"Homer or "Aeneid" Virgil) if not fiction artistic. In Russia, back in the 1820s, critics agreed that the best examples of Russian prose were “History of the Russian State” by Karamzin and “An Experience in the Theory of Taxes” by Nikolai Turgenev. By separating the fiction of other periods from religious, philosophical, scientific, and journalistic literature, we project our modern ideas into the past.

Nevertheless, literature has a number of universal properties, unchanged in all national cultures and throughout human history, although each of these properties is associated with certain problems and reservations.

  • Literature includes author's texts (including anonymous, that is, those in which the author is unknown for one reason or another, and collective, that is, written by a group of people - sometimes quite numerous, if we are talking, for example, about an encyclopedia, but still definite). The fact that the text belongs to a certain author, was created by him, is important in this case not from a legal point of view (cf. copyright) and not from a psychological point of view (the author as a living person, information about whom the reader can try to extract from readable text), but because the presence of a certain author in a text provides completeness to this text: the author puts the last point, and after that the text begins to exist on its own. The history of culture knows types of texts that exist according to other rules - for example, folklore: due to the lack of authorship, the text itself is not completely fixed, and the one who once again retells or rewrites it is free to make changes to it, sometimes quite significant. Certain records of such a text may be associated with the name of the writer or scientist who made such a record (for example, “Folk Russian Tales” by Afanasyev), however, such a literary fixation of a non-literary text does not negate the possibility of the existence of other versions of it, and the author of such a record belongs to this particular one the record, not the tale itself.
  • Another property is connected with the previous property: literature includes written texts and does not include oral ones. Oral creativity historically precedes writing and, unlike writing, was previously not amenable to fixation. Folklore has always been oral (until the 19th century, when written forms began to appear - for example, maiden albums). Modernity knows, however, transitional and borderline cases. So, in national cultures who made a big leap in development in the 20th century, storytellers engaged in oral (poetic, on the verge of song) creativity were preserved or are being preserved - before, such songs would have gone into folklore and existed in it, changing and developing in the mouths of other performers, but in modern times works, for example, by Dzhambul, were recorded in writing immediately after their creation and therefore exist as literary works. Another way to transform oral creativity into writing - the so-called “literary record”: for example, the memoirs of the mother of Zoya and Alexander Kosmodemyansky, repeatedly published as a separate book, were recorded from her words and turned into a literary text by the writer Frida Vigdorova who interviewed her.
  • Literature includes texts whose material is exclusively the words of the human language, and does not include synthetic and syncretic texts, that is, those in which the verbal component cannot be separated from the musical, visual or any other. A song or an opera is not itself a part of literature. If the song was written by a composer based on an existing text written by a poet, then the problem does not arise; in the 20th century, however, the ancient tradition, according to which the same author simultaneously creates verbal text and music and (as a rule) performs the resulting work himself, became widespread again. The question of how legitimate it is to extract only the verbal component from the resulting synthetic work and consider it as an independent literary work remains debatable. In a number of cases, synthetic works are still perceived and qualified as literary if there are relatively few non-verbal elements in them (for example, the famous “squiggle” in “The Adventures of Tristram Shandy” by Laurence Sterne or the drawings in the famous children’s book “The Magic Chalk” by Shinken Hopp) ) or their role is fundamentally subordinate (like the role of formulas in mathematical, chemical, physical literature, even if they occupy most of the text). Sometimes, however, the place of additional visual elements in a literary text is so great that considering it as purely literary from a scientific point of view is already a stretch: the most famous of such texts is Saint-Exupery’s fairy tale “The Little Prince”, an important part of which are the author’s drawings.

All three of these criteria are not fully satisfied by some ancient texts, traditionally understood as literary, for example, “Iliad” and “Odyssey”: it is likely that Homer as the single author of these two poems never existed, and the texts of these two poems were formed from ancient Greek folklore performed by storytellers in the form of songs. However, the written recording of these texts in their final form took place so long ago that such a traditional approach can be considered justified.

One more criterion should be added, which relates not to the structure of literary texts, but to their function.

  • Literature includes texts that themselves have social meaning (or are designed to have one). This means that private and official correspondence, personal diaries, school essays, etc. are not considered literature. This criterion seems simple and obvious, but in fact it also causes a number of difficulties. On the one hand, personal correspondence can become a fact of literature (fiction or scientific) if it is conducted by significant authors: it is not without reason that collected works of both writers and scientists include a section on letters, and these letters sometimes contain important and valuable information for literature and science; the same applies to school essays future writers, scientists, politicians: they can be retroactively drawn into the space of literature, shedding unexpected light on the subsequent work of their authors (for example, a fairy tale written on a school assignment by 14-year-old Saint-Exupéry reveals amazing similarities with “The Little Prince”) . Moreover, in some cases, writers, philosophers, and publicists purposefully turn private correspondence or a diary into a fact of literature: they write them with an outside reader in mind, publicly perform excerpts, publish them, etc.; Well-known examples of such personal in form, but public in purpose, texts are the letters of Russian writers of the 1820s, who were part of the literary society“Arzamas”, and in the latest Russian literature - correspondence between Vyacheslav Kuritsyn and Alexei Parshchikov, the diary of Sergei Yesin, etc. On the other hand, the status remains problematic artistic creativity amateur authors whose texts remain the property of themselves and a narrow circle of their friends and acquaintances: is it legitimate to consider as a literary phenomenon a poetic congratulation, composed by a group of employees for the birthday of their boss? New difficulties in this regard arose with the advent of the Internet and the spread of free publishing sites, where anyone can publish their works. Modern scientists (for example, the French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu and his followers) are trying to describe the social mechanisms that define literature, art, science and distinguish them from amateurish activities of any kind, but the schemes they propose are not generally accepted and remain the subject of heated debate.

Main types of literature[ | ]

Types of literature can be distinguished both by the content of texts and by their purpose, and it is difficult to fully comply with the principle of unity of basis when classifying literature. In addition, such a classification can be misleading, combining dissimilar and completely different phenomena. Often typologically different texts from the same era are much closer to each other than typologically identical texts different eras and cultures: Plato's Dialogues, which form the basis of European philosophical literature, have much more in common with other monuments of ancient Greek literature (say, with the dramas of Aeschylus) than with the works of such modern philosophers as Hegel or Russell. The fate of some texts is such that during their creation they gravitate toward one type of literature, and subsequently move towards another: for example, “The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe,” written by Daniel Defoe, are read today rather as a work of children’s literature, and between Therefore, they were written not just as a work of fiction for adults, but as a pamphlet with a significant role of journalistic origin. Therefore, a general list of the main types of literature can only be approximately indicative, and the specific structure of the literary space can only be established in relation to a given culture and a given period of time. For applied purposes, however, these difficulties are not of fundamental importance, so the practical needs of the book trade and libraries are satisfied by fairly extensive, although superficial in approach, library and bibliographic classification systems.

Fiction[ | ]

Fiction is a type of art that uses words and structures of natural (written human) language as the only material. The specificity of fiction is revealed in comparison, on the one hand, with types of art that use other material instead of verbal-linguistic (music, visual arts) or along with it (theater, cinema, song), on the other hand, with other types of verbal text: philosophical, journalistic, scientific, etc. In addition, fiction, like other types of art, combines authored (including anonymous) works, in contrast to works of folklore that are fundamentally authorless.

Documentary prose[ | ]

Literature on psychology and self-development[ | ]

Literature on psychology and self-development is literature that gives advice on developing abilities and skills, achieving success in personal life and work, building relationships with others, raising children, etc.

There are also other types of literature: spiritual, religious literature, advertising literature, highlighted in separate species(leaflet, brochure, advertising brochure, etc.), and other types, as well as industry arrays.

How were great books created? How did Nabokov write Lolita? Where did Agatha Christie work? What was Hemingway's daily routine? These and other details of the creative process of famous authors are in our issue.

To write a book, you first need inspiration. However, each writer has his own muse, and it does not always come and not everywhere. What kind of tricks did famous authors go to in order to find that very place and that very moment when the plot and characters of the book took shape in their heads the best way. Who would have thought that great works were created in such conditions!

Agatha Christie (1890-1976), having already published a dozen books, indicated “housewife” in the “occupation” line of her questionnaire. She worked in fits and starts, without a separate office or even a desk. She wrote in the bedroom at the wash table or could sit at the dining table in between meals. “I used to feel a little embarrassed to “go write.” But if I managed to retire, close the door behind me and make sure that no one disturbed me, then I forgot about everything in the world.”

Francis Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940) wrote his first novel, “The Other Side,” on scraps of paper in training camp during his free time. After serving, he forgot about discipline and began to use alcohol as a source of inspiration. He slept until lunch, sometimes worked, and spent the night in bars. When there were bouts of activity, I could write 8,000 words in one go. This was enough for big story, but it was not enough for the story. When Fitzgerald wrote Tender is the Night, he had great difficulty staying sober for three or four hours. “Sensitive perception and judgment in editing are incompatible with drinking,” Fitzgerald wrote, admitting to his publisher that alcohol interfered with creativity.

Gustave Flaubert (1821-1880) wrote Madame Bovary for five years. The work progressed too slowly and painfully: “Bovary” is not working. In a week - two pages! There’s something to fill your face with despair.” Flaubert woke up at ten in the morning, without getting out of bed, read letters, newspapers, smoked a pipe, talked with his mother. Then he took a bath, had breakfast and lunch at the same time and went for a walk. He taught his niece history and geography for one hour, then sat in a chair and read until seven in the evening. After a hearty dinner, he talked with his mother for several hours and, finally, as night fell, he began to compose. Years later he wrote: “After all, work is the best way escape from life."

Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961) rose at dawn throughout his life. Even if he drank late the night before, he got up no later than six in the morning, fresh and rested. Hemingway worked until noon, standing near the shelf. There was a typewriter on the shelf; on top of the typewriter lay a wooden board lined with sheets for printing. Having covered all the sheets with a pencil, he removed the board and retyped what he had written. Every day he counted the number of words he wrote and made a graph. “When you finish, you feel empty, but not empty, but filled again, as if you were making love to someone you love.”

James Joyce (1882-1941) wrote about himself: “A man of little virtue, prone to extravagance and alcoholism.” No regime, no organization. He slept until ten, had coffee and bagels for breakfast in bed, earned money by teaching English and playing the piano, constantly borrowed money and distracted creditors with conversations about politics. To write Ulysses, it took him seven years, interrupted by eight illnesses, and eighteen moves to Switzerland, Italy, and France. Over the years, he spent approximately 20 thousand hours at work.

Haruki Murakami (b. 1949) gets up at four in the morning and writes for six hours straight. After work he runs, swims, reads, listens to music. Lights out at nine o'clock in the evening. Murakami believes that the repetitive routine helps him enter a trance that is beneficial for creativity. He once led a sedentary lifestyle, gained weight and smoked three packs of cigarettes a day. Then he moved to the village, began to eat fish and vegetables, quit smoking and has been running for more than 25 years. The only drawback- lack of communication. To comply with the regime, Murakami has to decline all invitations, and his friends are offended. “Readers don’t care what my daily routine is, as long as the next book turns out to be better than the previous one.”

Vladimir Nabokov (1899-1977) sketched novels on small cards, which he put in a long catalog box. He wrote down pieces of text on cards, and then put the fragments together into pages and chapters of a book. Thus, the manuscript and the desktop fit in the box. Nabokov wrote Lolita at night in the back seat of a car, believing that there was no noise or distractions there. As he grew older, Nabokov never worked in the afternoon, watched football matches, sometimes allowed himself a glass of wine and hunted butterflies, sometimes running up to 25 kilometers for rare specimens.

Jane Austen (1775-1817), author of the novels Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility, Emma, ​​and Persuasion. Jane Austen lived with her mother, sister, friend and three servants. She never had the opportunity to be alone. Jane had to work in the family living room, where she could be interrupted at any moment. She wrote on small pieces of paper, and as soon as the door creaked, warning her of a visitor, she managed to hide the notes and take out a basket of needlework. Later, Jane's sister Cassandra took over the running of the household. A grateful Jane wrote: “I can’t imagine how you can compose with lamb cutlets and rhubarb spinning in your head.”

Marcel Proust (1871-1922) wrote the novel “In Search of Lost Time” for almost 14 years. During this time he wrote one and a half million words. To concentrate fully on his work, Proust retreated from society and rarely left his famous oak-panelled bedroom. Proust worked at night and slept until three or four o'clock during the day. Immediately after waking up, he lit powder containing opium - this is how he treated asthma. I ate almost nothing, I just had coffee with milk and a croissant for breakfast. Proust wrote in bed, with a notebook on his lap and pillows under his head. To stay awake, he took caffeine tablets, and when it was time to sleep, he took the caffeine with Veronal. Apparently, he tortured himself deliberately, believing that physical suffering allows him to achieve heights in art.

George Sand (1804-1876) used to write 20 pages a night. Working at night became a habit for her since childhood, when she was caring for her sick grandmother and could only do what she loved at night. Later, she left her sleeping lover in bed and moved to her desk in the middle of the night. The next morning she did not always remember that she wrote in a sleepy state. Although George Sand was an unusual person(carried men's clothing, had affairs with both women and men), she condemned the abuse of coffee, alcohol or opium. To stay awake, she ate chocolate, drank milk or smoked a cigarette. “When the moment comes to give your thoughts form, you need to be in complete control of yourself, whether on the stage or in the sanctuary of your office.”

Mark Twain (1835-1910) wrote “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer” on a farm where a separate gazebo-office was built for him. Worked at open windows, pressing sheets of paper with bricks. No one was allowed to approach the office, and if Twain was really needed, the family blew a bugle. In the evenings, Twain read what he had written to the family. He smoked cigars continuously, and wherever Twain appeared, the room had to be ventilated after him. While working, he was tormented by insomnia, and, according to the recollections of his friends, he began to treat it with champagne at night. Champagne did not help - and Twain asked his friends to stock up on beer. Then Twain said that only Scotch whiskey helped him. After a series of experiments, Twain simply went to bed at ten in the evening and suddenly fell asleep. All this greatly entertained him. However, he was entertained by any life events.

Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-1980) worked three hours in the morning and three hours in the evening. The rest of the time was taken up Savor, lunches and dinners, drinking with friends and girlfriends, tobacco and drugs. This regime brought the philosopher to nervous exhaustion. Instead of resting, Sartre became addicted to coridran, a mixture of amphetamine and aspirin, legal until 1971. Instead of the usual dosage of a tablet twice a day, Sartre took twenty of them. He washed down the first one with strong coffee, chewed the rest slowly while working. One tablet - one page of “Critique of Dialectical Reason”. According to the biographer, Sartre's daily menu included two packs of cigarettes, several pipes of black tobacco, more than a liter of alcohol, including vodka and whiskey, 200 milligrams of amphetamine, barbiturates, tea, coffee and fatty foods.

Georges Simenon (1903-1989) is considered the most prolific writer of the 20th century. He has 425 books to his credit: 200 pulp novels under pseudonyms and 220 under his own name. Moreover, Simenon did not follow the regime; he worked in fits and starts for two or three weeks, from six to nine in the morning, producing 80 printed pages at a time. Then I walked, drank coffee, slept and watched TV. While writing a novel, he wore the same clothes until the end of work, supported himself with tranquilizers, never corrected what he had written, and weighed himself before and after work.

Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910) was a beech during his work. He got up late, around nine o'clock, and didn't talk to anyone until he washed his face, changed his clothes and combed his beard. I had breakfast with coffee and a couple of soft-boiled eggs and locked myself in my office until lunch. Sometimes his wife Sophia sat there, quieter than a mouse, in case he had to rewrite a couple of chapters of “War and Peace” by hand or listen to the next portion of his essay. Before lunch, Tolstoy went for a walk. If you returned to good mood, could share impressions or engage with children. If not, I read books, played solitaire and talked with guests.

Somerset Maugham (1874-1965) published 78 books during his 92 years of life. Maugham's biographer called his work writing not a calling, but rather an addiction. Maugham himself compared the habit of writing to the habit of drinking. Both are easy to acquire and both are difficult to get rid of. Maugham came up with the first two phrases while lying in the bath. After that, I wrote a daily quota of one and a half thousand words. “When you write, when you create a character, he is with you all the time, you are busy with him, he lives.” Stopping writing, Maugham felt endlessly lonely.

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Genre is a type of literary work. There are epic, lyrical, dramatic genres. There are also lyric epic genres. Genres are also divided by volume into large (including romance and epic novel), medium ( literary works“medium size” - stories and poems), small (short story, short story, essay). They have genres and thematic divisions: adventure novel, psychological novel, sentimental, philosophical, etc. The main division is related to the types of literature. We present to your attention the genres of literature in the table.

The thematic division of genres is rather arbitrary. There is no strict classification of genres by topic. For example, if they talk about the genre and thematic diversity of lyrics, they usually single out love, philosophical, and landscape lyrics. But, as you understand, the variety of lyrics is not exhausted by this set.

If you set out to study the theory of literature, it is worth mastering the groups of genres:

  • epic, that is, prose genres (epic novel, novel, story, short story, short story, parable, fairy tale);
  • lyrical, that is, poetic genres (lyric poem, elegy, message, ode, epigram, epitaph),
  • dramatic – types of plays (comedy, tragedy, drama, tragicomedy),
  • lyroepic (ballad, poem).

Literary genres in tables

Epic genres

  • Epic novel

    Epic novel– a novel with an image folk life at turning points historical eras. "War and Peace" by Tolstoy, " Quiet Don» Sholokhov.

  • Novel

    Novel– a multi-issue work depicting a person in the process of his formation and development. The action in the novel is full of external or internal conflicts. By topic there are: historical, satirical, fantastic, philosophical, etc. By structure: novel in verse, epistolary novel, etc.

  • Tale

    Tale- an epic work of medium or large form, constructed in the form of a narrative about events in their natural sequence. Unlike the novel, in P. the material is presented chronically, there is no sharp plot, there is no cunning analysis of the feelings of the characters. P. does not pose tasks of a global historical nature.

  • Story

    Story– small epic form, a small work with a limited number of characters. In R. most often one problem is posed or one event is described. The novella differs from R. in its unexpected ending.

  • Parable

    Parable- moral teaching in allegorical form. A parable differs from a fable in that it draws its artistic material from human life. Example: Gospel parables, the parable of the righteous land, told by Luke in the play “At the Bottom.”


Lyrical genres

  • Lyric poem

    Lyric poem- a small form of poetry, written either on behalf of the author or on behalf of a fictional lyrical character. Description of the inner world of the lyrical hero, his feelings, emotions.

  • Elegy

    Elegy- a poem imbued with moods of sadness and sadness. As a rule, the content of elegies is philosophical reflections, sad thoughts, grief.

  • Message

    Message- a poetic letter addressed to a person. According to the content of the message, there are friendly, lyrical, satirical, etc. The message may be addressed to one person or group of people.

  • Epigram

    Epigram- a poem that makes fun of a specific person. Character traits- wit and brevity.

  • Oh yeah

    Oh yeah- a poem distinguished by solemnity of style and sublimity of content. Praise in verse.

  • Sonnet

    Sonnet– a solid poetic form, usually consisting of 14 verses (lines): 2 quatrains (2 rhymes) and 2 tercet tercets


Dramatic genres

  • Comedy

    Comedy- a type of drama in which characters, situations and actions are presented in funny forms or imbued with the comic. There are satirical comedies ("The Minor", "The Inspector General"), high comedies ("Woe from Wit") and lyrical ones ("The Cherry Orchard").

  • Tragedy

    Tragedy- a work based on an irreconcilable conflict in life, leading to the suffering and death of the heroes. William Shakespeare's play "Hamlet".

  • Drama

    Drama- a play with an acute conflict, which, unlike the tragic one, is not so sublime, more mundane, ordinary and can be resolved one way or another. The drama is based on modern rather than ancient material and establishes a new hero who rebelled against circumstances.


Lyric epic genres

(intermediate between epic and lyric)

  • Poem

    Poem- an average lyric-epic form, a work with a plot-narrative organization, in which not one, but a whole series of experiences are embodied. Features: the presence of a detailed plot and at the same time close attention to inner world lyrical hero - or an abundance of lyrical digressions. Poem " Dead Souls» N.V. Gogol

  • Ballad

    Ballad- a medium lyric-epic form, a work with an unusual, intense plot. This is a story in verse. A story, told in poetic form, of a historical, mythical or heroic nature. The plot of a ballad is usually borrowed from folklore. Ballads “Svetlana”, “Lyudmila” V.A. Zhukovsky


Perhaps the works of Alexander Sergeevich most often attracted attention. The novel "Eugene Onegin" inspired genius composer P.I. Tchaikovsky to create the opera of the same name. The libretto, which is only general outline Reminiscent of the original source, Konstantin Shilovsky. All that remains from the novel is love line 2 couples - Lensky and Olga, Onegin and Tatiana. Onegin’s mental turmoil, because of which he was included in the list of “ extra people", excluded from the plot. The opera was first staged in 1879 and since then has been included in the repertoire of almost every Russian opera house.

One cannot help but recall the story “ Queen of Spades"and" created by P.I. Tchaikovsky based on it in 1890. The libretto was written by the composer’s brother, M.I. Tchaikovsky. Pyotr Ilyich personally wrote the words for Yeletsky’s arias in Act II and Liza’s in Act III.

The story "The Queen of Spades" was translated into French Prosper Merimee and became the basis of an opera written by composer F. Halévy.

Pushkin's drama "Boris Godunov" formed the basis of the great opera written by Modest Petrovich Mussorgsky in 1869. The premiere of the performance took place due to obstacles only 5 years later. The public's ardent enthusiasm did not help - the opera was removed from the repertoire several times for censorship reasons. Obviously, the genius of both authors highlighted too clearly the problem of the relationship between the autocrat and the people, as well as the price that has to be paid for power.

Here are a few more works by A.S. Pushkin, which became the literary basis of the operas: “The Golden Cockerel”, “The Tale of Tsar Saltan” (N.A. Rimsky-Korsakov), “Mazeppa” (P.I. Tchaikovsky), “The Little Mermaid” (A.S. Dargomyzhsky), “Ruslan and Lyudmila” (M.I. Glinka), “Dubrovsky” (E.F. Napravnik).

M.Yu. Lermontov in music

Based on Lermontov’s poem “The Demon,” the famous literary critic and researcher of his work P.A. Viskovatov wrote the libretto for the opera by the famous composer A.G. Rubinstein. The opera was written in 1871 and staged at the Mariinsky Theater in St. Petersburg in 1875.

A.G. Rubinstein wrote music for another work by Lermontov: “Song about the merchant Kalashnikov.” The opera entitled “Merchant Kalashnikov” was staged in 1880 at the Mariinsky Theater. The author of the libretto was N. Kulikov.

Mikhail Yuryevich’s drama “Masquerade” became the basis for the libretto of the ballet “Masquerade” by A.I. Khachaturyan.

Other Russian writers in music

The drama “The Tsar's Bride” by the famous Russian poet L.A. Meya formed the basis of Rimsky-Korsakov's opera, written in late XIX century. The action takes place at the court of Ivan the Terrible and bears pronounced features of that era.

Rimsky-Korsakov’s opera “The Woman of Pskov” is also dedicated to the theme of royal tyranny and lawlessness of his subjects, the struggle of the free city of Pskov against conquest by Ivan the Terrible, the libretto for which the composer himself wrote based on the drama by L.A. Meya.

Rimsky-Korsakov also wrote music for the opera “The Snow Maiden” based on the fairy tale by the great Russian playwright A.N. Ostrovsky.

Opera based on the fairy tale by N.V. Gogol's "May Night" was written by Rimsky-Korsakov based on the composer's own libretto. Another work of the great writer, “The Night Before Christmas,” became the literary basis of the opera by P.I. Tchaikovsky "Cherevichki".

In 1930, Soviet composer D.D. Shostakovich wrote the opera “Katerina Izmailova” based on the story by N.S. Leskova "Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk District". Shostakovich's innovative music provoked a barrage of harsh, politically motivated criticism. The opera was removed from the repertoire and restored only in 1962.

In what works of Russian literature are images of historical figures created and how can they be compared with L. N. Tolstoy’s assessment of real historical figures?

The following images-characters can be used as a literary context: Emelyan Pugachev in the novel by A. S. Pushkin “The Captain's Daughter” and the poem of the same name by S.A. Yesenina, Ivan the Terrible in “Song about the Merchant Kalashnikov”, the imperial court and generals Kornilov, Denikin, Kaledin in the epic of M.A. Sholokhov’s “Quiet Don”, Stalin and Hitler in V. S. Grossman’s epic novel “Life and Fate” (two positions of the student’s choice).

When justifying your choice and comparing the characters in a given direction of analysis, note that the image of Pugachev in A.S. Pushkin, like L. N. Tolstoy’s Napoleon, is subjective, not so much historically specific as subordinate to the author’s idea - to show the tragedy of the “people's king,” which is the product of “Russian rebellion, senseless and merciless.” The impostor is poeticized by the author: he is kind, humane, and fair, unlike his guys.

Point out that the image of Pugachev in “ The captain's daughter"and Napoleon in the epic "War and Peace" is determined by the writer's task: for L.N. Tolstoy it is the debunking of Napoleonism, for A.S. Pushkin - poeticization of the image of the “counselor”. Both are characterized by unique personal qualities, military genius, and ambition. Pugachev’s willfulness is manifested in his statement: “Execute like this, execute like this, favor like this: this is my custom...” Despite all the differences in the positions of the impostor and the French emperor, both are shown not only as historical figures, but also as people in their relationships with the people and servants. Rise and fall also distinguish the nature of their fate.

Tell us how in the depiction of Ivan the Terrible by M. Yu. Lermontov in “The Song about the Merchant Kalashnikov,” the prevailing attitude is towards stylization of folk epic works, and therefore towards idealization. Like french emperor, the Russian Tsar is self-willed: he wants to execute, he wants to have mercy. The injustice of the tsar’s decision regarding the fate of Kalashnikov is compensated by his unquestioned authority among the people.

Remember that in V. S. Grossman’s novel “Life and Fate” Stalin and Hitler appear only as weak-willed slaves of time, hostages of the circumstances they themselves created. Hitler himself gave birth to the magic wand of ideology and believed in it himself. A comparison of grotesquely reduced images of the rulers of two great nations gives the author the opportunity to compare Hitlerism and Stalinism, which must be condemned and overcome.

Summarizing what has been said, note that Tolstoy’s Napoleon is small man in a gray frock coat with a “fat chest”, a “round belly”, a trembling calf of his left leg, Grossman’s Stalin is a pockmarked, dark-skinned man in a long overcoat (“Shtrum was outraged that the name of Stalin overshadowed Lenin, his military genius was contrasted with the civilian mindset of Lenin’s mind”) . These arbiters of destinies do not realize the strength of the people's spirit.

S. Grossman, following Tolstoy's traditions, orients the reader to comprehend historical patterns. Raised to unprecedented heights, idols then become victims of their own people.

Searched here:

  • what works contain historical figures
  • name another work of literature in which the image of a king was created
  • a Russian work in which the image of the sovereign is created