The human concept in Russian Neomodernist prose of the 21st Century - Núm. 10-43, Julio 2021 - Amazonía Investiga - Libros y Revistas - VLEX 908530226

The human concept in Russian Neomodernist prose of the 21st Century

AutorAlexey Tatarinov, Marina Bezrukavaya
CargoAlexey Tatarinov, Kuban State University, Krasnodar, Russia. Doctor of Philological Sciences, Professor, Kuban State University, Krasnodar, Russia. Marina Bezrukavaya, Kuban State University, Krasnodar, Russia. Doctor of Philological Sciences, Associate Professor, Kuban State University, Krasnodar, Russia.
Páginas9-19
Volume 10 - Issue 43
/ July 2021
9
htt p:// www .am azon iain vest iga. inf o ISSN 2 322- 6307
DOI: https://doi.org/10.34069/AI/2021.43.07.1
How to Cite:
Tatarinov, A., & Bezrukavaya, M. (2021). The Human Concept in Russian Neomodernist Prose of the 21st Century. Amazonia
Investiga, 10(43), 9-19. https://doi.org/10.34069/AI/2021.43.07.1
The human concept in Russian Neomodernist prose of the 21st
Century
Концепция человека в русской неомодернистской прозе XXI века
Received: June 16, 2021 Accepted: August 1, 2021
Written by:
Alexey Tatarinov1
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8708-3918
Marina Bezrukavaya2
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8334-5634
Abstract
Research subject is grounding efficiency and
topicality of Russian literature (and its studies) as
a cultural project, that could be apologia of a
traditional individual. Methodological basis is
anthropocentric li terature of Eri ch Auerbach,
Dmitry Likhachev, Sergey Averintsev, Harold
Bloom, in which literary text analysis,
assessment of ge nre structures lead to the
conclusions on the individual’s state under the
established cultural traditi on. Analysis of
contemporary Russian no vels outlines authors’
worlds. Reading them evokes various images: of
a passionate individual, often with certain intent,
but always affected by the interaction with crises
and voids (Yury Buida), an individual
characterized by various anti-totalitarian acts, by
aspiration to exercise the freedom of thought in
everyday life (Ludmila Ulitskaya), an egocentric
individual, believing that the most significant
victories come in the representation of the own
self ( Edward Limonov), an individual prone to
interaction with totalitarian principles,
synthesizing non-canonic metaphysical forms
and attributes of strong state under ambivalent
relations of utopia and anti-utopia (Vladimir
Sorokin), an indi vidual actively e xploring
modern world and general existence in motions,
related by the author to Oriental cognition
principles and spiritual practices (Victor
Pelevin). Our focused literary analysis aims at
combining all text moves in plot and language
that represent evolvement of a person as one of
the central problems of any novel.
1
Doctor of Philological Sciences, Professor, Kuban State University, Krasnodar, Russia.
2
Doctor of Philological Sciences, Associate Professor, Kuban State University, Krasnodar, Russia.

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