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  <title>DSpace Community:</title>
  <link rel="alternate" href="http://hdl.handle.net/10023/111" />
  <subtitle />
  <id>http://hdl.handle.net/10023/111</id>
  <updated>2013-06-19T16:52:07Z</updated>
  <dc:date>2013-06-19T16:52:07Z</dc:date>
  <entry>
    <title>The Letter of the law : literacy and orality in S. A. Panov's Murder in Medveditsa Village</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://hdl.handle.net/10023/3485" />
    <author>
      <name>Whitehead, Claire Eugenie</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://hdl.handle.net/10023/3485</id>
    <updated>2013-05-12T02:32:02Z</updated>
    <published>2011-01-01T00:00:00Z</published>
    <summary type="text">Abstract: This article takes as its subject a nineteenth-century detective story: S.A. Panov’s Murder in Medveditsa Village (1872). Panov’s work is remarkable amongst its contemporaries for the way in which it interrogates the relative authority of the written and the spoken word in the criminal investigation and, in so doing, foregrounds the role and status that detective fiction assigns to language. The aim of the present article is to discuss the ambiguously nuanced illustration Panov provides of the relative power of written, spoken and non-verbal language in the particular context of the functioning of the law and the pursuit of the ‘truth’, two cornerstones of detective fiction. Language, and especially the written word, is thus shown to play the decisive role in structuring the various networks of authority operating in and around the fictional world.</summary>
    <dc:date>2011-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:creator>Whitehead, Claire Eugenie</dc:creator>
    <dc:description>This article takes as its subject a nineteenth-century detective story: S.A. Panov’s Murder in Medveditsa Village (1872). Panov’s work is remarkable amongst its contemporaries for the way in which it interrogates the relative authority of the written and the spoken word in the criminal investigation and, in so doing, foregrounds the role and status that detective fiction assigns to language. The aim of the present article is to discuss the ambiguously nuanced illustration Panov provides of the relative power of written, spoken and non-verbal language in the particular context of the functioning of the law and the pursuit of the ‘truth’, two cornerstones of detective fiction. Language, and especially the written word, is thus shown to play the decisive role in structuring the various networks of authority operating in and around the fictional world.</dc:description>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>The work of Aleksandr Grin (1880-1932) : a study of Grin's philosophical outlook</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://hdl.handle.net/10023/2467" />
    <author>
      <name>Martowicz, Krzysztof</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://hdl.handle.net/10023/2467</id>
    <updated>2012-03-27T15:05:28Z</updated>
    <published>2011-11-30T00:00:00Z</published>
    <summary type="text">Abstract: There has been to date no attempt at a detailed examination of Aleksandr Grin’s&#xD;
philosophical views interpreted on the basis of his literary work. Whilst some critics have&#xD;
noted interesting links between the writer’s oeuvre and a few popular philosophers, this has&#xD;
usually been done in passing and on an ad hoc basis. This thesis aims to fill this gap by&#xD;
reconstructing Grin’s views in relation to the European philosophical tradition.&#xD;
The main body of the thesis consists of three parts built on and named after three&#xD;
essential themes in philosophy: External World, Happiness and Morality.&#xD;
Part One delineates Grin’s views on nature and civilisation: I argue first that his cult of&#xD;
nature makes it possible to conceive of Grin as a pantheistic thinker close to Rousseau and&#xD;
Bergson, and then I reconstruct the author’s criticism of urbanisation and industrialisation.&#xD;
In the second part I assess the place of happiness in Grin’s world-view, indicating its&#xD;
similarities to the philosophy of various thinkers from the Ancients to Schopenhauer and&#xD;
Nietzsche. After sketching a general picture of the concept of happiness in Grin’s works, I&#xD;
discuss the place of material and immaterial factors in the writer’s outlook. I also gather&#xD;
maxims expressed by the protagonists in his fiction that can be taken as recommendations&#xD;
concerning ways of achieving and defending happiness. Finally, I link happiness with the&#xD;
problem of morality in Grin’s oeuvre.&#xD;
In the final part I examine modes of moral behaviour as displayed by the author’s&#xD;
protagonists. Firstly, I argue that in Grin’s works we find numerous examples and themes that&#xD;
allow us to perceive him as an existentialist. Secondly, I indicate Grin’s adherence to rules of&#xD;
conduct commonly associated with chivalric literature. Thirdly, I emphasise the importance of&#xD;
Promethean-like characters in the moral hierarchy of Grin’s protagonists.</summary>
    <dc:date>2011-11-30T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:creator>Martowicz, Krzysztof</dc:creator>
    <dc:description>There has been to date no attempt at a detailed examination of Aleksandr Grin’s&#xD;
philosophical views interpreted on the basis of his literary work. Whilst some critics have&#xD;
noted interesting links between the writer’s oeuvre and a few popular philosophers, this has&#xD;
usually been done in passing and on an ad hoc basis. This thesis aims to fill this gap by&#xD;
reconstructing Grin’s views in relation to the European philosophical tradition.&#xD;
The main body of the thesis consists of three parts built on and named after three&#xD;
essential themes in philosophy: External World, Happiness and Morality.&#xD;
Part One delineates Grin’s views on nature and civilisation: I argue first that his cult of&#xD;
nature makes it possible to conceive of Grin as a pantheistic thinker close to Rousseau and&#xD;
Bergson, and then I reconstruct the author’s criticism of urbanisation and industrialisation.&#xD;
In the second part I assess the place of happiness in Grin’s world-view, indicating its&#xD;
similarities to the philosophy of various thinkers from the Ancients to Schopenhauer and&#xD;
Nietzsche. After sketching a general picture of the concept of happiness in Grin’s works, I&#xD;
discuss the place of material and immaterial factors in the writer’s outlook. I also gather&#xD;
maxims expressed by the protagonists in his fiction that can be taken as recommendations&#xD;
concerning ways of achieving and defending happiness. Finally, I link happiness with the&#xD;
problem of morality in Grin’s oeuvre.&#xD;
In the final part I examine modes of moral behaviour as displayed by the author’s&#xD;
protagonists. Firstly, I argue that in Grin’s works we find numerous examples and themes that&#xD;
allow us to perceive him as an existentialist. Secondly, I indicate Grin’s adherence to rules of&#xD;
conduct commonly associated with chivalric literature. Thirdly, I emphasise the importance of&#xD;
Promethean-like characters in the moral hierarchy of Grin’s protagonists.</dc:description>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>'Post-Soviet neo-modernism' : an approach to 'postmodernism' and humour in the post-Soviet Russian fiction of Vladimir Sorokin, Vladimir Tuchkov and Aleksandr Khurgin</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://hdl.handle.net/10023/1917" />
    <author>
      <name>Dreyer, Nicolas D.</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://hdl.handle.net/10023/1917</id>
    <updated>2011-11-21T12:14:04Z</updated>
    <published>2011-06-23T00:00:00Z</published>
    <summary type="text">Abstract: The present work analyses the fiction of the post-Soviet Russian writers,&#xD;
Vladimir Sorokin, Vladimir Tuchkov and Aleksandr Khurgin against the&#xD;
background of the notion of post-Soviet Russian postmodernism. In doing&#xD;
so, it investigates the usefulness and accuracy of this very notion, proposing&#xD;
that of ‘post-Soviet neo-modernism’ instead. Common critical approaches to&#xD;
post-Soviet Russian literature as being postmodern are questioned through&#xD;
an examination of the concept of postmodernism in its interrelated historical,&#xD;
social, and philosophical dimensions, and of its utility and adequacy in the&#xD;
Russian cultural context. In addition, it is proposed that the humorous and&#xD;
grotesque nature of certain post-Soviet works can be viewed as a creatively&#xD;
critical engagement with both the past, i.e. Soviet ideology, and the present,&#xD;
the socially tumultuous post-Soviet years.&#xD;
Russian modernism, while sharing typologically and literary-historically&#xD;
a number of key characteristics with Western modernism, was particularly&#xD;
motivated by a turning to the cultural repository of Russia’s past, and a&#xD;
metaphysical yearning for universal meaning transcending the perceived fragmentation&#xD;
of the tangible modern world. Continuing the older Russian tradition&#xD;
of resisting rationalism, and impressed by the sense of realist aesthetics&#xD;
failing the writer in the task of representing a world that eluded rational&#xD;
comprehension, modernists tended to subordinate artistic concerns to their&#xD;
esoteric convictions. Without appreciation of this spiritual dimension, semantic&#xD;
intention in Russian modernist fiction may escape a reader used to&#xD;
the conventions of realist fiction. It is suggested that contemporary Russian&#xD;
fiction as embodied in certain works by Sorokin, Tuchkov and Khurgin, while&#xD;
stylistically exhibiting a number of features commonly regarded as postmodern,&#xD;
such as parody, pastiche, playfulness, carnivalisation, the grotesque, intertextuality&#xD;
and self-consciousness, seems to resume modernism’s tendency&#xD;
to seek meaning and value for human existence in the transcendent realm, as&#xD;
well as in the cultural, in particular literary, treasures of the past. The closeness&#xD;
of such segments of post-Soviet fiction and modernism in this regard is,&#xD;
it is argued, ultimately contrary to the spirit of postmodernism and its relativistic&#xD;
and particularistic worldview. Hence the suggested conceptualisation&#xD;
of post-Soviet Russian fiction as ‘neo-modernist’.</summary>
    <dc:date>2011-06-23T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:creator>Dreyer, Nicolas D.</dc:creator>
    <dc:description>The present work analyses the fiction of the post-Soviet Russian writers,&#xD;
Vladimir Sorokin, Vladimir Tuchkov and Aleksandr Khurgin against the&#xD;
background of the notion of post-Soviet Russian postmodernism. In doing&#xD;
so, it investigates the usefulness and accuracy of this very notion, proposing&#xD;
that of ‘post-Soviet neo-modernism’ instead. Common critical approaches to&#xD;
post-Soviet Russian literature as being postmodern are questioned through&#xD;
an examination of the concept of postmodernism in its interrelated historical,&#xD;
social, and philosophical dimensions, and of its utility and adequacy in the&#xD;
Russian cultural context. In addition, it is proposed that the humorous and&#xD;
grotesque nature of certain post-Soviet works can be viewed as a creatively&#xD;
critical engagement with both the past, i.e. Soviet ideology, and the present,&#xD;
the socially tumultuous post-Soviet years.&#xD;
Russian modernism, while sharing typologically and literary-historically&#xD;
a number of key characteristics with Western modernism, was particularly&#xD;
motivated by a turning to the cultural repository of Russia’s past, and a&#xD;
metaphysical yearning for universal meaning transcending the perceived fragmentation&#xD;
of the tangible modern world. Continuing the older Russian tradition&#xD;
of resisting rationalism, and impressed by the sense of realist aesthetics&#xD;
failing the writer in the task of representing a world that eluded rational&#xD;
comprehension, modernists tended to subordinate artistic concerns to their&#xD;
esoteric convictions. Without appreciation of this spiritual dimension, semantic&#xD;
intention in Russian modernist fiction may escape a reader used to&#xD;
the conventions of realist fiction. It is suggested that contemporary Russian&#xD;
fiction as embodied in certain works by Sorokin, Tuchkov and Khurgin, while&#xD;
stylistically exhibiting a number of features commonly regarded as postmodern,&#xD;
such as parody, pastiche, playfulness, carnivalisation, the grotesque, intertextuality&#xD;
and self-consciousness, seems to resume modernism’s tendency&#xD;
to seek meaning and value for human existence in the transcendent realm, as&#xD;
well as in the cultural, in particular literary, treasures of the past. The closeness&#xD;
of such segments of post-Soviet fiction and modernism in this regard is,&#xD;
it is argued, ultimately contrary to the spirit of postmodernism and its relativistic&#xD;
and particularistic worldview. Hence the suggested conceptualisation&#xD;
of post-Soviet Russian fiction as ‘neo-modernist’.</dc:description>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>The generic originality of Iurii Tynianov's representation of Pushkin in the novels 'Pushkin' and 'The Gannibals'</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://hdl.handle.net/10023/1712" />
    <author>
      <name>Rush, Anna</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://hdl.handle.net/10023/1712</id>
    <updated>2011-03-24T16:33:35Z</updated>
    <published>2011-01-01T00:00:00Z</published>
    <summary type="text">Abstract: This thesis is the first extensive study devoted to the generic originality of Iurii Tynianov’s&#xD;
representation of Pushkin in his two historical novels, Pushkin (1935-1943) and the abandoned&#xD;
The Gannibals (1932). Chapter 1 contextualises Tynianov’s contribution to the current debates&#xD;
on the novel’s demise, ‘large’ form and the worthy protagonist. The conditions giving rise to&#xD;
contemporary interest in the genres of biography and the historical novel are delineated and the&#xD;
critical issues surrounding these are examined; Tynianov’s concern to secularise the rigid&#xD;
monolith of an all but sanctified ‘state-sponsored Pushkin’ and the difficulties of the task are&#xD;
also reviewed. Chapter 2 shifts the examination of Pushkin as a historical novel to its study&#xD;
within the generic framework of the Bildungs, Erziehungs and Künstlerromane with their&#xD;
particular problematics which allowed Tynianov to grapple with a cluster of moral,&#xD;
philosophical and educational issues, and to explore the formative influences on the&#xD;
protagonist’s identity as a poet. Chapter 3 explores the concept of history underlying&#xD;
Tynianov’s interpretation of the characters and events and the historiographical practices he&#xD;
employed in his analyses of the factors that shaped Pushkin’s own historical thinking. Chapter&#xD;
4 investigates Tynianov’s scepticism about Abram Gannibal’s and A. Pushkin’s mythopoeia&#xD;
which reveals itself in Tynianov’s subversively ironical and playful use of myth in both novels.&#xD;
The Conclusion assesses Tynianov’s contribution to the 20th century fictional Pushkiniana and&#xD;
reflects on his innovative transgeneric historical novel which broke the normative restrictions&#xD;
of the genre, elevated it to the level of ‘serious’ literature and made it conducive to stylistic&#xD;
experimentation.</summary>
    <dc:date>2011-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:creator>Rush, Anna</dc:creator>
    <dc:description>This thesis is the first extensive study devoted to the generic originality of Iurii Tynianov’s&#xD;
representation of Pushkin in his two historical novels, Pushkin (1935-1943) and the abandoned&#xD;
The Gannibals (1932). Chapter 1 contextualises Tynianov’s contribution to the current debates&#xD;
on the novel’s demise, ‘large’ form and the worthy protagonist. The conditions giving rise to&#xD;
contemporary interest in the genres of biography and the historical novel are delineated and the&#xD;
critical issues surrounding these are examined; Tynianov’s concern to secularise the rigid&#xD;
monolith of an all but sanctified ‘state-sponsored Pushkin’ and the difficulties of the task are&#xD;
also reviewed. Chapter 2 shifts the examination of Pushkin as a historical novel to its study&#xD;
within the generic framework of the Bildungs, Erziehungs and Künstlerromane with their&#xD;
particular problematics which allowed Tynianov to grapple with a cluster of moral,&#xD;
philosophical and educational issues, and to explore the formative influences on the&#xD;
protagonist’s identity as a poet. Chapter 3 explores the concept of history underlying&#xD;
Tynianov’s interpretation of the characters and events and the historiographical practices he&#xD;
employed in his analyses of the factors that shaped Pushkin’s own historical thinking. Chapter&#xD;
4 investigates Tynianov’s scepticism about Abram Gannibal’s and A. Pushkin’s mythopoeia&#xD;
which reveals itself in Tynianov’s subversively ironical and playful use of myth in both novels.&#xD;
The Conclusion assesses Tynianov’s contribution to the 20th century fictional Pushkiniana and&#xD;
reflects on his innovative transgeneric historical novel which broke the normative restrictions&#xD;
of the genre, elevated it to the level of ‘serious’ literature and made it conducive to stylistic&#xD;
experimentation.</dc:description>
  </entry>
</feed>

