Ostrovsky wrote
A Profitable Position at his Moscow home, lying there with a broken leg after the incident during his Volga trip. Taking bribery and corruption as its themes, the play was eagerly anticipated by
Sovremennik and its followers, but it was not a straightforward social critique. According to biographer Lakshin, Ostrovsky's approach was now different: "Is it worthwhile to wage ardent wars against certain bribe-takers when they are only part of the way of life with corruption serving as its hidden mechanism? Wouldn't it be more intriguing to try and penetrate under the skin of these people, learn how their special kind of morality works, expose the logic of their excuses?" Ostrovsky loathed tendentious drama and shied didacticism. "To pronounce a clever and honest word is not such a big deal, lots of them have been said and written. For a statement of truth to be effective and for it to make people wiser, it has to be filtered through the soul of a highest quality, that of an artist," he used to say, according to
Mikhail Ippolitov-Ivanov. Ostrovsky published
A Profitable Position in
Russkaya Beseda where he had some unfulfilled obligations, notably,
Minin, promised and never delivered.
Ivan Panaev deplored the fact that "such a thing had been published not by
Sovremennik" and
Leo Tolstoy reproached his friend for having given "such a brilliant comedy to the
raskolniks' journal".
Nikolai Chernyshevsky greeted the play warmly in his
Magazines review, comparing it favourably to the
Family Affair.
A Profitable Positions premiere was scheduled on December 20, 1857, but the show was cancelled at the eleventh hour, censors labeling it "an opus poking fun at state officials." The real reason, according to
Vasily Botkin, was that "it examined the thin line between honesty and corruption," showing bribery to be not an isolated vice but part of a serious social malaise. == Reception==