NEOROMANTIC TENDENCY AND INTELLECTUAL CONFLICT IN PROSE LITERARY WORKS BY LESIA UKRAYINKA

Abstract

In the given article is analysed genre specific of prose by Lesya Ukrayinka and it was discovered that the base of her short stories is formed by an intellectual conflict. There iss traced reception of prose by Lesya Ukrayinka by her first literary critics and also investigated neoromantic tendencies in the short stories by the authoress. In the given article is probed the appearance of the new method of reality perception, which is directed on fixing alienation in the spiritual situation of contemporaneity. There ias traced embodiment of neoromantic tendencies in short stories by Lesya Ukrayinka. It is noted that scornful attitude toward Lesya Ukrayinka as a prose writer dominates in criticism, which is explained by the fact that literary criticism is not always ready to accept new tendencies: writers avoid simplification of the artistic world of own works, deepen the expressive side of artistic value in behalf of approaching to indescribable. There is traced transformation of small prose structural types by the authoress, in which realistic and modernistic short story coexist. It is noticed that in the short stories by Lesya Ukrayinka is developed an intellectual conflict. There is analysed accent transference from external events to internal heartfelt changes and changes experienced by the heroine of the short story «Friendliness». There is traced an intuitional denial of the traditional for realism genres of prose by Lesya Ukrayinka. There is investigatied the phenomenon of artistic value of authoress, which consists in both presenting the author’s individuality, and at the same time being unidentical for the author. It was proved that the basic feature of the short stories in the end of 19th — beginning of the 20th century is a multidimensional approach to a character, aimed at immersion in the existentional depths of a human being. It is considered important the attention to womanish psychology and attempt of the deep emotional states analysis in the prose literary works by Lesya Ukrayinka. According to research, in modern methodological reading of the works of Lesya Ukrainka inherent in the hitherto implicit aspects of meaning and interpretation.

Authors and Affiliations

Olha Olehivna Podlisetska

Keywords

Related Articles

MICROPOETICS OF KHARKIV POETESS KATAEVA`S LYRICAL CYCLES

The article deals with the investigation of role played by ;lyrical cycles as an independent genre in poetess` works and the analysis of separate components of micropoetics (for example: the rhythm, the phonics, the poet...

ПРОБЛЕМА АВТОРСЬКОГО ЖАНРОВОГО ВИЗНАЧЕННЯ П’ЄС Г. КВІТКИ-ОСНОВ’ЯНЕНКА «МЕРТВЕЦЬ-ШАЛУН» ТА «БОЙ-ЖІНКА»

In 20s of the XIXth century Kvitka-Osnovyanenko gives a very strange for that time genre determination to his works («Deadman-misbehavourer», a joke in 2 actions, and «Battle woman», a joke-vaudeville). Let’s try to prov...

К ВОПРОСУ О СОДЕРЖАНИИ КАТЕГОРИИ «ХУДОЖЕСТВЕННЫЙ МИР»

The author of the article tries to define and delimitate concepts: «author’s world», «artistic world», «artistic picture of world».

GENRE TRANSFORMATIONS IN THE LITERATURE OF TURN AND TRANSITION PERIODS (GERMAN LITERATURE OF THE LATE XXTH — EARLY XXIST C-S.)

The article suggests that the modern German literature at the turn of XXth and XXIst centuries should be viewed as the literature of transitional type. The object the present research focuses on is the literature genre s...

КОНЦЕПТ «ТВОРЧЕСКАЯ ЛИЧНОСТЬ» В РАССКАЗЕ А. И. КУПРИНА «АНАФЕМА»

The article reveals the principle of the creation and development of the concept «creative person». It suggested the methods of textual realization of the concept «creative personality» in the story Anathema by A. Kuprin...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP426607
  • DOI -
  • Views 106
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Olha Olehivna Podlisetska (2015). NEOROMANTIC TENDENCY AND INTELLECTUAL CONFLICT IN PROSE LITERARY WORKS BY LESIA UKRAYINKA. Проблеми сучасного літературознавства, 0(21), 73-80. https://europub.co.uk./articles/-A-426607