An edition of Toda-Raba (1956)

Toda Raba

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Last edited by aschon
December 2, 2021 | History
An edition of Toda-Raba (1956)

Toda Raba

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  • 2 Want to read
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[Translated by Amy Mims.]
Toda Raba was written in 1929, after Kazantzakis’ return from his journeys through the Soviet Union. It is a novel — strange, surging, mystical and, in the final analysis, terrifyingly prophetic.
The characters are — with one exception — reflections of Kazantzakis himself, and represent his own deeply conflicting views of the Revolution. They are all wanderers, searchers, drawn by the force of Lenin (who has already died) to the Soviet Union, at a time when Russia is still living in the aftermath of the Civil War.
There is Rahel, a Polish-Jewish girl, drawn to Communism and working for the secret police; there is Azad, the ex-Cheka murderer, who believes in the necessity for a new and purer revolution, and thinks Communism must come from a change of man’s soul, not from the machines and the materialism of Europe and America; there is Geranos, a Cretan like Kazantzakis, by far the most rational and comprehensible of the characters, who admires the Revolution but is too old to join in its works, too set in his mental habits to abandon himself to it; there is Sou-ki, a Chinese from California; and Amita, a Japanese writer; and Ananda, an Indian monk — all these meet, talk, think, analyze the Revolution and the Soviet Union.
Towering over them all, in a mysterious way, is Toda Raba, an African Negro who abandons his tribe and his savage god to make a pilgrimage to Russia. And it is he, with his violence, his paganism and his humanity, who represents the wave of the future, not the others, who represent, each in his or her own way, the old races and the old civilizations. Toda Raba is the man of the future, and the Russian Revolution releases his energy and his sense of his own destiny.
There is a terrifying scene at an Asian Congress in the U.S.S.R., in which the Asians cry out for revenge and declare that the future of the world is with them and with Africa, not with the West, not even with the new Russia.
In this sense the novel is prophetic, and Kazantzakis understood even in 1929 that the Russian Revolution’s importance was far greater than the effects it had on Russia herself, and that the echoes of it would awake the vast areas of Africa and Asia that had been silent for centuries.

Publish Date
Publisher
Simon and Schuster
Language
English
Pages
220

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Tonta-Rampa
Tonta-Rampa
1969, Ekdoseis El. Kazantzakē
in Modern Greek - Ektē ekdosē
Cover of: Tonta-Rampa
Tonta-Rampa
1969, Ekdoseis He. Kazantzakē
in Modern Greek - 2. Ekdosē
Cover of: Tonta-Rampa
Tonta-Rampa
1969, Ekdoseis El. Kazantzakē
in Modern Greek - Ektē ekdosē.
Cover of: Tonta-rampa
Tonta-rampa
1969, Hel. Kazantzakē
in Modern Greek - 6. ekd.
Cover of: Toda Raba
Toda Raba
1964, Simon and Schuster
in English
Cover of: Tonta rampa.
Tonta rampa.
1956, Dithros
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Published in
New York

Classifications

Library of Congress
PZ3.K1884 To

The Physical Object

Pagination
220 p.
Number of pages
220

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL5913257M
Internet Archive
todaraba00kaza
LCCN
64015349
OCLC/WorldCat
780890
Library Thing
2490589

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December 2, 2021 Edited by aschon changed work title
November 29, 2021 Edited by AgentSapphire Merge works
November 17, 2021 Edited by AgentSapphire Merge works
October 17, 2009 Created by WorkBot add works page