Summary
Boris Pasternak's epic novel Doctor Zhivago is considered one of the great works of 20th- century Russian literature. First published in Italy in 1957 after being banned in the Soviet Union, the sweeping story follows the life of physician and poet Yuri Zhivago during the tumultuous period of the Russian Revolution and subsequent Russian Civil War. Pasternak earned the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1958 for this novel, though he was forced to decline the award under pressure from Soviet authorities. Doctor Zhivago is renowned for its vivid depiction of Russian history and its exploration of the struggle between individual desires and societal demands. The book was famously adapted into an Academy Award-winning film in 1965, directed by David Lean and starring Omar Sharif and Julie Christie.
Plot
Doctor Zhivago follows the life of Yuri Zhivago, a physician and poet, during the tumultuous period of Russian history spanning the Russian Revolution and subsequent civil war. As a young man, Yuri marries his childhood friend Tonya, but later falls in love with nurse Lara Antipova while serving as a medical officer during World War I. After the October Revolution, Yuri and his family flee Moscow to a rural estate in the Ural Mountains. There, Yuri has a chance encounter with Lara and they begin an affair.
Yuri is later abducted and forced to serve as a medical officer for the Communist partisans. After two years, he escapes and returns to find his family has managed to escape Russia. He reunites with Lara briefly before she leaves the country with her former lover, Victor Komarovsky. Yuri then returns to Moscow, where he lives in poverty and declining health. He fathers two children with another woman but eventually dies of heart failure while riding a tram.
The novel concludes years after the doctor’s death, when Yuri's half-brother Yevgraf meets a young woman named Tanya he believes may be Yuri and Lara's daughter. The final section features a selection of Yuri's poems, meant to represent his artistic legacy that survived the tumultuous times he lived through.
Themes
Love and passion in times of war and revolution
Individual freedom vs. societal expectations
The power of art and poetry to transcend suffering
Loss of idealism and disillusionment with political ideology