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oapen-20.500.12657-261302022-04-26T12:31:44Z Don't Weep a Gold Chain Waszink, Paul M. Chain Classical Derzhavin's Poetry Gogol Gold Literature Mannerisms in Verbal and Pictorial Texts Observations Primary Romantic Russian russian Realism russian Romanticism Secondary Systems Waszink Weep bic Book Industry Communication::C Language::CF linguistics In this work I have endeavoured to apply the theory of primary and secondary systems as defined by D.S. Likhachev to Russian literary texts. Likhachev's idea amounts to the fact that those systems reoccur alternately. Thus, a primary system evolves into a so-called elliptic stage which enables a succeeding, secondary system to develop itself. Conversely, when the latter has become the standard norm it gradually evolves, in turn, into a similar elliptic stage. This, in turn, gradually develops into a primary system too. As far as the fluent succession of systems is concerned, Likhachev's theory differs from a similar theory developed by E.R. Curtius. The latter assumes that literary works should be divided into works with a Classicistic and a Manneristic character. The first develop into the latter which show a frozen character with no original qualities. In the end works with a new Classicistic character develop themselves. These, in turn, have a vital character again. In other words, in Curtius' scheme there is no place for a fluent alternation of systems the way there is in Likhachev's. 2019-01-10 23:55 2020-01-09 14:46:48 2020-04-01T11:00:52Z 2020-04-01T11:00:52Z 2003 book 1003957 OCN: 1082953286 9783954790197 http://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/26130 eng Slavistische Beitraege application/pdf n/a 1003957.pdf Peter Lang International Academic Publishers 10.3726/b12705 10.3726/b12705 e927e604-2954-4bf6-826b-d5ecb47c6555 9783954790197 426 309 Bern open access
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In this work I have endeavoured to apply the theory of primary and secondary systems as defined by D.S. Likhachev to Russian literary texts. Likhachev's idea amounts to the fact that those systems reoccur alternately. Thus, a primary system evolves into a so-called elliptic stage which enables a succeeding, secondary system to develop itself. Conversely, when the latter has become the standard norm it gradually evolves, in turn, into a similar elliptic stage. This, in turn, gradually develops into a primary system too. As far as the fluent succession of systems is concerned, Likhachev's theory differs from a similar theory developed by E.R. Curtius. The latter assumes that literary works should be divided into works with a Classicistic and a Manneristic character. The first develop into the latter which show a frozen character with no original qualities. In the end works with a new Classicistic character develop themselves. These, in turn, have a vital character again. In other words, in Curtius' scheme there is no place for a fluent alternation of systems the way there is in Likhachev's.
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Peter Lang International Academic Publishers
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2019
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