. Anything as long as your heart skips the beat...it's worth dying for.
Being an Iranian, I personally believe Persian poets such as Rumi, Khayam, Ferdowsi, Saadi and many others are among great literary individuals of the world. Please tell me if you have read any Persian poetry 🌼
I love both Russian and Latin American literature. My personal favorites are: “Crime and Punishment,” “Brother Kamarazov,” “The Idiot” by Dostoyevsky. Another genius writer of Russian literature is Turgenev who also has written fantastic novels such as “Fathers and sons,” and “First Love.” From Latin America Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Mario Vargas Llosa and Julio Cortázar are phenomenal writers. As a Latin American myself who has lived abroad I would say Latin American literature resonates a lot with Russian literature, authors love to denounce both social and psychological issues. Some books from Latin American authors I recommend are “100 years of solitude,” “The feast of the Goat,” and “Hopscotch.” (They are listed in the same order respective the previously mentioned authors)
You mention "The Idiot." Truly an underappreciated and undermentioned masterpiece IMO. "Crime and Punishment" and "Brothers Karamazov" usually get all the glory.
I love russian and german lit, but I’d say that everyone should read Brazillian Literature. “To the worm that first gnawed at the cold flesh of my cadaver I dedicate as a fond remembrance these posthumous memoirs.” Original: “Ao verme que primeiro roeu as frias carnes do meu cadáver dedico como saudosa lembrança estas memórias póstumas” Machado de Assis
I really enjoy German literature, though my exposure is rather limited: a bit of Hesse, Mann, and Fontaine (as well as some medieval stories like Parzival). Currently reading a compilation of Tolstoy's works and greatly enjoying them. I haven't read any French literature at all yet, which is something I definitely need to correct.
I love Hesse myself, and Nietzsche has been a solid favourite that I've reread for years now. I'm happy to hear you're enjoying Tolstoy - VERY interesting man.
Michael, how nice that you should German writers. It’s my maternal tongue, so until few years ago, I’d read only books from D/CH/A . Thomas Mann, my favourite long time, all read and reread. Heinrich Mann’s “Henri Quatre” a time travel, most colourful. Theodor Fontane: you find marvellous audiobooks read by Gert Westphal: Effi Briest and Stechlin! From the swiss authors I read repeatedly the books of Max Frisch, “Gantenbein” probably my favourite, and his diaries. Here on RUclips in snippets though the famous Faust I from Goethe with Gruendgens as Mephisto. Gruendgens was the son-in-law of Thomas Mann. (To add a bit of gossip). South America has very legible authors. Ubaldo Ribeiro : viva o povo brasileiro. And everything really from Vargas Llosa, Peru. I’m not into ranking. I leave that to sports rather than to arts. And also my charts would change quicker than the Premier League.
The 19th century is the golden age of Russian literature. Number 1 on this list is Alexander Pushkin, Number 2 is Mikhail Lermontov, and then a whole list of remarkable classics of Russian literature Nikolai Gogol, Leo Tolstoy, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Anton Chekhov, Ivan Turgenev, Ivan Goncharov, playwright Alexander Ostrovsky and many others,
I read French literature in French I read Spanish literature in Spanish English literature in English Unfortunately I don’t know Russian so I read it in Spanish Or German etc When your read in the original language I think is the best
Wow! Great video/article! I myself, don´t think there is a country with best literature, but I like knowing where the author is from, like you say, you get a glimpse of a culture and that is very enriching.
I am just getting into the classics in the past couple of years, but I feel much like the privileged class of the old, we are fortunate that a cornucopia of literary art is available at our fingertips. Rather than ranking the great books I am just thankful to experience the plethora of stories from across borders and epochs and gain a semblance of humanity through its arts.
I’m in a Russian phase right now. Brazil had a hold on me, French still does, but I always come back to English / American Lit. Tolstoy is an experience, but Cormac McCarthy’s new book is a must-read.
I am an Iranian by birth. I know much about Iranian literature but as great works of art in Persian have not been translated in English or French they are not very well known in the world . Most of the readers in the west are , more or less, familiar with Rumi or Khayyam . However, there are wonderful poets and writers such as Ferdowsi whose great epic masterpiece The Shahnameh is somewhat equal to the works of Homer. Modern authors have fantastic books, too. I will be very happy if you can talk about such works and in case you need help I will be delighted to be of help.
I'm an English major, my mother tongue is arabic, and every few months I get this sorrowful feeling of having neglected the Arabic language. so a few years ago I've decided to read 5 arabic books a year, and they have never failed me.
@@BenjaminMcEvoy Absolutely, my list contains: Seasons of Migration to the North by Tayyeb Salih The Cairo Trilogy by Naguib Mahfouz Men in the Sun by Ghassan Kanafani The Blue Lanterns by Hanna Mina Granada by Radwa Ashur Every time I read in Arabic it reminds me of how beautiful and diverse the language is. I love your channel btw, keep up the good work
Serbian literature all the way. From Miloš Crnjanski, Petar Petrović Njegoš, Ivo Andrić, Dobrica Ćosić, Branko Nušić to Milorad Pavić. All original, dark, hard, real and beautiful, definitely worth a read!
I would say Russin and French because they revolutionised literature not in the western or English speaking world but around the globe. English literature mainly was revolutionary in the English speaking world which was very advanced due it's progressing industry epoch, therefore it reached many people and became popular not because of the ideas it held (although some English writers had written very intellectual pieces) but because it was easy to bring to everyone since most of the people started learning English by then in order to communicate. But everyone has their own preference for literature, being born as a Russian speaking person I of course grew on Russian literature and always found it to be too rough and too realistic and dramatic and philosophical for my taste, as if I was about to die any second now and I need to gasp all the human knowledge before that. Therefore, as a child I liked the French one which was non the less realistic but not as brutal as Russian. Currently my most favourite is 20th century American and especially everything that has to do with slavery and citizen war, but I know tastes change and so I am not expecting to praise it now. I also enjoy Hebrew/ Israeli literature but it is only because I live there and no one will ever understand it unless they live in Israel so I will never recommend it...
i suggest that in prose literature there is before and after Dickens, everyone was influenced by him - or reacted against him. A revolutionary writer in form and content.
Oh yes!! I'm in love with all of these writers. Proust and Hugo alone are enough for me to want to learn the language. And Rimbaud got me into poetry back in my teenage years :)
Thank yoy for this video :) I believe it is a matter of upbringing and exposure ....I agree that one can't talk about world literature because there are thousands of languages .... there are literatures that haven't been translated into English or any other major language .... the literatures that I have been exposed to ....in my opinion Persian poetry is unparalleled .... so is Urdu and Kashmiri Poetry..... English prose including fiction is matchless ... If I have to rank I will do it like this: 1. Persian Poetry and Urdu Poetry 2. English/ Russian/ French prose and fiction 3. Kashmiri Poetry PS: This is based on my upbringing and exposure ....
My favorite literature is Russian British American (XX century) Latin American Spanish I want to know more about Asian and African literature. I have complicated relationship with Japanese literature. I'm not sure why exactly. The major tune of the books I read doesn't coincide with me as a personality. Maybe the trouble is in my wrong choice of books or authors
Contemporary Russian literature is fab too. Sorokin, Pelevin, Shishkin, Tolstaya, Prilepin, Vodolazkin, Akunin. So so many. Travel, learn other languages, everywhere is wonderful.
Support with both hands. Lots of modern Russian authors who really deserve attention. In addition to already mentioned Guzel Yakhnin, Sergey Belyakov. I' d also add not modern but well known Zamyatin, Gorky and Nabokov, Sholokhov and Bulgakov, Kaverin who are my fav. authors of the XX century. But Konstatnin Paustovsky is the very top of my list
It's like flavors of icecream. They're all good if you keep an open mind. If someone you love recommends a book - you should feel like you're in good hands and read it.
Excellent analysis - I have subscribed. My own vote would be for the 19th century French writers - Hugo, Dumas, Flaubert, Zola, Maupassant etc, although there are some great English, German and Russian novels written in the same era.
I delved into Icelandic literature. I was astonished how quirky it was. Fairly short and easy to digest, the fairytale aspect of the stories had me spellbound.
Have you read Independent People by Halldor Laxness? The only Icelander to win a Nobel prize in any category. It’s incredible. Its Iceland’s grapes of wrath. The end had me weeping unlike any book I’ve read.
I disagree on the last part. Liking certain literature is not necessary about liking a country of its origin. For example, I always enjoyed American XXth century sci-fi literature, but I genuanly dislike American society and their perception of the world in general. At the time they just happend to be good at the genre I by some reason like. Russian authors were good at sci-fi too, but they often were either too optimistic or too serious and pretentious (for my taste at least).
Really insightful comment, thank you! I believe I agree with you. When I lived in Japan, I met a ton of foreigners who came to the country because they loved Japanese books (or anime or manga) and then found they didn't like the actual experience of living in the culture. So the discrepancy is very real!
Right now I am totally enamored with Russian literature... I have added a few Dostoevsky books to my Audible collection, listening to The Brothers Karamazov (P& V). Out of the public library I have P & V translations of Chekhov short stories, The Master and Margarita & War and Peace. I've only had the War and Peace for a couple days-: so far I've only read Pevear's introduction and the very first chapter. The other stuff I'm taking one or two chapters at a time- and a short story by Chekhov at a time. To leave Russia for a moment I read a story from Dubliners or a chapter from a Tale of Two Cities.
I do have a bachelor's degree in Dutch literature and I must say, it's really amazing. Not totally objective and neutral of course, but it's so diverse. From 13th century works like 'Karel ende Elegast' to the big three of 20th century W.F. Hermans, Harry Mulisch and Gerard Reve, you should really dive into it!
I'm French and although I've studied texts from the canon at school I'm still completely baffled by the 16th century. Especially Montaigne, but even Rabelais is almost unreadable today for several reasons: context - the religious wars. Without a clear understanding of the brutal savagery of the conflict between the Catholics and the Protestants you can't figure out what is at stakes in the satire of Rabelais and the philosophy of Montaigne. Language: in the 16th century Italian had become the de facto secular lingua franca over Europe thanks to the Italian poets and scientists of the Renaissance. So all the writers, both in prose and verse, wanted to write in the most sophisticated ways possible. And compared to Montaigne, Shakespeare is a limerick writer (only regarding the language, not the content). Things improved in the 17th century thanks to the creation of l'Académie Française by Richelieu, but it almost killed poetry for two centuries. But the French language reached a level of clarity even beyond Latin that would allow the Enlightenment philosophers to invent a proper philosophy of right that led to the creation of the modern state.
This was such a great video. I’m American with my Master’s degree in British Literature and I have to say it is the nearest and dearest and best to my heart. But I love French literature (The Count of Monte Christo, The Three Musketeers) I love Russian literature as well. I think you say it best that different literature takes us to different worlds and perhaps, because of that the literature that is incomparable to any of us is the world we best find ourselves home in.
I'm a Bosnian economy student i grew up reading german and russian philosophy,but the american post modernism is by far my favourite literature, great video btw.
As a Chinese , I personally recommend you which is one of the Four Great Classic Novels of Chinese literature. And I also recommend all LuXun's novels and essays. Sometimes I feel sad that we can't fully understand and experience other country's culture because of the difference between the languages. So I work hard to study English, forcing myself to read the English original edition. Fortunately It's hard but worthy. And your videos help me a lot, thank you.
I feel like each country has their own reasons why their literature is fantastic. My personal favorite is Russian literature. But I also love Faulkner and Hemingway. The novel Musashi by Yoshikawa is fantastic and another favorite and Mishima is also fantastic. Cervantes, Jorge Borges and Roberto Bolano are favorites from South America. But they all have there own amazing differences.
You are uttering truisms. My favorite literature is what Deuluze calls “ minor literature. He write about a Kafka, I would add a Borges and Cortazar. In addition to Joyce who is excellent, Italy Svebo. To me a single story by Joyce is worth all of Ulysses. This is because even a great writer can write encyclopedic works and also minor works that are works of genius.
Have you read Lermontov? He was right after Pushkin. In his short life - he was killed at the duel at the age of 26 - he achieved a lot. Tolstoy himself said that had he lived to a ripe old age, none of them would know if there was any point in writing at all (meaning that in comparison with Lermontov they would all look too insignificant).
Ben, you are so wonderful. I cannot wait to introduce you to my grandson in a few years. He will get the wonderful stuff I am only getting now. Oh, I'm sure someone has already told you, but Onegin is pronounced o NYAY gen.
Thanks for the video! The only book by Tolstoy I've read is What is Art (reviewed it too!), and I think by that point, Tolstoy was in full on retreat mode, and wasn't interested in being part of the general media/art scene anymore. I felt that he wasn't criticizing things because they weren't up to the level he wanted, but because they challenged his increasingly cloistered worldview. By the end he believed the only worthwhile thing he'd written were some late devotional short stories, and the rest could burn, haha. Still, I'd definitely like to get into some of his novels, and I have a P & V translation of Anna Karenina waiting for me! Hoping to get around to some Kenyan, Peruvian, and French authors this year or next as well! :)
My favorite literature comes from England, Japan, Czech, Germany and the US. There are of course countries which I have read very little from and I know that I need to check out, like Russia and France.
You are talking about the evolution of literature. Art, music, architecture seems to have parallels literature. Your enthusiasm is compelling, what day do you have off?
By the way I rarely hear from english speakers about Theodore Dreiser though here in Russia he's considered to be one of the best American novelists. My special thanks to him for his American tragedy❤
When it comes to Mystery and Ghost stories, the British writers are unsurpassed. I have read tales of Genji and it absolutely fascinated me. I had no idea of the sophistication and elegance of the culture in that time period. Their society was as complex as any European. We learn a lot when we explore writing from other cultures and other times.
Nice one, Anna. I love your taste in literature :) English and French Literature are great, but your home also boasts a huge array of incredible works of literature too 🇧🇷
@@BenjaminMcEvoy Thank you! Yes, our literature is amazing, but not many English speakers are aware of it. I've recently fallen in love with "Time and the Wind", by Erico Veríssimo. And "Senhora: Profile of a Woman", by José de Alencar, has been one of my favorites for as long as I can remember. I don't really like Machado, because I was forced to read it too early at school, but I haven't given up on him yet; his works are on my shelf right now, waiting for my next attempt.
It's sad how often great Canadian literature is overlooked. I adore Canadian literature for its diversity of voices, with Indigenous writers, people of colour and women all well represented. Some of my personal favourites include (in no particular order): Indian Horse, Richard Wagamese Coming Through Slaughter, Michael Ondaatje The Handmaid's Tale, Margaret Atwood The poetry of E. Pauline Johnson Anne of Green Gables series, Lucy Maud Montgomery Life of Pi, Yann Martel Such is My Beloved, Morley Callaghan The Deptford Trilogy, Robertson Davies The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz, Mordecai Richler The Lives of Girls and Women, Alice Munro Monkey Beach, Eden Robinson The Stone Angel, Margaret Laurence The Jade Peony, Wayson Choy The Temptations of Big Bear, Rudy Wiebe A Fine Balance, Rohinton Mistry
I would say the country of your origin that brought forth your Mother tongue in written literature. That aha moment that you experience as a young reader, when what you've just read, corresponds with the language you know and speak best. The moment when reading becomes meaningful and your lifelong journey with reading starts. You might've had scaffolded aid along the path, facilitated by a passionate teacher, or perhaps a home where books were made available to you, either bought or loaned from the library. Thereafter, you can expand, read widely, from literature collected from all over the world, translated into the language that comes naturally to you ..
Ronald Firbank actually got there before Joyce, in a few exquisite short ultra camp comedies written during the Great War. Hence, so many of the great writers of the 30s were glad to mention that they were influenced by Firbank, but didn’t rate Joyce so highly.
Sorry for necroposting but come on. The French clearly had a huge impact, and so did the Italian and German literatures (to cite a few examples, everything from Russeau, Dumas, Sartre or Camus, everything from Goethe, a lot of stuff from Manzoni, Pirandello, Pasolini, Umberto Eco) or even famous Nobel winners like Fernando Pessoa and Saramago. I'm always amazed how few books from around the world English-speaking readers read, because as a European nearly half or more of the books I read are either in english or translated from other languages. Heck I'm 18, it's not like I read a lot of books in my life but I tend to differentiate a lot. But I also have a lot of difficulties with russian literature, I can't stand Dostoevsky's style at all and I hate that I can't enjoy it lol
I agree impossible to really choose from any objective or intellectual standpoint as how can you compare. Beautiful to visit all over the world through literature. So I would stick with my homeland, ireland, as my heart is connected to the land and stories here. We have Joyce, seamus heany, beckett, wilde, Sean o Casey, yeats, maeve binchy, Cs lewis and more I'm sure. Even other writers with Irish roots like Jonathan swift and bram stoker. Even the brontes' dad lived just outside my hometown so the Irish is in their blood too. Also living here I can see how literature and storytelling is entwined in the landscape and alive in the culture, even outside of 'great' literature, with Irish myths, storytellers at the pubs and cultural events sharing local folklore, we have children's writers on the scene today such as oliver jeffers and the prolific Martin waddell, the immense creativity and storytelling performances at our local theatres, and even stuff like Lisa magee's screen play 'derry girls' which has been dubbed by some as modern classic and enjoyed by many across the world.
I love it too. Sometimes I get a little bit annoyed with questions like this. There are so many ways to have a debate - like limiting the discussions to the best novels from every country or the best short stories or poetry. The reasons that Russian was seemingly slow to arrive is interesting it happened around the same time that American literature arrived - even though people were in Russia for centuries longer than the in the US. When the Russians got big it was huge - the novelists, short stories, the music and dance were incredibly influential There was a time when the French just couldn't get enough of Russian culture. Ironically for a long time the upper classes in Russia only spoke French. They thought Russian was only for the serfs and the help - people really thought you had to use French to express ideas and beauty. Pushkin was raised to speak French but one of the maids who was Russian read to him and sang songs for him. This served him well because he knew French culture so well he was able to understand how to find the classical beauty of the Russian language and culture and could show everyone because he understood both cultures so well.
The impressive thing about English and French literature is the depth. The literature of England really begins with Chaucer in the 1380s. You then have 600 years in which poets and writers in England are influenced by those who went before. So Shakespeare is influenced by Chaucer, Milton by Shakespeare, Blake by Milton, Wordsworth by Blake, and so on right up to Larkin and Geoffrey Hill. It’s a single body of literature rooted in one small place.
Not saying that English Literature is the best - although the influence of Dickens on Tolstoy and Dostoevsky is profound. I don't think it's possible to work this out unless you've read every book in the world. I'll put my neck out here though - I think that England has produced the funniest literature - Dickens, Waugh, Kingsley Amis and P.G Wodehouse for example. No one will have the nerve to doubt that Tolstoy is great, although you would be hard pushed to find any laughs! Gogol is very funny though, similar to Dickens in that sense.
American literature: I will die stuck in traffic! Asian literature (general): I will die in shame for dishonoring my family name! Australian literature: I will die on the other side of the world for abstract geopolitical reasons that I have no connection to! Brazilian literature: I will die for my ex-wife's second husband's third ex-fiancee who once starred in a forgotten soap opera on local tv but has since moved in with her neighbor's best friend! Canadian literature: I will die in the wild! Eastern European literature: I will die sandwiched in between two great powers vying for absolute supremacy over my chicken farm! Indian literature: I will die to fight the colonial oppressors but I will live to oppress the lower castes! Indian literature redux: I will die after protecting my son from a killer but I was reborn as my son's killer! Mexican literature: I will die, wait I'm already dead, looking for my relatives! Japanese literature: I will die but soon my friends will resurrect me with the mythical dragon balls! Japanese literature redux: I will die in a supernatural allegory to the horrors of the damages caused by nuclear weapons! Latin American literature (general): I will die alone, of a broken heart, after everyone I have ever loved has died of cholera, been murdered, or forced to work to death in a banana plantation! Scandinavian literature: I will die after I have fought and killed the bear who chewed off my foot by pummeling it to death with my own foot! Spanish literature: I will die in the gallows after killing someone for ethereal reasons but I will have the last laugh! 😊
I reckon we should read literature in the original language as much as possible. I love Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, Proust, Steinbeck, Christie, Pirandello ... Unfortunately, as Italian, I believe we've not been enough fruitful over the past few decades. I suggest historical novels by Valerio Manfredi, though.
Alllll are great! Yeah some are more famous and on point - Russia, USA, France, England but for me all are great because from every siingle word you can learn something.
I think America has had some great writers, but it is analogous to sports teams with a couple great players and a weak bench. We have Melville, Steinbeck, Harper Lee, but not much more (limiting the discussion to novelists). I think Pynchon and McCarthy have cult following,s but neither has a broad-based following. I would give my vote to England because of the depth and breadth of Shakespeare and Dickens' work.
I would argue differently that we have a lot of great literature, but there is just a lot of saturation of bad and unremarkable literature in the market.
Sanskrit language has literature that is vast and ancient and most of it is spiritual and metaphysical. The western world's inability to comprehend it does not diminish is greatness. But there were quite a few lovers of Sanskrit in the west too especially the Germans . Max Muller is well known The longest epic poem in the world written by Ved Vyasa is The Mahabharata of which the Bhagvat Gita is a part . Besides there were great writers like Kalidasa Bhatrihari apart from the anonymous great voluminous works of the Upanishads/ Vedas All Buddhist and Jain scriptures too are in Sanskrit Sanskrit literature is vast in drama narrative prose touching all facets of life like science Ayurveda Yoga etc and Panini, Valmiki, Kalidasa, Bhatrihari, Adi Shankara are only a few examples..
In my view, it’s British literature by a hair’s breadth ahead of Russian literature. The Britons narrowly winning due to the fact of how old their literary tradition is, whereas for the Russians, there hasn’t been much before Pushkin/Zhukovsky. 3. American 4. French 5. German
In my opinion, it is not the country that writes good literature, but the people, no matter where they are from, if they have something to say and they do it with dignity and beauty.
Just to comment briefly in response, I've long believed Russian stuff was the best, hands down. However, I seem to have pre determined my opinion without truly delving into much else. I arrogantly thought, surely nothing can beat this. I may still be correct in my idea, but my goodness, how I am loving American lit thesedays. The quest continues.
Nice one :) I love both American and Russian Literature - they excel for different reasons. For the human condition, I go to the Russians. For experimental narratives, I'll go to the Americans!
I love the dichotomy of the East and West in thought and literature. Being born Pakistani in UK gives me a taste of two separate world view which are often so different and at odds with each other. I find western people like to put things in distinct categories whereas in India everything is just spiritual. In order to appreciate it fully you need to have knowledge of the various belief systems. If you get a chance do look at Waris Shah "Heer", a love story that takes on a divine element. The author is considered the Shakespeare of Punjabi language. Poetry has often been woven into music and songs. There is so much I would love to recommend. I find that people in India are much more driven by emotions and the heart whereas western is more driven by logic and the mind. By being able to see those lenses you can get a great sense of appreciation of the literature and poetry produced.
When I was young, I was obsessed with Russian literature. I also found I loved French and Japanese literature. Now that I'm nearly 60, I'm in love with Latin American literature. And, in fact, I can vouch that Latin American literature doesn't get the respect it deserves because most people seem to not know about all that region's great authors and their books.
Murakami is more Western writer (when it comes to style) than Japanese. Kobo Abe, Akutagava Ryunosuke, Yukio Mishima, etc, they truly carry the torch of Japanese culture
I would like to share my thoughts here when you mentioned that "how on earth can we comprehend the power of the Bhagavad Gita indian text when we don't know what it's like to be indian" :- Bhagavad Gita is one of the highest text of self-knowledge, i.e Vedanta. And, it's not like that one has to be Indian to comprehend its power. Its an Upanishad- and its available to anyone in the whole world if one is just open enough honestly to know the Truth . However, over a period of time, its meaning has been so degenerated and degraded that it's always recommended to read it from a true teacher like Acharya Prashant currently. Infact, i feel , Vedanta- Bhagavad Geeta and other Upanishads has been an inspiration of rich literature by Walt Wiltman- Songs of Myself, Ulyseys, books by Benjamin Franklin, and others.!!
I'm an American, but my preference is British lit. Where irony and language (two essential aspects of literature) are concerned, I really don't believe anyone holds a candle to the Brits, and the English in particular. Of course, I have my American favorites, but I find myself so often returning to second-half twentieth century writers like Larkin, Amis, and Murdoch (to name only three writers from your country). (Side note: I don't think American rock and roll holds a candle to the British offering either, but Americans own jazz and film.)
Russian, Portuguese and Brazilian are the best in my opinion. I am trying to enjoy the style and themes of American Classics but it seems to me extremely inferior to these above. Classics is all I read in fiction. If for westerners it’s too difficult to get into Asian literature (japonese, Indian etc) why not keep western but dive into Brazilian literature for example? We put a wall thinking that they are too different but actually they aren’t. Brazil in the 1800 wasn’t too different than England, except for the slaves. 😅 Fashion and culture were actually very similar.
An impossible task indeed. On the basis of Dostoyevsky alone (Sorry, I know it's probably heresy to say so, but I prefer him to Tolstoy.) I would be tempted to say Russian literature. On the basis of Melville alone I would be tempted to say American literature (but let's not even mention Twain, Faulkner, Steinbeck, Hemingway....) Here's someone I've never heard mentioned on this channel (but then I only discovered you about 17 recommended videos ago): Henrik Ibsen. He was a Norwegian. And speaking of Scandinavians, are the Icelandic Sagas to be considered "great literature?" The Finnish Kalevala? Beowulf? Hmmm, going either forward or backward from the "golden age" of English Literature, the task becomes impossible either way. I will only say that I have favorites from all countries and cultures. Perhaps theses favorites tap something "universal" to the human experience?
Perhaps we should also consider classic Greek and Roman literature. Homer's Illiad and Odyssey. The plays of Sophocles, among others. Are Plato and Aristotle "great literature?" And what of Virgil's Aeneid?
British literature-I will die for honour. American literature-I will die for freedom. French literature-I will die for love. Russian literature -I will die.
☺️☺️ yes, that meme was good.
So true 👍
Oh, goosebumps...never heard of such definitions of spirits. How true though . I always say - smth kills me every day, it can anything if it evokes a strong emotion, I die. Anything as long as your heart skips the beat...it's worth dying for.
20th Bengali literature: i dont have much time to die i have to transform my scriptures in novels
Brazilian literature - I'm already dead, here's how it happened!
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P.S. Read Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas by Machado de Assis
I simply love Russian literature the best.
I’m finishing up Crime & Punishment myself and have absolutely loved it
I completely agree unparalleled
Putin sends his thanks
Least braindead kremlin bot
Proust is better than any russian writer
@gissellest333 you can learn it biu you will suffer
Being an Iranian, I personally believe Persian poets such as Rumi, Khayam, Ferdowsi, Saadi and many others are among great literary individuals of the world.
Please tell me if you have read any Persian poetry 🌼
I love both Russian and Latin American literature. My personal favorites are: “Crime and Punishment,” “Brother Kamarazov,” “The Idiot” by Dostoyevsky. Another genius writer of Russian literature is Turgenev who also has written fantastic novels such as “Fathers and sons,” and “First Love.” From Latin America Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Mario Vargas Llosa and Julio Cortázar are phenomenal writers. As a Latin American myself who has lived abroad I would say Latin American literature resonates a lot with Russian literature, authors love to denounce both social and psychological issues. Some books from Latin American authors I recommend are “100 years of solitude,” “The feast of the Goat,” and “Hopscotch.” (They are listed in the same order respective the previously mentioned authors)
Dostoyevsky is a heavyweight champion in classic literature ❤
Borges!!
You mention "The Idiot." Truly an underappreciated and undermentioned masterpiece IMO. "Crime and Punishment" and "Brothers Karamazov" usually get all the glory.
I love russian and german lit, but I’d say that everyone should read Brazillian Literature.
“To the worm that first gnawed at the cold flesh of my cadaver I dedicate as a fond remembrance these posthumous memoirs.”
Original:
“Ao verme que primeiro roeu as frias carnes do meu cadáver dedico como saudosa lembrança estas memórias póstumas” Machado de Assis
Can you recommend any Brazilian literature?
I really enjoy German literature, though my exposure is rather limited: a bit of Hesse, Mann, and Fontaine (as well as some medieval stories like Parzival). Currently reading a compilation of Tolstoy's works and greatly enjoying them.
I haven't read any French literature at all yet, which is something I definitely need to correct.
I love Hesse myself, and Nietzsche has been a solid favourite that I've reread for years now. I'm happy to hear you're enjoying Tolstoy - VERY interesting man.
Michael, how nice that you should German writers. It’s my maternal tongue, so until few years ago, I’d read only books from D/CH/A . Thomas Mann, my favourite long time, all read and reread. Heinrich Mann’s “Henri Quatre” a time travel, most colourful. Theodor Fontane: you find marvellous audiobooks read by Gert Westphal: Effi Briest and Stechlin! From the swiss authors I read repeatedly the books of Max Frisch, “Gantenbein” probably my favourite, and his diaries. Here on RUclips in snippets though the famous Faust I from Goethe with Gruendgens as Mephisto. Gruendgens was the son-in-law of Thomas Mann. (To add a bit of gossip).
South America has very legible authors. Ubaldo Ribeiro : viva o povo brasileiro. And everything really from Vargas Llosa, Peru. I’m not into ranking. I leave that to sports rather than to arts. And also my charts would change quicker than the Premier League.
My Nr. 1 German book is: "Simplicissimus" by Grimmelshausen from the 17th century
Goethe!
Hesse is a giant, IMO.
The 19th century is the golden age of Russian literature. Number 1 on this list is Alexander Pushkin, Number 2 is Mikhail Lermontov, and then a whole list of remarkable classics of Russian literature Nikolai Gogol, Leo Tolstoy, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Anton Chekhov, Ivan Turgenev, Ivan Goncharov, playwright Alexander Ostrovsky and many others,
Man you speak like you are whispering wisdom, great job...I love it....
Ha! Thank you :)
Spanish and Italian (Dante, Cervantes, Unamuno, Calderon de la Barca, Petrarch) and German (Hesse, Goethe)
Nice :)
I read French literature in French
I read Spanish literature in Spanish
English literature in English
Unfortunately I don’t know Russian so I read it in Spanish
Or German etc
When your read in the original language I think is the best
I’m delighted to find this hidden gem channel 🤩
Keeping posting such videos
Thank you, Ahmed :)
I will reccomend some great pieces of literature from Southern part of India.
1. Cilapatikaram - A tale of an Anklet
2. Thirukural
Beautiful :) Thank you, my friend.
Cringe
@@twoblocksdown5464 That you are 🤭
Wow! Great video/article! I myself, don´t think there is a country with best literature, but I like knowing where the author is from, like you say, you get a glimpse of a culture and that is very enriching.
I am just getting into the classics in the past couple of years, but I feel much like the privileged class of the old, we are fortunate that a cornucopia of literary art is available at our fingertips. Rather than ranking the great books I am just thankful to experience the plethora of stories from across borders and epochs and gain a semblance of humanity through its arts.
I’m in a Russian phase right now. Brazil had a hold on me, French still does, but I always come back to English / American Lit.
Tolstoy is an experience, but Cormac McCarthy’s new book is a must-read.
I am an Iranian by birth. I know much about Iranian literature but as great works of art in Persian have not been translated in English or French they are not very well known in the world . Most of the readers in the west are , more or less, familiar with Rumi or Khayyam . However, there are wonderful poets and writers such as Ferdowsi whose great epic masterpiece The Shahnameh is somewhat equal to the works of Homer. Modern authors have fantastic books, too. I will be very happy if you can talk about such works and in case you need help I will be delighted to be of help.
I'm an English major, my mother tongue is arabic, and every few months I get this sorrowful feeling of having neglected the Arabic language. so a few years ago I've decided to read 5 arabic books a year, and they have never failed me.
That's lovely to hear. Do you have any recommendations for one wanting to get deeper into Arabic Literature?
@@BenjaminMcEvoy Absolutely, my list contains:
Seasons of Migration to the North by Tayyeb Salih
The Cairo Trilogy by Naguib Mahfouz
Men in the Sun by Ghassan Kanafani
The Blue Lanterns by Hanna Mina
Granada by Radwa Ashur
Every time I read in Arabic it reminds me of how beautiful and diverse the language is.
I love your channel btw, keep up the good work
9
The CAIRO TRILOGY was wonderfully rich and vivid. I love everything I have read by this amazing writer.
Ahlan Elias. Are you a member of the Patreon book club?
Fascinating! your passion is inspiring and contagious
Thank you, Chris!! :)
Serbian literature all the way. From Miloš Crnjanski, Petar Petrović Njegoš, Ivo Andrić, Dobrica Ćosić, Branko Nušić to Milorad Pavić. All original, dark, hard, real and beautiful, definitely worth a read!
please make a video on the article on win hof breathing. Its incredible
I would say Russin and French because they revolutionised literature not in the western or English speaking world but around the globe. English literature mainly was revolutionary in the English speaking world which was very advanced due it's progressing industry epoch, therefore it reached many people and became popular not because of the ideas it held (although some English writers had written very intellectual pieces) but because it was easy to bring to everyone since most of the people started learning English by then in order to communicate.
But everyone has their own preference for literature, being born as a Russian speaking person I of course grew on Russian literature and always found it to be too rough and too realistic and dramatic and philosophical for my taste, as if I was about to die any second now and I need to gasp all the human knowledge before that. Therefore, as a child I liked the French one which was non the less realistic but not as brutal as Russian.
Currently my most favourite is 20th century American and especially everything that has to do with slavery and citizen war, but I know tastes change and so I am not expecting to praise it now. I also enjoy Hebrew/ Israeli literature but it is only because I live there and no one will ever understand it unless they live in Israel so I will never recommend it...
i suggest that in prose literature there is before and after Dickens, everyone was influenced by him - or reacted against him. A revolutionary writer in form and content.
Tal, these are very interesting insights. Thank you. 🙂
@@kevinlong3603 Debatable. Great Expectations bore me to tears.
French! Proust, Flaubert, Hugo, Stendhal, Appolinaire, Camus... too many to name!
Oh yes!! I'm in love with all of these writers. Proust and Hugo alone are enough for me to want to learn the language. And Rimbaud got me into poetry back in my teenage years :)
French literature stands at top with great writers,
Thank yoy for this video :) I believe it is a matter of upbringing and exposure ....I agree that one can't talk about world literature because there are thousands of languages .... there are literatures that haven't been translated into English or any other major language .... the literatures that I have been exposed to ....in my opinion Persian poetry is unparalleled .... so is Urdu and Kashmiri Poetry..... English prose including fiction is matchless ...
If I have to rank I will do it like this:
1. Persian Poetry and Urdu Poetry
2. English/ Russian/ French prose and fiction
3. Kashmiri Poetry
PS: This is based on my upbringing and exposure ....
My favorite literature is
Russian
British
American (XX century)
Latin American
Spanish
I want to know more about Asian and African literature. I have complicated relationship with Japanese literature. I'm not sure why exactly. The major tune of the books I read doesn't coincide with me as a personality. Maybe the trouble is in my wrong choice of books or authors
@@yuliyarue1804 I recently read The Woman in the Dunes ...it is such a masterpiece ...lovely book ....
Very enlightening episode.
Thank you.
Thank you :)
British and Russsian literature. I love Jane Austen and Trollope so much and Anna Karenina kills you every time and Turgjenjev is magic.
Contemporary Russian literature is fab too. Sorokin, Pelevin, Shishkin, Tolstaya, Prilepin, Vodolazkin, Akunin. So so many. Travel, learn other languages, everywhere is wonderful.
Tolstoya's The Slynx is a superb novel.
Support with both hands. Lots of modern Russian authors who really deserve attention. In addition to already mentioned Guzel Yakhnin, Sergey Belyakov. I' d also add not modern but well known Zamyatin, Gorky and Nabokov, Sholokhov and Bulgakov, Kaverin who are my fav. authors of the XX century. But Konstatnin Paustovsky is the very top of my list
They are good indeed, but if you are going to bring modern (20-th century) Russian literature, don't you think you have missed truly great ones?
@@ip6289 Andrei Platonov, perhaps...
@@ip6289
Solzhenitsyn and Pasternak.
Russian, English, French, Spanish, and American: equally tops.
It's like flavors of icecream. They're all good if you keep an open mind. If someone you love recommends a book - you should feel like you're in good hands and read it.
Wow you speak fast but your thoughts and insights flow. What a gift . Keep it coming
Thank you, Michael :) I really appreciate that!
Excellent analysis - I have subscribed. My own vote would be for the 19th century French writers - Hugo, Dumas, Flaubert, Zola, Maupassant etc, although there are some great English, German and Russian novels written in the same era.
I delved into Icelandic literature. I was astonished how quirky it was. Fairly short and easy to digest, the fairytale aspect of the stories had me spellbound.
Have you read Independent People by Halldor Laxness? The only Icelander to win a Nobel prize in any category. It’s incredible. Its Iceland’s grapes of wrath. The end had me weeping unlike any book I’ve read.
@@thetributary8089 wow. Thanks for that. I’ll have a look. One author who stuck out is Sjon. The Blue Fox is wonderful.
@@philipswain4122 Marvelous! I'll give that a look likewise.
Yes! The Sagas. Greatness.
I disagree on the last part. Liking certain literature is not necessary about liking a country of its origin. For example, I always enjoyed American XXth century sci-fi literature, but I genuanly dislike American society and their perception of the world in general.
At the time they just happend to be good at the genre I by some reason like. Russian authors were good at sci-fi too, but they often were either too optimistic or too serious and pretentious (for my taste at least).
Really insightful comment, thank you! I believe I agree with you. When I lived in Japan, I met a ton of foreigners who came to the country because they loved Japanese books (or anime or manga) and then found they didn't like the actual experience of living in the culture. So the discrepancy is very real!
Right now I am totally enamored with Russian literature...
I have added a few Dostoevsky books to my Audible collection, listening to The Brothers Karamazov (P& V). Out of the public library I have P & V translations of Chekhov short stories, The Master and Margarita & War and Peace. I've only had the War and Peace for a couple days-: so far I've only read Pevear's introduction and the very first chapter.
The other stuff I'm taking one or two chapters at a time- and a short story by Chekhov at a time. To leave Russia for a moment I read a story from Dubliners or a chapter from a Tale of Two Cities.
Eastern Europe has some great literature. Too bad they aren't often translated to English.
I do have a bachelor's degree in Dutch literature and I must say, it's really amazing. Not totally objective and neutral of course, but it's so diverse.
From 13th century works like 'Karel ende Elegast' to the big three of 20th century W.F. Hermans, Harry Mulisch and Gerard Reve, you should really dive into it!
I hope, one day, we have more and more translations of persian literature and it gets the attention it deserves. Great videos as always 🙏🏻
I'm French and although I've studied texts from the canon at school I'm still completely baffled by the 16th century. Especially Montaigne, but even Rabelais is almost unreadable today for several reasons: context - the religious wars. Without a clear understanding of the brutal savagery of the conflict between the Catholics and the Protestants you can't figure out what is at stakes in the satire of Rabelais and the philosophy of Montaigne.
Language: in the 16th century Italian had become the de facto secular lingua franca over Europe thanks to the Italian poets and scientists of the Renaissance. So all the writers, both in prose and verse, wanted to write in the most sophisticated ways possible. And compared to Montaigne, Shakespeare is a limerick writer (only regarding the language, not the content).
Things improved in the 17th century thanks to the creation of l'Académie Française by Richelieu, but it almost killed poetry for two centuries. But the French language reached a level of clarity even beyond Latin that would allow the Enlightenment philosophers to invent a proper philosophy of right that led to the creation of the modern state.
I love Russian writers, they are The Best! 🕊️
If you are interested in eastern literature, I would strongly recommend Selected Short Stories from Rabindranath Tagore🇮🇳
This was such a great video. I’m American with my Master’s degree in British Literature and I have to say it is the nearest and dearest and best to my heart. But I love French literature (The Count of Monte Christo, The Three Musketeers) I love Russian literature as well. I think you say it best that different literature takes us to different worlds and perhaps, because of that the literature that is incomparable to any of us is the world we best find ourselves home in.
As a suggestion consider reading both Jose Saramago (Blindness) and Fernando Pessoa (Disquiet).
I'm a Bosnian economy student i grew up reading german and russian philosophy,but the american post modernism is by far my favourite literature, great video btw.
As a Chinese , I personally recommend you which is one of the Four Great Classic Novels of Chinese literature. And I also recommend all LuXun's novels and essays.
Sometimes I feel sad that we can't fully understand and experience other country's culture because of the difference between the languages. So I work hard to study English, forcing myself to read the English original edition. Fortunately It's hard but worthy.
And your videos help me a lot, thank you.
Brilliant video by the way, god damn!
Thank you so much, my friend!
Portuguese Literature: "Tobbaco Shop" or "Naval Ode" by Alvaro de Campos. / Book of Disquiet by Bernard of Soares
The answer is simple. Russian literature is in another level.
I feel like each country has their own reasons why their literature is fantastic. My personal favorite is Russian literature. But I also love Faulkner and Hemingway. The novel Musashi by Yoshikawa is fantastic and another favorite and Mishima is also fantastic. Cervantes, Jorge Borges and Roberto Bolano are favorites from South America. But they all have there own amazing differences.
Cervantes was Spanish.
Russians baby! Hands down.
They are amazing!
And French ! Both Top 1 imo
You are uttering truisms. My favorite literature is what Deuluze calls “ minor literature. He write about a Kafka, I would add a Borges and Cortazar. In addition to Joyce who
is excellent, Italy Svebo. To me a single story by Joyce is worth all of Ulysses. This is because even a great writer can write encyclopedic works and also minor works that are works of genius.
German! Mann, Kafka, Hesse and Rilke are favourites ......
Great choice! I'm a huge Nietzsche and Rilke fan myself, and we'll be reading Hesse's Siddharta as part of the book club soon :)
Have you read Lermontov? He was right after Pushkin. In his short life - he was killed at the duel at the age of 26 - he achieved a lot. Tolstoy himself said that had he lived to a ripe old age, none of them would know if there was any point in writing at all (meaning that in comparison with Lermontov they would all look too insignificant).
Ben, you are so wonderful. I cannot wait to introduce you to my grandson in a few years. He will get the wonderful stuff I am only getting now. Oh, I'm sure someone has already told you, but Onegin is pronounced o NYAY gen.
Thanks for the video!
The only book by Tolstoy I've read is What is Art (reviewed it too!), and I think by that point, Tolstoy was in full on retreat mode, and wasn't interested in being part of the general media/art scene anymore. I felt that he wasn't criticizing things because they weren't up to the level he wanted, but because they challenged his increasingly cloistered worldview. By the end he believed the only worthwhile thing he'd written were some late devotional short stories, and the rest could burn, haha. Still, I'd definitely like to get into some of his novels, and I have a P & V translation of Anna Karenina waiting for me! Hoping to get around to some Kenyan, Peruvian, and French authors this year or next as well! :)
My favorite literature comes from England, Japan, Czech, Germany and the US.
There are of course countries which I have read very little from and I know that I need to check out, like Russia and France.
You are talking about the evolution of literature. Art, music, architecture seems to have parallels literature. Your enthusiasm is compelling, what day do you have off?
By the way I rarely hear from english speakers about Theodore Dreiser though here in Russia he's considered to be one of the best American novelists. My special thanks to him for his American tragedy❤
When it comes to Mystery and Ghost stories, the British writers are unsurpassed. I have read tales of Genji and it absolutely fascinated me. I had no idea of the sophistication and elegance of the culture in that time period. Their society was as complex as any European. We learn a lot when we explore writing from other cultures and other times.
I'm from Brazil and English Literature is my favorite. French Literature comes second. In both cases, I always gravitate around the 19th century.
Nice one, Anna. I love your taste in literature :) English and French Literature are great, but your home also boasts a huge array of incredible works of literature too 🇧🇷
@@BenjaminMcEvoy Thank you! Yes, our literature is amazing, but not many English speakers are aware of it. I've recently fallen in love with "Time and the Wind", by Erico Veríssimo. And "Senhora: Profile of a Woman", by José de Alencar, has been one of my favorites for as long as I can remember. I don't really like Machado, because I was forced to read it too early at school, but I haven't given up on him yet; his works are on my shelf right now, waiting for my next attempt.
It's sad how often great Canadian literature is overlooked. I adore Canadian literature for its diversity of voices, with Indigenous writers, people of colour and women all well represented. Some of my personal favourites include (in no particular order):
Indian Horse, Richard Wagamese
Coming Through Slaughter, Michael Ondaatje
The Handmaid's Tale, Margaret Atwood
The poetry of E. Pauline Johnson
Anne of Green Gables series, Lucy Maud Montgomery
Life of Pi, Yann Martel
Such is My Beloved, Morley Callaghan
The Deptford Trilogy, Robertson Davies
The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz, Mordecai Richler
The Lives of Girls and Women, Alice Munro
Monkey Beach, Eden Robinson
The Stone Angel, Margaret Laurence
The Jade Peony, Wayson Choy
The Temptations of Big Bear, Rudy Wiebe
A Fine Balance, Rohinton Mistry
I would say the country of your origin that brought forth your Mother tongue in written literature. That aha moment that you experience as a young reader, when what you've just read, corresponds with the language you know and speak best. The moment when reading becomes meaningful and your lifelong journey with reading starts. You might've had scaffolded aid along the path, facilitated by a passionate teacher, or perhaps a home where books were made available to you, either bought or loaned from the library. Thereafter, you can expand, read widely, from literature collected from all over the world, translated into the language that comes naturally to you ..
Ronald Firbank actually got there before Joyce, in a few exquisite short ultra camp comedies written during the Great War. Hence, so many of the great writers of the 30s were glad to mention that they were influenced by Firbank, but didn’t rate Joyce so highly.
Sorry for necroposting but come on. The French clearly had a huge impact, and so did the Italian and German literatures (to cite a few examples, everything from Russeau, Dumas, Sartre or Camus, everything from Goethe, a lot of stuff from Manzoni, Pirandello, Pasolini, Umberto Eco) or even famous Nobel winners like Fernando Pessoa and Saramago. I'm always amazed how few books from around the world English-speaking readers read, because as a European nearly half or more of the books I read are either in english or translated from other languages. Heck I'm 18, it's not like I read a lot of books in my life but I tend to differentiate a lot. But I also have a lot of difficulties with russian literature, I can't stand Dostoevsky's style at all and I hate that I can't enjoy it lol
I agree impossible to really choose from any objective or intellectual standpoint as how can you compare. Beautiful to visit all over the world through literature.
So I would stick with my homeland, ireland, as my heart is connected to the land and stories here.
We have Joyce, seamus heany, beckett, wilde, Sean o Casey, yeats, maeve binchy, Cs lewis and more I'm sure. Even other writers with Irish roots like Jonathan swift and bram stoker. Even the brontes' dad lived just outside my hometown so the Irish is in their blood too.
Also living here I can see how literature and storytelling is entwined in the landscape and alive in the culture, even outside of 'great' literature, with Irish myths, storytellers at the pubs and cultural events sharing local folklore, we have children's writers on the scene today such as oliver jeffers and the prolific Martin waddell, the immense creativity and storytelling performances at our local theatres, and even stuff like Lisa magee's screen play 'derry girls' which has been dubbed by some as modern classic and enjoyed by many across the world.
You made this topic extremely interesting..
i prefer Russian Littelature
I love it too. Sometimes I get a little bit annoyed with questions like this. There are so many ways to have a debate - like limiting the discussions to the best novels from every country or the best short stories or poetry.
The reasons that Russian was seemingly slow to arrive is interesting it happened around the same time that American literature arrived - even though people were in Russia for centuries longer than the in the US.
When the Russians got big it was huge - the novelists, short stories, the music and dance were incredibly influential There was a time when the French just couldn't get enough of Russian culture.
Ironically for a long time the upper classes in Russia only spoke French. They thought Russian was only for the serfs and the help - people really thought you had to use French to express ideas and beauty.
Pushkin was raised to speak French but one of the maids who was Russian read to him and sang songs for him. This served him well because he knew French culture so well he was able to understand how to find the classical beauty of the Russian language and culture and could show everyone because he understood both cultures so well.
As a Russian literature fun my top - French, Russian, English, Spanish.
Anna Karenina❤️❤️❤️
I must say, sir, i find you fascinating !
Thank you!
I love Russian literature more than any other!!
6:50 American
9:45 Colin Wilson
The impressive thing about English and French literature is the depth. The literature of England really begins with Chaucer in the 1380s. You then have 600 years in which poets and writers in England are influenced by those who went before. So Shakespeare is influenced by Chaucer, Milton by Shakespeare, Blake by Milton, Wordsworth by Blake, and so on right up to Larkin and Geoffrey Hill. It’s a single body of literature rooted in one small place.
Not saying that English Literature is the best - although the influence of Dickens on Tolstoy and Dostoevsky is profound. I don't think it's possible to work this out unless you've read every book in the world. I'll put my neck out here though - I think that England has produced the funniest literature - Dickens, Waugh, Kingsley Amis and P.G Wodehouse for example. No one will have the nerve to doubt that Tolstoy is great, although you would be hard pushed to find any laughs! Gogol is very funny though, similar to Dickens in that sense.
American literature: I will die stuck in traffic!
Asian literature (general): I will die in shame for dishonoring my family name!
Australian literature: I will die on the other side of the world for abstract geopolitical reasons that I have no connection to!
Brazilian literature: I will die for my ex-wife's second husband's third ex-fiancee who once starred in a forgotten soap opera on local tv but has since moved in with her neighbor's best friend!
Canadian literature: I will die in the wild!
Eastern European literature: I will die sandwiched in between two great powers vying for absolute supremacy over my chicken farm!
Indian literature: I will die to fight the colonial oppressors but I will live to oppress the lower castes!
Indian literature redux: I will die after protecting my son from a killer but I was reborn as my son's killer!
Mexican literature: I will die, wait I'm already dead, looking for my relatives!
Japanese literature: I will die but soon my friends will resurrect me with the mythical dragon balls!
Japanese literature redux: I will die in a supernatural allegory to the horrors of the damages caused by nuclear weapons!
Latin American literature (general): I will die alone, of a broken heart, after everyone I have ever loved has died of cholera, been murdered, or forced to work to death in a banana plantation!
Scandinavian literature: I will die after I have fought and killed the bear who chewed off my foot by pummeling it to death with my own foot!
Spanish literature: I will die in the gallows after killing someone for ethereal reasons but I will have the last laugh!
😊
Sadly, it seems a lot of people are put-off by American literature nowadays. Which breaks my heart because it's my favorite.
As a Russian literature enthusiast I want say huge thank you for you video.
Thank you so much! I appreciate you watching, my friend :)
Jorge Amadu is my brazilian love. Just finished São Jorge dos Ilheus and Capitães da areia
Our home might be across the sea, and we can access to it by great literature. Perfectly said. Thanks alot!
I reckon we should read literature in the original language as much as possible. I love Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, Proust, Steinbeck, Christie, Pirandello ...
Unfortunately, as Italian, I believe we've not been enough fruitful over the past few decades. I suggest historical novels by Valerio Manfredi, though.
what about Dante Alighieri, Umberto Eco
??
Alllll are great! Yeah some are more famous and on point - Russia, USA, France, England but for me all are great because from every siingle word you can learn something.
I totally agree :)
I think America has had some great writers, but it is analogous to sports teams with a couple great players and a weak bench. We have Melville, Steinbeck, Harper Lee, but not much more (limiting the discussion to novelists). I think Pynchon and McCarthy have cult following,s but neither has a broad-based following. I would give my vote to England because of the depth and breadth of Shakespeare and Dickens' work.
I would argue differently that we have a lot of great literature, but there is just a lot of saturation of bad and unremarkable literature in the market.
Great video 👍🏼
Thank you, Naomi :)
Sanskrit language has literature that is vast and ancient and most of it is spiritual and metaphysical. The western world's inability to comprehend it does not diminish is greatness. But there were quite a few lovers of Sanskrit in the west too especially the Germans . Max Muller is well known The longest epic poem in the world written by Ved Vyasa is The Mahabharata of which the Bhagvat Gita is a part . Besides there were great writers like Kalidasa Bhatrihari apart from the anonymous great voluminous works of the Upanishads/ Vedas All Buddhist and Jain scriptures too are in Sanskrit Sanskrit literature is vast in drama narrative prose touching all facets of life like science Ayurveda Yoga etc and Panini, Valmiki, Kalidasa, Bhatrihari, Adi Shankara are only a few examples..
Latin American: Argentina, Uruguay, Columbia(Garzia Marquez), Peru...
Thank u for your chanel. I found u today 18.01 . I love Russian literature but my soulmate author is French Alexander Dùma jr♥️
Thank you so much for watching, Fjorina :)
Where does the author Ivan Goncharov (Oblomov) fit into the Russian writers. I have read high praise concerning him and began collecting his books.
In my view, it’s British literature by a hair’s breadth ahead of Russian literature. The Britons narrowly winning due to the fact of how old their literary tradition is, whereas for the Russians, there hasn’t been much before Pushkin/Zhukovsky.
3. American
4. French
5. German
In my opinion, it is not the country that writes good literature, but the people, no matter where they are from, if they have something to say and they do it with dignity and beauty.
Just to comment briefly in response, I've long believed Russian stuff was the best, hands down. However, I seem to have pre determined my opinion without truly delving into much else. I arrogantly thought, surely nothing can beat this. I may still be correct in my idea, but my goodness, how I am loving American lit thesedays. The quest continues.
Nice one :) I love both American and Russian Literature - they excel for different reasons. For the human condition, I go to the Russians. For experimental narratives, I'll go to the Americans!
I love the dichotomy of the East and West in thought and literature. Being born Pakistani in UK gives me a taste of two separate world view which are often so different and at odds with each other. I find western people like to put things in distinct categories whereas in India everything is just spiritual. In order to appreciate it fully you need to have knowledge of the various belief systems.
If you get a chance do look at Waris Shah "Heer", a love story that takes on a divine element. The author is considered the Shakespeare of Punjabi language. Poetry has often been woven into music and songs. There is so much I would love to recommend. I find that people in India are much more driven by emotions and the heart whereas western is more driven by logic and the mind. By being able to see those lenses you can get a great sense of appreciation of the literature and poetry produced.
Russian Literature ❤️
বাঙালী
Finally someone who knows the hidden litterateur
😂
Britain, though Tolstoy is great.
When I was young, I was obsessed with Russian literature. I also found I loved French and Japanese literature. Now that I'm nearly 60, I'm in love with Latin American literature. And, in fact, I can vouch that Latin American literature doesn't get the respect it deserves because most people seem to not know about all that region's great authors and their books.
You are really expert in literature
Murakami is more Western writer (when it comes to style) than Japanese. Kobo Abe, Akutagava Ryunosuke, Yukio Mishima, etc, they truly carry the torch of Japanese culture
I would like to share my thoughts here when you mentioned that "how on earth can we comprehend the power of the Bhagavad Gita indian text when we don't know what it's like to be indian" :- Bhagavad Gita is one of the highest text of self-knowledge, i.e Vedanta. And, it's not like that one has to be Indian to comprehend its power. Its an Upanishad- and its available to anyone in the whole world if one is just open enough honestly to know the Truth .
However, over a period of time, its meaning has been so degenerated and degraded that it's always recommended to read it from a true teacher like Acharya Prashant currently.
Infact, i feel , Vedanta- Bhagavad Geeta and other Upanishads has been an inspiration of rich literature by Walt Wiltman- Songs of Myself, Ulyseys, books by Benjamin Franklin, and others.!!
I'm an American, but my preference is British lit. Where irony and language (two essential aspects of literature) are concerned, I really don't believe anyone holds a candle to the Brits, and the English in particular. Of course, I have my American favorites, but I find myself so often returning to second-half twentieth century writers like Larkin, Amis, and Murdoch (to name only three writers from your country). (Side note: I don't think American rock and roll holds a candle to the British offering either, but Americans own jazz and film.)
Russian, Portuguese and Brazilian are the best in my opinion.
I am trying to enjoy the style and themes of American Classics but it seems to me extremely inferior to these above. Classics is all I read in fiction.
If for westerners it’s too difficult to get into Asian literature (japonese, Indian etc) why not keep western but dive into Brazilian literature for example? We put a wall thinking that they are too different but actually they aren’t. Brazil in the 1800 wasn’t too different than England, except for the slaves. 😅
Fashion and culture were actually very similar.
An impossible task indeed. On the basis of Dostoyevsky alone (Sorry, I know it's probably heresy to say so, but I prefer him to Tolstoy.) I would be tempted to say Russian literature. On the basis of Melville alone I would be tempted to say American literature (but let's not even mention Twain, Faulkner, Steinbeck, Hemingway....) Here's someone I've never heard mentioned on this channel (but then I only discovered you about 17 recommended videos ago): Henrik Ibsen. He was a Norwegian. And speaking of Scandinavians, are the Icelandic Sagas to be considered "great literature?" The Finnish Kalevala? Beowulf? Hmmm, going either forward or backward from the "golden age" of English Literature, the task becomes impossible either way. I will only say that I have favorites from all countries and cultures. Perhaps theses favorites tap something "universal" to the human experience?
Perhaps we should also consider classic Greek and Roman literature. Homer's Illiad and Odyssey. The plays of Sophocles, among others. Are Plato and Aristotle "great literature?" And what of Virgil's Aeneid?
Persian for sure