ANTHROPONYMS AND EVANGELICAL TEXT IN TOLSTOY’S STORIES “WHAT MEN LIVE BY”, “WHERE LOVE IS, THERE GOD IS ALSO”, “HOW MUCH LAND DOES A MAN NEED?”

Journal Title: Проблемы исторической поэтики - Year 2017, Vol 15, Issue 3

Abstract

In Tolstoy’s stories “What Men Live by” and “Where Love Is, There God Is Also” the choice of the anthroponymic naming formula is predetermined by the relation of characters to the Gospel. Anthroponyms determine the destiny of people, have a prospective function and give hope for the favorable safe final of the story. In the story “Where Love Is, There God Is Also” the narrator uses a proper name when his character is not right; a patronymic has a greater value than a proper name because the patronymic naming formula emphasizes the succession of generations as well as a religious and moral essence laid in the name. Tolstoy’s character absorbs the Word Divine and as a result of it he is transformed. The “neutral” impersonal naming formula is replaced by the anthroponymic naming formula with its Christian semantics obtained in baptizing. Semantics of anthroponyms not always “helps” Tolstoy’s characters. In the story “What Men Live by” the semantics of patronymic Trifonov is “empty”: Trifonov is a poor man who did not help Semyon in a difficult situation, which he himself created in part. In the story “How Much Land Does a Man Need?” greedy and cunning Pachom failed to realize the positive semantics of his personal name and died. Tolstoy’s nameless characters are usually separated from God; the exception is a woman with a child from “What Men Live by” and an old wanderer from “Where Love Is, There God Is Also”. Angel’s speech at the end of the story “What Men Live by” and the description of his ascension correlate with the Gospel text. The forms of inclusion of the Gospel text in Tolstoy’s stories are different. A number of stories are preceded by the evangelical epigraphs that create a parabolic composition. In some stories Tolstoy’s character reads and comprehends the evangelical verses; the Gospel text sounds in his speeches and “subdues” the narrative. All this leads to an increase in the meaning of Tolstoy’s “national stories”, written in the context of Christian literature.

Authors and Affiliations

Elena Masolova

Keywords

Related Articles

THE POETICS OF N. N. TOLSTOY’S LONG SHORT STORY “PLASTUN”

The article presents the analysis of the main problems of the long short story “Plastun” by Nikolay Tolstoy (the elder brother of Leo Tolstoy), that is the life of a man kidnapped during the Caucasus War and forced to li...

SOME FOLCLORE FEATURES OF POETICS OF A. KONDRATIEV’S NOVEL “ON THE BANKS OF THE YARYN RIVER”

The article is devoted to analysis of folklore features of A. A. Kondratyev’s novel “On the banks of the Yaryn river”, in particular the influence of poetics of the folk non-fiction prose (folk stories) and fairy-tales o...

PROVOCATION OF THE FANTASY: MYSTIFICATED QUOTATION OF D. S. MEREZHKOVSKY AS A LITERARY FACT IN N. V. GOGOL STUDIES

At the beginning of the 20th century, half a century after the death of Gogol, in the periodicals of that time along with the memoirs of his last days of life appeared a story about how the writer’s spiritual father, arc...

RELIGIOUS MOTIFS IN “SEGODNYASHNIY LUBOK” AND “OKNA ROSTA AND GLAVPOLITPROSVET” OF V. V. MAYAKOVSKY

The propaganda posters in “Segodnyashniy lubok” and “Windows of satire of the Russian Telegraph Agency (Okna ROSTA) and Glavpolitprosvet” series are similar both in visual and verbal sense. Many artistic principles, firs...

HISTORICAL MYTHOLOGY IN THE FIRST LITTLE RUSSIAN SHORT STORY OF N. GOGOL “EVENING ON THE EVE OF IVAN KUPALA”

The article deals with Nikolai Gogol’s first novel “Evening on the Eve of Ivan Kupala” (1830), and studies the difference between its early and canonical editions, that argues for an attempt of an emerging author to crea...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP301341
  • DOI 10.15393/j9.art.2017.4341
  • Views 99
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Elena Masolova (2017). ANTHROPONYMS AND EVANGELICAL TEXT IN TOLSTOY’S STORIES “WHAT MEN LIVE BY”, “WHERE LOVE IS, THERE GOD IS ALSO”, “HOW MUCH LAND DOES A MAN NEED?”. Проблемы исторической поэтики, 15(3), 109-126. https://europub.co.uk./articles/-A-301341