Anton Chekhov grew up with a family full of problems, this influenced him to become a doctor. In Chekhov’s early years his family was full of problems. His father was an alcoholic who was never accountable in his family life. His brother, Alexander, was a man who had many mistresses and mistreated them. Chekhov’s other brother, Nikolai, had a serious drug issue, he started to become addicted to morphine (Chin 4). The men in his family are men who were addicted to alcohol and this broke Chekhov’s heart. These men in his life were his heroes, then they became detached. This caused Chekhov to not become too attached with his characters in the plays and stories. Anton Chekhov became a man who had issues with trusting people and didn’t trust his own family. …show more content…
Chekhov was fascinated in the creative diseases of his patients. Many of his works are about his fascination in the diseases of the human body. Chekhov’s study in medicine was hard work, but it showed how dedicated he was. His knowledge of medicine will be needed in his later life to research about his disease tuberculosis. As he was “trained as a doctor, Chekhov retained a scientific professional scepticism and laconicism which insulated him from the philosophical and religious searchings”(Rayfield 1).
Chekhov grew up in poverty and moved around in Russia as a child. Anton Chekhov was born on January 29, 1860 in Taganrog, Russia. He had two brothers, Alexander and Nikolai, which later became drug and alcohol addicts. He grew up to study medicine and move to Moscow to become a doctor. He began to write about his findings in medicine and create a medical journal. In Chekhov’s writing career he wrote short stories that were comical and wrote stories for the newspaper. After the peak of his writing and medical career, he became sick with tuberculosis and died on July 15,