GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
Mikhail Afanasyevich Bulgakov

Mikhail Afanasyevich Bulgakov

Soviet novelist, playwright, physician, and satirist

RussiaBorn 1891 · Died 1940creatorKyiv University Medical FacultyMoscow Art TheatreSoviet literary press
58
MIXED

of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving

Standing

58/100

Raw Score

48/85

Confidence

67%

Evidence

Strong with private observability gaps

About

Bulgakov is best evidenced as a truth telling writer who kept working under fear, bans, and illness, while leaving a weaker public trail on direct service and private worship.

The record strongly supports resilience, moral seriousness, and refusal to surrender artistic conscience under Stalinist pressure. It supports social concern mostly through witness and critique rather than verified hands on aid.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview60%(15/25)
Contribution to Others43%(13/30)
Personal Discipline30%(3/10)
Reliability80%(4/5)
Stability Under Pressure87%(13/15)

Bulgakov scores highest in resilience and integrity because the public record clearly shows persistence under censorship, fear, illness, and blocked publication. He scores lower where the record is indirect on direct service, routine prayer, and disciplined charity.

Goodness over time

Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.

17 Criteria Scores

Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes

Core Worldview

Belief in god2/5

Religious family background and the moral architecture of his fiction support some theistic orientation, but the record is indirect.

Belief in accountability last day3/5

His major fiction repeatedly assumes moral answerability beyond state power.

Belief in unseen order4/5

The supernatural and metaphysical structure of his work shows durable confidence in realities beyond material ideology.

Belief in revealed guidance3/5

Scriptural and theological reference points remain visible, though not as a plainly documented rule of life.

Belief in prophets as examples3/5

The Jesus and Pilate material in The Master and Margarita suggests real moral engagement with prophetic example.

Contribution to Others

Helps relatives2/5

Family responsibility is visible in parts of the biography, but the public record is not rich in directly evidenced kin focused aid.

Helps orphans or unsupported young people1/5

Little strong public evidence shows a repeated youth or orphan focused practice.

Helps the poor or stuck3/5

His writing gave sustained witness to people trapped by bureaucracy, fear, and ideological coercion.

Helps travelers strangers or cut off people2/5

His work reached socially cut off readers, but the case is still stronger in symbolic than material care.

Helps people who ask directly1/5

The surviving record offers little direct proof of repeated one to one aid in response to requests.

Helps free people from constraint4/5

A major recurring function of his satire was to expose lies, domination, and spiritual suffocation.

Personal Discipline

Prays consistently2/5

There are signs of spiritual seriousness, but routine prayer is not well documented in public evidence.

Gives obligatory charity1/5

The public record does not strongly document disciplined charitable giving.

Reliability

Keeps promises agreements contracts commitments and clear communication4/5

He kept returning to the same artistic and moral commitments despite real cost and communicated his pleas to power directly.

Stability Under Pressure

Patient during financial difficulty4/5

Blocked publication and insecure theatre dependence did not stop his work.

Patient during personal hardship4/5

Illness, addiction recovery, and later kidney disease did not end his disciplined production.

Patient during conflict pressure fear or battlefield moments5/5

War medicine, censorship, fear, and surveillance tested him repeatedly without fully breaking his creative conscience.

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

1916

Completed medical training and served as a wartime doctor

Bulgakov graduated from Kyiv University medical training and worked as a frontline and rural doctor during war and civil upheaval.

Direct exposure to disorder, fear, and suffering fed the moral realism later visible in his fiction.

high
1921

Moved to Moscow and committed fully to literary work

After civil war dislocation in the Caucasus, he settled in Moscow in 1921, left medicine behind, and entered journalism and literature.

The move placed him inside the cultural system he would later satirize and resist.

medium
1925

Published major early prose including The White Guard

By the mid 1920s Bulgakov had published The White Guard and satirical prose that established him as a major new voice.

His reputation rose quickly, but the same work also marked him as politically suspect.

high
1926

Days of the Turbins succeeded on stage while criticism hardened against him

His play Days of the Turbins became a notable Moscow Art Theatre production, yet official criticism increasingly targeted him for unacceptable politics and satire.

Public success did not protect him; state pressure tightened while keeping him visible enough to be managed.

high
1930

After a publishing ban, he appealed to the Soviet government and received Stalins call

By 1929 and 1930 his plays and prose were effectively blocked. In despair he requested either permission to work or leave the USSR; Stalin personally phoned him on 18 April 1930, but emigration was not granted.

He obtained employment at the Moscow Art Theatre but remained trapped inside a system that restricted his freedom.

high
1936

The Cabal of Hypocrites was halted after only seven performances

His play about Moliere, also known as The Cabal of Hypocrites, was banned in 1936 after only a handful of performances.

The episode confirmed that even major institutions could not shield him from censorship.

medium
1940

Kept revising The Master and Margarita until his death

Across his final decade Bulgakov kept reworking The Master and Margarita despite bans, illness, and the expectation that it could not appear openly.

Posthumous publication in 1966 and 1967 turned the suppressed manuscript into his enduring global legacy.

high

Pressure Tests

Behavior under crisis or scrutiny

Civil war dislocation and abandonment of medicine

1921

War, displacement, and the collapse of medical normalcy forced Bulgakov to abandon a stable profession.

Response: He redirected himself into literature instead of public surrender or silence.

positive

State censorship and the 1930 plea to Stalin

1930

His work was blocked so thoroughly that he asked to leave the Soviet Union or at least be allowed to work.

Response: He kept writing, accepted theatre work to survive, and continued privately shaping major fiction.

mixed

Fatal illness during the last revision years

1939

Advanced kidney disease narrowed his capacity while he was still under cultural pressure.

Response: He continued revising The Master and Margarita until death.

positive

Progression

crisis years

The late 1920s and 1930s narrowed his public options but deepened the record of endurance and artistic seriousness.

tested_but_steady

current stage

His enduring influence rests less on official success than on the later survival of the suppressed manuscripts.

enduring_legacy

early years

Medical work and exposure to war formed an early pressure tested moral imagination rather than a sheltered literary start.

formation

growth years

The move to Moscow and early prose success rapidly expanded his reach, while also exposing him to ideological scrutiny.

rising

Behavioral Patterns

Positive

  • Repeatedly converted censorship pressure into disciplined literary labor instead of propaganda.
  • Kept moral and metaphysical questions alive inside an officially atheist public culture.
  • His appeals to power remained direct and clear rather than hidden behind vague public evasions.

Concerns

  • The evidence base is weaker on hands on service to vulnerable people than on literary witness.
  • His survival within a protected theatre institution leaves room for competing readings of prudence, compromise, and necessity.

Evidence Quality

4

Strong

3

Medium

1

Weak

Overall: strong_with_private_observability_gaps

This profile measures publicly observable patterns and evidence, not hidden intention or salvation.