AUTHOR(S), TITLE |
PAGES |
Literary theory
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Ala A. Kharatyan. “Gandz” Subgenre Performance and Poetics as Tactics
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10 - 27 |
Yuliya V. Shevchuk. Lyricism: A Free Category or a Relevant Concept in Domestic Literary Criticism?
|
28 - 55 |
World literature
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|
Levente Nagy. The Tyrant and the Saint: Cruelty, Ambivalence, Humour in the Earliest Dracula Tales
|
56 - 95 |
Natalia M. Dolgorukova, Kseniia V. Babenko. The Motif of Mixing Wine and Water in Goliardic Poetry: Genesis and Functions
|
96 - 113 |
Svetlana Yu. Pavlova. Self-Quoting in Moliere’s Comedies: Original Text and Translations
|
114 - 135 |
Maria R. Nenarokova. Transformation of Symbolism of a “Mountain/Hill” in John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress (19th–21st Centuries)
|
136 - 157 |
Sergey L. Fokin. Two Reminiscences from the “Russian Novel” in Marcel Proust’s Essay “Filial Feelings of a Matricide”
|
158 - 175 |
Liudmila E. Saburova. Bestiary Images of Federigo Tozzi (Beasts and With Closed Eyes)
|
176 - 197 |
Tatiana N. Krasavchenko. Shakespearean Tradition in the Contemporary British Novel: Ian MсEwan
|
198 - 215 |
Irina E. Adelgeim. “I Will Bear Witness That I Remember”: The Novel Umschlagplatz by J.M. Rymkiewicz
|
216 - 241 |
Russian Literature
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Maria D. Levina. Pasternak and Severyanin: Two Editions of Vokzal
|
242 - 255 |
Chieh-han Chiang. Confessional Narrative in Leonid Andreev’s “Thought” and “My Notes”
|
256 - 271 |
Anna V. Protopopova, Ivan A. Protopopov. Polemics on the Ways of Development of Russian Literature in Russian Critical Literature Abroad in the 1920–1930s
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272 - 307 |
Close Up: The Estate and the Dacha in Russian Literature of the 20th–21st Centuries — The Fates of a National Ideal
|
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Valeria G. Andreeva. “Masha,” a Story by B.K. Zaitsev: Composition and Idea of Order of Estate Life
|
308 - 327 |
Elena Yu. Knorre. Estate-Sanatorium and Garden City: “Happy Spaces” in the Novel How the Steel Was Tempered by N.A. Ostrovsky
|
328 - 345 |
George A. Veligorsky. Estate as “A House at the Edge of Time” in Texts of English Children’s Writers of the 19th–21st Centuries
|
346 - 367 |
Andrey E. Agratin. Museum Estate in Russian Literature: Narratological Aspect
|
368 - 385 |
Olga A. Bogdanova. Three Circles of Intertextuality: The “Estate Myth” in M.L. Stepnova’s Novel The Garden
|
386 - 403 |
Folklore Studies
|
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Tatyana A. Agapkina. Spells and the Holy Tradition: On the Reception of the Biblical Heritage in the Verbal Magic of the Eastern Slavs
|
404 - 431 |
Textology. Materials
|
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Alexandr S. Alexandrov. “I Choose the Chapter About Protopopov for Testing...” (From the History of A. Blok’s Essay “The Last Days of Imperial Power”)
|
432 - 451 |
Anastasia V. Sysoeva. From the History of the Work of the Union of Soviet Writers’ Defense Commission: Closing and Reorganization
|
452 - 467 |
Marina A. Arias-Vikhil, Yakov D. Chechnev. Flowers of Evil by Charles Baudelaire in the Translations and Edited by N.S. Gumilev (Unfulfilled Project by Publishing House “World Literature”)
|
468 - 495 |
Reviews
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Maria V. Kundozerova. Eternal Disputes About Kalevala. Review of the Book by M. Nieminen “My Kalevala. What? Why? Where from? When? Whose? Discussions About an Epic”
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496 - 504 |