Oblomov, I imagine, looks like that stonily stoned chap in František Kupka’s The Yellow Scale. It’s a striking painting, a riot of yellows, with Kupka — for this is a self-portrait — staring defiantly at you, propped up in a cushioned wicker chair, a cigarette in one hand and the index finger of his other lodged in a lemony paperback, as if saying, “yes, I’m a lazy bastard. So what?”
That’s the vibe conveyed by Ilya Ilyich Oblomov, the hero of Ivan Goncharov’s second novel, published in 1859. He embodies that mid-19th century Russian ideal type — common enough in Turgenev and Pushkin — whom we would do well to emulate: the “superfluous man”. He is an “incorrigible, carefree idler”, his pal Penkin observes, but that’s an understatement.
Oblomov is paralysed by indolence. His achievement, in the first 50 pages, is to negotiate a relocation from his bed to his chair. He isn’t handicapped, Goncharov explains: “Lying down was not for Oblomov a necessity, as it is for a sick man; or a matter of chance, as it is for a tired man; or a pleasure, as it is for a lazy man: it was his normal condition.” Oblomov spends much of the novel in a state of near-permanent recumbency, wearing “an expression of serene unconcern, thoughts promenading freely all over his face”, his presence adding nothing to society, any more than detracting from it.
Oblomov, we learn, was once a clerk before he decided that working wasn’t worth the trouble. “In his opinion, life was divided into two halves: one consisted of work and boredom — those words were synonymous for him — and the other of rest and quiet enjoyment.” Accordingly, he decided to commit himself to a life of literary lethargy. He could afford to. With 350 serfs to his name, he has a modest rentier income that frees him from the indignities of work. His overseers swindle him, but he can’t be arsed to put in an appearance in distant Oblomovka, “on the borders of Asia”. Nor can he be bothered to stay au courant with the news. The morning papers bore him. So, too, does high society. He can’t stand the highfalutin eggheads at the Mussinskys’ salon, where they discuss da Vinci and the Venetian School: “Pedants. How boring!”
Oblomov was always a bit of a philistine. At school, “he was quite satisfied with what was written in his notebook and showed no tiresome curiosity when he failed to understand all that he heard”. So it was that, on reaching adulthood, Oblomov withdrew from society, spending his days like the Dude in The Big Lebowski, that inveterate slacker, though in the Russian’s case, his chosen uniform is a capacious oriental dressing-gown rather than a bath-robe, and he doesn’t reside alone in his bachelor pad but has a cantankerous Gogolesque manservant in tow. The two of them bicker like a married couple. Oblomov scolds Zakhar for his appetite: “Are you a cow that you have munched so much greenstuff?” The servant, in turn, faults him for his profligacy with glassware: why can’t the master imbibe directly from the decanter?
The foil to Oblomov is his dour German workaholic schoolmate, Andrey Stolz, a votary of the Protestant work ethic. Stolz laments Oblomov’s laziness: “What do you do? You just roll up and lie about like a piece of dough.” Much of the book is taken up with Stolz’s efforts to make a dull and dutiful German out of the lazy Russian. Needless to say, Stolz fails to improve Oblomov. At first, though, he succeeds in getting our slothful hero to hook up with Olga, and for a minute, Oblomov becomes a party animal, hopping from one soirée to the next. But it doesn’t last. His laziness returns, as it dawns upon him that “intimacy with a woman involves a great deal of trouble”, all the more with those high-maintenance “pale, melancholy maidens”, the kind that make you suffer “tormenting days and iniquitous nights”.
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SubscribeA fine essay. Liberate the superfluous middle managers, indeed.
I was brought up in a time when the “Protestant work ethic” was paramount. Being busy was an end in itself. And I haven’t done badly. If you saw my CV and current job title you might mistake me for one of the “elite” (Our modern world is obsessed with redefining words: what other word has been more redefined, more debased, than “elite”?).
But my attitude toward work has utterly changed. I have jumped through so many hoops to remain employed, and I can honestly say my current job is little more than box checking. It is not unreasonable to ask, “Why bother?”
Some criticize the young for laziness, but I say, given their prospects in the modern world, quietly quit, play the employment game to your advantage, never, ever take corporate pronouncements at face value. You are part of a game: learn the rules.
One of the reasons people like to be ‘busy” is that it leaves little time, or head-space, to think. Many will go out of their way to avoid having to think.
Whereas once it was necessary to plough through life engaged in mainly manual tasks – both at work and at home – the rise of labour-saving devices hasn’t led to a greater propensity to think but to the endless scrolling on mobile phones, Netflix or the implantation of semi-permanent ear buds to drown out the possibility of having to think. Only ‘content’ can make them content.
Why? Because it hurts most people to have to think for themselves. It bewilders them, causing all sorts of difficulties, and it makes them both suspicious and envious of those who’re able to construct a satisfying mental life, or what’s referred to as a ‘hinterland’, for themselves.
So, the news is semi-absorbed at a glance, filtered by the msm with just enough pretence of depth to convince people they’re ‘informed’. And of course, above all: they’re “entitled to their opinion” – having spent as little time as possible in formulating it; or rather, having it formulated for them. Of history and of historical precedent they know nothing, hence every world event becomes an unprecedented crisis.
The majority simply can’t bear to be alone with their own thoughts; consciousness is both a blessing and a curse. Escaping this paradox is to become super-human.
>Because it hurts most people to have to think for themselves.
And also because they might come upon ideas that are opposed to the group think, and that can only get you in trouble.
Ah the world of work is peculiar in 2024.
I’m amazed at the amount of bullshit jobs that exist today.
On top of that, the scam that is ‘home working’ is the best of all. I’m stunned at how long it takes to get things done in 2024. No one wants to call it out, because everyone enjoys the perks. But from a ‘getting shit done’ perspective it doesn’t work.
Why does the author live in London when his job is at Oxford?
His wife works in London to pay the mortgage??
For some ten minutes before reading this sensible article I was beset by guilt for doing nothing in retirement but but read and browse publications such as Unherd. Pratinav Anil’s call to lassitude has set me upon the right couch again.
You are also obliged to occasionally admire bees.
And the birds?
There’s nothing here that a common indoor cat wouldn’t know from the moment of birth.
A very enjoyable essay!
Good article , no point being a busy fool. I cant remember the quote ( actually if anyone remembers the attribution let me know) but the discussion between a politician and an economist around a dam construction site
Politician : and in addition to electricity look at all the employment we are generating
Economist : if we were trying to generate employment sir, we would have given them spoons.
It was Milton Freeman. He was talking to a group of Chinese dignitaries who were bragging about al the jobs they were creating on a construction site by using shovels to dig the foundation instead of heavy equipment.
Maybe we could get AI to write a sequel id call it ” Oblomov goes to the gym”
Does the 32-hour work week also come with 32-hour pay? We had a dose of layabout syndrome, albeit enforced by govt diktat, during Covid. I don’t know that many people look back on that period as one of enlightenment or personal growth.
That this hasn’t come to pass, the anthropologist David Graeber argued, is because we have created “bullshit jobs”. —–> Out of curiosity, would anthropologist be one of those jobs? It’s a bit smug to demean another man’s labor when your own offers little tangible value and may well include a lifetime of benefits at public expense.
I think many people surely realised during Lockdown/s how much they disliked work. Especially as many were paid by the government to not work.
I’m glad you mentioned David Graeber. The biggest take-out from his thesis for me was the idea of an inverse relationship between how socially useful your job is and the amount of pay and prestige attached to it. Minimum wage jobs are invariably essential; the aspirational jobs are more likely to be bullshit.
Excellent essay. I was all fired up, ready to act on your advice, when I remembered that Monday’s are when I wash my hair. So, alas, my newer better life will have to wait.
I’m thinking of reading “The Hobbit”. Again. It gets easier each time I do. Very gratifying. But I’ll get around to your project very soon.
Sixty-odd years ago I decided I didn’t want to be “a Lawyer, Diplomat or Accountant, or anything else that involved wearing a suit and tie”. It’s entailed working harder rather than less, but we’ve found it rewarding doing our own thing. No box checking for us.
Me too. I quit law school and retired at the age of 17 and travelled the world, making intermittent money by means farious and nefarious. I had my first real job ten years later. Entirely unqualified I lived off my wits and had the greatest time of it. My CV reads like a short novel. Now I work when I choose at things I like doing and thoroughly enjoy it.
A lot of my time could look lazy to the outside world. I increasingly spend time with myself – reflecting, meditating, and sitting with feelings (both comfortable and uncomfortable). Much harder work than doing something for a living. As a planner at a London agency once told me when considering buying a knock-off luxury watch: you can fool everyone else, but you can never fool yourself. Hmmm, indeed not. Take nothing at face value …. even perceived “laziness”.
My closest friend, a Mancunian of Russian parentage, told me once that Oblomov was quite proverbial in Russia as a personality type, sometimes used as an insult, sometimes as banter, always with affection.
Thanks for a really entertaining piece – I look forward to re-reading it with more leisure later. Might even get out of bed and into the chair…
Can I just say thank you Pratinav – if your reading. I’d never heard of Oblomov, but it has been a useful example for my dissertation on Peter Kropotkin. Great article, fully agree with the sentiment.
Out of bed and into the chair? Sir, you’ve entirely missed the point of the piece!
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