Linear aspectuality of perfection and occasionality of literary heroes

Cover Page

Cite item

Abstract

The study is an opportunity to attract the attention of students who study in the Russian and Moldavian languages to the works of Pushkin and Negruzi, Russian and Moldavian classics. The study explores the linear aspectuality of perfection and occasionality of literary characters in the context of the short story “Calypso” by Negruzi, solving the problem of successfully studying the short story and archival, historical and everyday materials in two languages. The purpose of the study is to analyze and compare the literary approach and the facts of the heroes’ lives, as well as to draw the attention to the socio-historical connections of the time and the invisible connection of the masters of words - Pushkin, Byron and Negruzi. The study also aims at intriguing and interesting the students in the Bessarabian period of Pushkin’s work (link 1820-1823), as well as to captivate people of different nationalities with the study of the work of Pushkin and Negruti in two languages. To achieve this goal, the following tasks were set: to compare the information from the text of Negruzi’s short story with Pushkin’s letters, as well as archival materials from Trubetskoy’s book; to attract the students to study the Russian and Moldavian literary sources; based on the facts, to prove the consistency of the novella in the realities of life. The relevance of this topic comes from the desire to involve as many people as possible in reading and studying the works of Pushkin, getting acquainted with the works of Negruzi, to the permanent and necessary rapprochement of bilingualism, dialogue in two languages, to strengthen the ties of national communities and in-depth study of state languages.

About the authors

Galina B. Gursky

T.G. Shevchenko Pridnestrovian State University

Author for correspondence.
Email: stea201958@mail.ru
Associate Professor of the Department of Moldovan Philology, Faculty of Philology Tiraspol, Moldova, Pridnestrovie

References

  1. Zababurova, N.I. (1980). You were born to ignite the
  2. Alekseev, M.P. (1982). Russian-English literary connections (XVIII century — first half of the XIX century). Vol. 91. Nauka.
  3. Vigel’, F.F. (1892). Notes. Part 1. Moscow.
  4. Vigel’, F.F. (1995). Legends and myths about Pushkin. Saint-Petersburg.
  5. Vigel’, F.F. (1985). Pushkin in the memoirs of his contemporaries. Moscow.
  6. Grabovskaya, V.A. (1995). Chisinau beauties in Pushkin’s drawings. Kishinev. imagination of poets. In M.P. Alekseev (Ed.), The reaction of the Russian intelligentsia of the early 19th century to the news of Byron’s death. Literaturnoe nasledstvo.
  7. Negruzi, K. (1980). Opere. Literatura shi arta.
  8. Trubeckoj, B.A. (1990). Pushkin yn Moldova. Literatura artistike.
  9. Cherejskij, L.A. (1976). Pushkin shi anturazhul luj. Shtiinca.

Copyright (c) 2023 Gursky G.B.

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

This website uses cookies

You consent to our cookies if you continue to use our website.

About Cookies