Background
Maxim Alexeyevich Antonovich was born on April 27, 1835 in Bilopillia, Kursk Oblast, Russian Federation to the family of a clergyman.
essayist literary critic philosopher translator memoirist
Maxim Alexeyevich Antonovich was born on April 27, 1835 in Bilopillia, Kursk Oblast, Russian Federation to the family of a clergyman.
After studying at the Kharkiv seminary Maxim Alexeyevich enrolled in the Saint Petersburg Theological Academy which he graduated in 1859.
Antonovich's literary career started in Sovremennik where several articles promoting the philosophy of materialism brought him the reputation of an "ideological heir to Chernyshevsky." As a head of the magazine's literary criticism department (a position he took after Nikolai Dobrolyubov's death) Maxim Alexeyevich waged bitter feuds against Vremya, Epokha, and later Russkoye Slovo, after his slagging of Ivan Turgenev's Fathers and Sons in 1862 outraged Dmitry Pisarev and a violent confrontation ensued which Fyodor Dostoyevsky called "the break-up of the Russian nihilism."
As Nekrasov refused Maxim Alexeyevich an invitation to the renewed Otechestvennye Zapiski in 1869, he accused the former in "betrayal of the old friends" and turned to translation work (Histoire de la Revolution Française by Louis Blanc, Physics by Balfour Stewart, The Teaching of Geography by Archibald Geikie, Textbook of Physiology by Michael Foster, among others). In 1898-1916 Maxim Alexeyevich published memoirs on Nikolai Dobrolyubov, Nikolai Chernyshevsky, Nikolai Nekrasov and Pyotr Lavrov.
Maxim Alexeyevich died on 14 November 1918 in Petrograd, Soviet Russia.