Enemies

Maxim Gorky
Translated by David Hare
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780571232123
Date Published
18.05.2006
Delivery
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Summary

1905. Russia is at a turning point. Zakhar Bardin is from the landowning class, but is now the uneasy owner of a factory. His managing director is determined to face down militant workers on a point of principle. But the shutting of the business has tragic consequences for everyone concerned.

Gorky’s extraordinary play, which was written in exile and banned in his home country, presents a panoramic view of a restless society, with a bourgeoisie no longer sure of its own values, and a working class steadily facing up to the terrifying sacrifices ahead. Described by Ronald Bryden in the Observer in 1971 as ‘a real discovery . . . the missing link between Chekhov and the Russian revolution’, Enemies has a dramatic breadth, humour and ambition unique to Gorky.

Maxim Gorky’s Enemies is adapted by David Hare and premiered at the Almeida Theatre, London, in May 2006.

MaximGorky

Maxim Gorky was born in 1868, suffered a deprived childhood and spent his early youth as a vagrant, but by the 1890s he was ranked with Tolstoy and Chekhov among Russia’s leading writers. For long he was best known in the West as a novelist, notably for The Mother (1907) and for the three volumes of his Autobiography, with only…

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