Goncharov, Ivan Aleksandrovich
Related Category: Russian and Eastern European Literature: Biographies
(ēvän´ əlyĭksän´drəvĭch gənchərôf´), 181291, Russian novelist. Goncharov was a governmental official from 1835 to 1867. His realistic and satirical novel
Oblomov (1858, tr. 1929) is a portrayal of the indolent nobleman common in Russia c.1860. The word
Oblomovism was coined to describe the lassitude the protagonist of the novel typified. Goncharov's other novels,
A Common Story (1847, tr. 1894) and
The Precipice (1869, tr. 1915), are variations on the same theme. He also wrote
The Frigate Pallas (1858), based on his voyage to England, Africa, and Japan.
See biography by A. and S. Lyngstad (1971); study by M. Ehre (1973).