Anti-Materialism In Tolstoy's The Death Of Ivan Ilych

1188 Words3 Pages

Tolstoy is a modern writer. His style plays with literary conventions while his writing questions society itself. However, towards the end of his life, Tolstoy notices the growing anti-materialism in the middle class (Ress). This increasing detachment of the Russian middle class from nature, life, and religious tradition irritates Tolstoy. By focusing his later works on anti-materialism, Tolstoy awakens the middle class to what he thinks it has become—deluded. To reveal this illusion, Tolstoy writes a religious, traditional ending to The Death of Ivan Ilych to illustrate the Russian middle class’s anti-materialism, and the New Testament’s Book of Luke helps us understand this connection between religion and anti-materialism best.
However, some may believe that the ending is more modern than anti-materialistic because modernism and anti-materialism are heavily intertwined. Baudelaire describes modernism as, “[shocking] the middle class out of their complacency,” (Lewis 13). And the ending is …show more content…

Tolstoy awakens the middle class to its delusion but wants to create an “out”; he shows that Christianity restores all previous sins of inhumanity. Tolstoy’s abrupt Christian ending—an unmodern ending to a modern novella—pays tribute to Tolstoy’s strong belief in not only Christianity, but his belief that the middle class has so far distanced itself from religion and humanity. By using Ivan Ilych as a metaphor for the entire the middle class, Tolstoy strips away the illusion that material goods will provide happiness. Not only will Christianity restore humanity, but that we can return to God at anytime; God will forgive us no matter how we live our lives. Tolstoy’s final message demonstrates that if God can forgive and send Ivan Ilych—a character so immoral and materialist—to Heaven, anyone can be saved and

Open Document