Sofia Petrovna

by

Lydia Chukovskaya

Loyalty, Political Allegiance, and Truth Theme Analysis

Themes and Colors
Uncertainty and Disbelief Theme Icon
Patriotism and Fanaticism Theme Icon
Pride, Status, and Moral Superiority Theme Icon
Loyalty, Political Allegiance, and Truth Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Sofia Petrovna, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Loyalty, Political Allegiance, and Truth Theme Icon

Sofia Petrovna questions the limits of political allegiance, exploring how long people will remain loyal to repressive governments. As someone who genuinely believes in the good intentions of the Communist Party under Joseph Stalin, Sofia Petrovna is slow to question the government’s actions—even when her own son Kolya is arrested and imprisoned without just cause. For most of the novel, she insists that Kolya’s arrest was nothing more than a mistake. Despite the fact that she has met multiple people who say their innocent loved ones have been in jail for months, she thinks she’ll easily be able to clear up the misunderstanding and convince the authorities to free Kolya. Her optimism in this regard doesn’t emerge from her own foolishness or naivety but from a strong belief in the virtues of the Soviet Union. She maintains her conviction that Stalin’s regime values justice, which is why she’s so convinced that she’ll be able to free Kolya simply by telling the prosecutor about his commitment to communism. Once she gets the chance to do this, though, she discovers that things won’t be quite so easy. The prosecutor hardly listens to her, and she learns that Kolya has signed a written confession. Of course, he surely signed this confession as a means of self-preservation in the face of torture, but Sofia doesn’t consider this possibility—yet another sign of her genuine belief that the government is just and humane.

However, Sofia is also a devoted mother who believes Kolya would never conspire against the Communist Party. She’s thus torn between her loyalty to her son and her loyalty to her country. In order to support Kolya without thinking ill of her government, then, she performs some rather complex mental gymnastics, reasoning that Kolya—who she knows is innocent—must have encountered an “overzealous investigator” who “confused him” and made it impossible for him to prove his innocence. Her thought process reveals her attempt to make sense of the government’s cruelty, essentially demonstrating how hard it can be to admit the evils and shortcomings of a corrupt political system that originally meant so much to its citizens. In fact, Sofia doesn’t fully stop believing the government will do the right thing until Kolya has been imprisoned for over two years, at which point all of her close companions are either dead or in jail. The novel thus highlights how long it can take for some people to give up their deeply held beliefs in order to acknowledge the reality of their circumstances.

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Loyalty, Political Allegiance, and Truth ThemeTracker

The ThemeTracker below shows where, and to what degree, the theme of Loyalty, Political Allegiance, and Truth appears in each chapter of Sofia Petrovna. Click or tap on any chapter to read its Summary & Analysis.
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Loyalty, Political Allegiance, and Truth Quotes in Sofia Petrovna

Below you will find the important quotes in Sofia Petrovna related to the theme of Loyalty, Political Allegiance, and Truth.
Chapter 1 Quotes

Sofia Petrovna didn’t really understand what it was all about, she was bored and wanted to leave, but she was afraid it wasn’t the thing to do and glared at one of the typists who was making her way to the door.

Related Characters: Sofia Petrovna
Page Number: 7
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

Sofia Petrovna even wrote to Kolya about the injustice Natasha had suffered. But Kolya replied that injustice was a class concept and vigilance was essential. Natasha did after all come from a bourgeois, landowning family. Vile fascist hirelings, of the kind that had murdered comrade Kirov, had still not been entirely eradicated from the country. The class struggle was still going on, and therefore it was essential to exercise the utmost vigilance when admitting people to the party and the Komsomol.

Related Characters: Sofia Petrovna, Kolya, Natasha Frolenko
Page Number: 24
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

Two years before, after the murder of Kirov (Oh! What grim times those were! Patrols walked the streets…and when Comrade Stalin was about to arrive, the station square was cordoned off by troops…and there were troops lining all the streets as Stalin walked behind the coffin)—after Kirov’s murder there had also been many arrests, but at that time they first took all kinds of oppositionists, then old regime people, all kinds of “vons” and barons. But now it was doctors.

Related Characters: Sofia Petrovna
Page Number: 31
Explanation and Analysis:

After the murder of Kirov they had sent away, as a member of the nobility, Madame Nezhentseva, an old friend of Sofia Petrovna’s—they had attended school together. Sofia Petrovna had been astonished: what connection could Madame Nezhentseva possibly have to the murder? She taught French in a school and lived just like everybody else. But Kolya had explained that it was necessary to rid Leningrad of unreliable elements. “And who exactly is this Madame Nezhentseva of yours anyway? You remember yourself, Mama, that she didn’t recognize Mayakovsky as a poet and always said that things were cheaper in the old days. She’s not a real Soviet person…”

Related Characters: Sofia Petrovna, Kolya
Page Number: 32
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

“Arrested last night was the ex-supervisor of our print shop, now unmasked as an enemy of the people—Gerasimov. He turned out to be the nephew of the Moscow Gerasimov, who was unmasked a month ago. With the connivance of our party organization, which is suffering, to use Comrade Stalin’s apt expression, from the idiotic disease of complacency, Gerasimov continued to, so to speak, ‘operate’ in our print shop even after his own uncle, the Moscow Gerasimov, had been unmasked.”

Related Characters: Anna Grigorievna (speaker), Sofia Petrovna
Page Number: 35
Explanation and Analysis:

“And really, why are you so upset? Since [your husband] isn’t guilty—then everything will be all right. Nothing can happen to an honest man in our country. It’s just a misunderstanding. Come on, don’t be discouraged…Stop by and have a cup of tea sometime!”

Related Characters: Sofia Petrovna (speaker), Kolya, Mrs. Kiparisova, Dr. Kiparisov
Page Number: 37
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

“They say our director has been abroad,” Natasha recalled. “Also on a mission. Remember Marya Ivanovna, the elevator woman, told us that he’d brought his wife a light-blue knitted suit from Berlin?”

Related Characters: Natasha Frolenko (speaker), Sofia Petrovna, The Director (Zakharov)
Page Number: 41
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

Just think of it, all these women, the mothers, wives and sisters of saboteurs, terrorists and spies! And the men, the husband or brother of one…They all looked perfectly ordinary, like those on a streetcar or in a store. Except they all looked tired and baggy-eyed. “I can imagine how awful it must be for a mother to learn that her son is a saboteur,” thought Sofia Petrovna.

Related Characters: Sofia Petrovna, Kolya
Page Number: 50
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 10 Quotes

The night before, in the line, one woman had said to another—Sofia Petrovna had heard her: “No point waiting for him to return! Those who wind up here never return.” Sofia Petrovna had wanted to interrupt, but decided not to get involved. In our country innocent people aren’t held. Particularly not Soviet patriots like Kolya. They’ll clear the matter up and let him go.

Related Characters: Sofia Petrovna, Kolya
Page Number: 59
Explanation and Analysis:

No, Sofia Petrovna had been quite right to keep aloof from her neighbors in the lines. She was sorry for them, of course, as human beings, sorry especially for the children; but still an honest person had to remember that all these women were the wives and mothers of poisoners, spies and murderers.

Related Characters: Sofia Petrovna, Kolya
Page Number: 60
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

“And who is this Frolenko? She’s the daughter of a colonel who under the old regime was the owner of a so-called estate. What, it is asked, was citizeness Frolenko doing in our publishing house, the daughter of an alien element, appointed to her job by the bandit Zakharov? Another document will tell us about that. Under the wing of Zakharov, citizeness Frolenko learned to blacken our beloved Red Army of workers and peasants, to strike counterrevolutionary blows: she calls the Red Army, the Rat Army…”

Related Characters: Comrade Timofeyev (speaker), Natasha Frolenko, The Director (Zakharov)
Page Number: 64
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12 Quotes

“You’re still very young, I assure you, you’re mistaken. It’s all a question of tact. For instance, yesterday I defended Natalia Sergeyevna at the meeting. And the result? Nothing’s happened to me because of it. Believe me, this business with Kolya is a nightmare to me. I’m his mother. But I understand it’s a temporary misunderstanding, exaggerations, disagreement…One has to be patient.

Related Characters: Sofia Petrovna (speaker), Kolya, Natasha Frolenko, Alik Finkelstein
Page Number: 73
Explanation and Analysis:

“You have to be persistent,” said Sofia Petrovna quietly. “If they won’t tell you here, you must write to Moscow. Or else, what’s going to happen? You’ll lose track of each other completely.”

The director’s wife looked her up and down.

“Who is it? Your husband? Your son?” she asked with such intense fury that Sofia Petrovna involuntarily drew back closer to Alik. All right then, when they send your son away—you just be persistent, you go find out his address.”

“They won’t send my son away,” said Sofia Petrovna apologetically. “You see, he’s not guilty. He was arrested by mistake.”

“Ha-ha-ha!” laughed the director’s wife, carefully enunciating each syllable.

Related Characters: Sofia Petrovna (speaker), The Director’s Wife (speaker), Kolya, The Director (Zakharov)
Page Number: 75
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 16 Quotes

Lying in her bed, she would think about her next letter to Comrade Stalin. Since Kolya had been taken away, she had already written three letters to Comrade Stalin. In the first she had asked him to review Kolya’s case and have him released since he was not guilty of anything. In the second, she had asked to be told where he was so that she might go there and see him just once more before she died. In the third, she implored him to tell her one thing only: was Kolya alive or dead? But there was no answer…The first letter she had simply dropped into the mailbox, the second she had sent by registered mail, and the third, with a return slip for confirmation of delivery. The return slip came back after a few days. In the space “signature of recipient” was an incomprehensible scribble, in small letters: “…eryan.”

Who was this “Eryan”? And had he given Comrade Stalin the letter? After all the envelope had been marked: “Personal and Private.”

Related Characters: Sofia Petrovna, Kolya, Alik Finkelstein
Page Number: 97
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 18 Quotes

“Don’t write it!” whispered Kiparisova, bringing her huge eyes, ringed with yellow, close up to Sofia Petrovna’s face. “Don’t write one for your son’s sake. They’re not going to pat you on the back for an appeal like that. Neither you, nor your son. Do you really think you can write that the investigator beat him? You can’t even think such a thing, let alone write it. They’ve forgotten to deport you, but if you write an appeal—they’ll remember. And they’ll send your father away, too…and who brought this letter, anyway? And where are the witnesses?...And what proof is there?...”

Related Characters: Mrs. Kiparisova (speaker), Sofia Petrovna, Kolya
Page Number: 108
Explanation and Analysis: