1 00:00:07,982 --> 00:00:10,572 The Devil has come to town. 2 00:00:10,572 --> 00:00:14,652 But don’t worry – all he wants to do is stage a magic show. 3 00:00:14,652 --> 00:00:20,317 This absurd premise forms the central plot of Mikhail Bulgakov’s masterpiece, 4 00:00:20,317 --> 00:00:22,322 "The Master and Margarita." 5 00:00:22,322 --> 00:00:24,992 Written in Moscow during the 1930s, 6 00:00:24,992 --> 00:00:30,632 this surreal blend of political satire, historical fiction, and occult mysticism 7 00:00:30,632 --> 00:00:34,632 has earned a legacy as one of the 20th century’s greatest novels– 8 00:00:34,632 --> 00:00:37,122 and one of its strangest. 9 00:00:37,122 --> 00:00:41,532 The story begins when a meeting between two members of Moscow’s literary elite 10 00:00:41,532 --> 00:00:45,315 is interrupted by a strange gentleman named Woland, 11 00:00:45,315 --> 00:00:47,705 who presents himself as a foreign scholar 12 00:00:47,705 --> 00:00:51,245 invited to give a presentation on black magic. 13 00:00:51,245 --> 00:00:55,485 As the stranger engages the two companions in a philosophical debate 14 00:00:55,485 --> 00:00:58,278 and makes ominous predictions about their fates, 15 00:00:58,278 --> 00:01:01,949 the reader is suddenly transported to first-century Jerusalem. 16 00:01:01,949 --> 00:01:04,399 There a tormented Pontius Pilate 17 00:01:04,399 --> 00:01:08,699 reluctantly sentences Jesus of Nazareth to death. 18 00:01:08,699 --> 00:01:11,497 With the narrative shifting between the two settings, 19 00:01:11,497 --> 00:01:16,307 Woland and his entourage– Azazello, Koroviev, Hella, 20 00:01:16,307 --> 00:01:18,788 and a giant cat named Behemoth– 21 00:01:18,788 --> 00:01:21,428 are seen to have uncanny magical powers, 22 00:01:21,428 --> 00:01:23,648 which they use to stage their performance 23 00:01:23,648 --> 00:01:28,348 while leaving a trail of havoc and confusion in their wake. 24 00:01:28,348 --> 00:01:32,780 Much of the novel’s dark humor comes not only from this demonic mischief, 25 00:01:32,780 --> 00:01:35,660 but also the backdrop against which it occurs. 26 00:01:35,660 --> 00:01:39,660 Bulgakov’s story takes place in the same setting where it was written– 27 00:01:39,660 --> 00:01:43,310 the USSR at the height of the Stalinist period. 28 00:01:43,310 --> 00:01:46,889 There, artists and authors worked under strict censorship, 29 00:01:46,889 --> 00:01:50,299 subject to imprisonment, exile, or execution 30 00:01:50,299 --> 00:01:53,679 if they were seen as undermining state ideology. 31 00:01:53,679 --> 00:01:55,879 Even when approved, their work– 32 00:01:55,879 --> 00:01:58,379 along with housing, travel, and everything else– 33 00:01:58,379 --> 00:02:01,419 was governed by a convoluted bureaucracy. 34 00:02:01,419 --> 00:02:06,509 In the novel, Woland manipulates this system along with the fabric of reality, 35 00:02:06,509 --> 00:02:08,519 to hilarious results. 36 00:02:08,519 --> 00:02:12,749 As heads are separated from bodies and money rains from the sky, 37 00:02:12,749 --> 00:02:16,431 the citizens of Moscow react with petty-self interest, 38 00:02:16,431 --> 00:02:22,111 illustrating how Soviet society bred greed and cynicism despite its ideals. 39 00:02:22,111 --> 00:02:25,539 And the matter-of-fact narration deliberately blends 40 00:02:25,539 --> 00:02:27,919 the strangeness of the supernatural events 41 00:02:27,919 --> 00:02:31,659 with the everyday absurdity of Soviet life. 42 00:02:31,659 --> 00:02:35,869 So how did Bulgakov manage to publish such a subversive novel 43 00:02:35,869 --> 00:02:38,234 under an oppressive regime? 44 00:02:38,234 --> 00:02:40,284 Well… he didn’t. 45 00:02:40,284 --> 00:02:43,484 He worked on "The Master and Margarita" for over ten years. 46 00:02:43,484 --> 00:02:45,424 But while Stalin’s personal favor 47 00:02:45,424 --> 00:02:48,904 may have kept Bulgakov safe from severe persecution, 48 00:02:48,904 --> 00:02:51,904 many of his plays and writings were kept from production, 49 00:02:51,904 --> 00:02:55,424 leaving him safe but effectively silenced. 50 00:02:55,424 --> 00:02:57,844 Upon the author’s death in 1940, 51 00:02:57,844 --> 00:03:00,034 the manuscript remained unpublished. 52 00:03:00,034 --> 00:03:03,884 A censored version was eventually printed in the 1960s, 53 00:03:03,884 --> 00:03:07,024 while copies of the unabridged manuscript continued to circulate 54 00:03:07,024 --> 00:03:09,214 among underground literary circles. 55 00:03:09,214 --> 00:03:12,674 The full text was only published in 1973, 56 00:03:12,674 --> 00:03:15,934 over 30 years after its completion. 57 00:03:15,934 --> 00:03:19,754 Bulgakov’s experiences with censorship and artistic frustration 58 00:03:19,754 --> 00:03:23,474 lend an autobiographical air to the second part of the novel, 59 00:03:23,474 --> 00:03:26,104 when we are finally introduced to its namesake. 60 00:03:26,104 --> 00:03:30,454 ‘The Master’ is a nameless author who’s worked for years on a novel 61 00:03:30,454 --> 00:03:34,164 but burned the manuscript after it was rejected by publishers– 62 00:03:34,164 --> 00:03:36,964 just as Bulgakov had done with his own work. 63 00:03:36,964 --> 00:03:41,214 Yet the true protagonist is the Master’s mistress Margarita. 64 00:03:41,214 --> 00:03:45,467 Her devotion to her lover’s abandoned dream bears a strange connection 65 00:03:45,467 --> 00:03:48,207 to the diabolical company’s escapades– 66 00:03:48,207 --> 00:03:51,627 and carries the story to its surreal climax. 67 00:03:51,627 --> 00:03:55,156 Despite its dark humor and complex structure, 68 00:03:55,156 --> 00:04:02,406 "The Master and Margarita" is, at its heart, a meditation on art, love, and redemption 69 00:04:02,406 --> 00:04:05,233 that never loses itself in cynicism. 70 00:04:05,233 --> 00:04:09,593 And the book’s long overdue publication and survival against the odds 71 00:04:09,593 --> 00:04:14,060 is a testament to what Woland tells the Master: 72 00:04:14,060 --> 00:04:17,297 “Manuscripts don’t burn.”