416 pages, Paperback
First published January 1,1906
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The novel is devoid of the didactic and rhetorical nature among Marxists in its long history. It often relied on a balanced discourse around the principles of the Manifesto in its English Marxist origins!
Max here turned the ordinary woman into a daily myth based on two feet, that is, turned the idea of struggle into a viable, achievable mythical feeling, which is one of the rare things in literary and human history, that the daily event is painted with a believable and observable mythical color. A woman like Pelagia, without a history or a true identity or even a faith that exceeds the daily meaning of the faith of "the five prayers," was actually turned by Max into a shocking event in the daily life of Russia, during the Marxist struggle between 1905-1917. The Marxist struggle during these years was almost in line with what Pelagia was like in the novel, as if Max was predicting from afar while he was living in America what was happening everywhere in Tsarist Russia.
All this doesn't matter!
In this novel, Max was able to read the psychological stages that any human goes through towards a new and innovative idea in society. These psychological stages can be generalized and issued as a general and governing framework for all human societies, and this is of course not didactic; but a reality that can be lived anywhere on earth. These stages, for Max, are considered the initial formation of the meaning of truth, and how to believe in it and spread it on a wide human scale, which necessarily sprouts under the influence of a different idea based on historical, religious, political, etc. forces that have strong foundations in the daily life of humans.
Here was the idea of Mrs. Pelagia, which can be drawn on all those who shared her struggle, all those who stood with her and supported her, and even those who were influenced by her story and followed in her footsteps. The truth that starts with a stage of doubt soon turns into a decision if the state of enthusiasm in the human mind that tries to activate it in reality agrees.
Perhaps all the risks that Pelagia took were not only for her only son Pavel. The mother's feeling does not lead to general stages of struggle like what Pelagia did, but it was for all her children on this earth. The mother Pelagia has several aspects for the reader, and the aspect of motherhood is not the only one. She has the aspect of the struggle for the original Marxist truth, then the aspect of the true human suffering in Russia, and then the aspect of the mother as the last and surely the most sincere aspect. This is the idea that Max tried to embody in a Marxist framework, and surely he could have embodied it in other ideological frameworks if he had belonged to another current.
The strategic passage:
The matter is not only Russia, but it is more like a situation that can be generalized to the European continent before the First World War. Europe, which was fragmented and bourgeois before the First World War, was almost a similar picture to the Russian picture before the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, and the struggle situations that Max talked about can be generalized to situations that might have occurred in those days in any other European society.
In the novel, there is a high degree of prophecy in Gorky. The novel, which was written in exile before the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, predicts the struggle events in order to reach a socialist revolution in Tsarist Russia - of course, this revolution could have spread to include other countries, but the reality of the war stopped it at the Russian borders. So, all that was in the novel was daily prophecies, which most of the characters in the novel believe in. Everyone talks about the reality of change and the inevitability of its occurrence in the near future, except for the mother who was losing this faith, but only hoping for it. She had begun to lose her faith in many things except for the sincerity of the revolutionary act, which she associated with hope and the fate of Pavel as a secondary level. Freedom and social justice in the eyes of everyone were coming inevitably, but Pelagia was only thinking about them. She did not believe in these things, perhaps because these comrades were lacking the true example that she had and which was represented in Christ. The absence of this example or the spiritual refuge made her doubt the inevitability of the event, and so she was only satisfied with hoping.
Another thing about Max's fate is the secret political manifesto, which was not inflammatory in the first place as much as it was educational and awakening for the factory workers and peasants to the last tired and deceived classes in Russian society. In addition to the educational situation, there was the situation of propaganda for the near future. So, all the worker had to do was to be patient, struggle, and be careful about what he did and continue to struggle against any deviation in the future. Therefore, the strikes were not ordinary things for the workers, but they only struck for a few hours in one day, while the burial of one of the comrades turned into a battle to prove the right to express only. It seems that Max in the novel is hinting at the basics of social change and inciting it, and calling to hold on to it. Issues such as equality, justice, freedom, the right to speak, and socialism are not only socialist principles for him, but pure human principles that are the right of everyone, and it is up to the Marxist ideology to spread them to everyone.
Max points to a core issue in the Christian human. This human cannot completely get rid of the image of Christ because it is in the rule of impossibility. So, Christ is compared to the fate of the worker. The volcano is the factory and the workplace and work in general in the capitalist, bourgeois, and plutocratic society, and the cross carried on the shoulders of Christ is the equivalent of this work. So, Christ is close to the poor and their assemblies, and he is also close to the workers and their assemblies. Although the faith in Christ is only clearly shown in the mother, it is the basic incentive in parallel with Pavel in the necessity of struggle and its continuation.
For me, the general human situation in the novel is the painful situation of the human who finds himself surrounded by thousands of daily obstacles and difficulties to reach his earthly paradise. The socialist does not believe in the sincerity of living in another paradise as long as he does not see it in front of him in exchange for his sweat. So, for him, the poor do not only enter paradise; but they must also live it in this life. The amount of oppression that must end in order to reach the amount of promised satisfaction in the earthly paradise was the third incentive for Pelagia and for Max, which is the general humanity in its Russian form.
I'm not saying that Pelagia didn't become a prophecy. This is what Max wanted in his heart as a mother, an ordinary and simple woman. But what he wanted to die was not the mother Pelagia but the ability to imagine the idea of pain in the human mind, the idea of oppression and confusion in this material world. The screams that died or disappeared at the train station were the ones that lingered for a long time in this universe, and this is what necessitated the life that turned into a secret political manifesto. The life of the struggler becomes more inspiring when dealing with it becomes an ordinary daily event. So, their lives became more exciting because they were never orderly and never boring, but able to create at every moment and every instant. What Pelagia had was the truth in all its manifestations. The truth in its beginnings is confused, then it soon becomes stronger and its voice becomes very high, just like the case of Nilovna at the train station. This woman represents the truth that does not despair of examining who contains it and trying to embrace it and speak the truth about it in this world. This mother is the opposite image of the general idea that is by nature confused at first and then soon becomes doubtful, and even when the right time comes, it becomes stronger and starts trying to convince others by shouting about it, and even sees in the hidden danger in it a proof of its vitality and a strong incentive.
The ability to endure pain and turn it into a means of entertainment is only a characteristic of the truth. Only the truth can do that because it is the only one that believes in itself absolutely. For me, this is how Pelagia Nilovna was, the human face of the truth in its Marxist form, the most radiant and beautiful face because it is the most just face in this world, the face that can live even if it is shot with a pistol because its fate is only life. As for death, it is the fate of the false that decays in this land. The truth that Pelagia believed in had only one language, which is the language of the poor who must end their poverty and exercise their rights because it is the only thing they have without exercising it.
Thank you, Max!
Quotations:
Birth of a human in the world is an extremely difficult thing, and the hardest thing of all is to teach him to be noble.
Fish were created to fall into the net.
The church is up to God.
Sorrow is like our skin and we are inside it, this garment returns us.
The wolves also have the right when they tear their sister Irsa Irsa.
You will not become a saint just by turning into icons.
The less you know, the longer you sleep.
Surely, a good thing will never come out of the slaves.
The people who make more jokes are the ones who suffer more than others.
Throughout the history of "Mother", the struggles of the working class and the lower social strata in early 20th-century Russia are revealed, serving as a prelude to the October Revolution that was to follow.
Certainly, there is a significant dose of propaganda in the story. However, one doesn't have to be a member of the Communist Party of Greece to enjoy this beautifully written and, in my opinion, literarily excellent book.
The narrative provides a vivid portrayal of the hardships and injustices faced by the common people during that era. It shows their determination to fight for a better life and their growing awareness of the need for social change.
"Mother" not only offers a historical perspective but also touches on universal themes such as love, sacrifice, and the power of the human spirit. It is a book that can resonate with readers from different backgrounds and inspire them to reflect on the importance of social justice and equality.