RAS History & PhilologyРусская литература Russian literature

  • ISSN (Print) 0131-6095
  • ISSN (Online) 3034-591X

“Not” death motive in Russian ethnography and Romanticism fiction

PII
S0236-20070000392-2-1
DOI
10.7868/S70000392-2-1
Publication type
Article
Status
Published
Authors
Volume/ Edition
Volume / Issue 4
Pages
16-34
Abstract
The folklore motifs and images in the works by V.A. Zhukovsky, A.S. Pushkin and N.V. Gogol are considered in the perspective of slavonic notions of fate, “not” death, “laid” deads (the term by the ethnographer D.K. Zelenin). According to ethnographic data, these ideas brought to life the images of Russian lower mythology (mermaids, water, brownies, etc.). It's well-known that appeal to folk consciousness was an important part of European romanticism project. But it was in Russian literature that the folk beliefs and images were expressed in the most accurate and even ethnographically authentic way. In the first half of 19th century Russia the traditional peasant culture was still preserved in its wholeness and authenticity so that the “high” culture could perceive it as quite alive. The proposed perspective allows to understand why Russian romanticism was much closer to the folk consciousness than romanticism in Western literature.
Keywords
ROMANTICISM, REALISM, ZHUKOVSKY, PUSHKIN, GOGOL, URBAN LEGEND, "NOT DEATH", RUSSIAN FOLKLORE, MEMORATES, "LAID" DEADS
Date of publication
01.08.2016
Year of publication
2016
Number of purchasers
1
Views
1263

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At the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation

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