This paper aims to illustrate one of the aspects of work of Russian literary critic M. Bakhtin which has not been considered previously. The sources of this paper are two works by Bakhtin dedicated to literary reviews: Bakhtin’s internal review of the book Shakespeare’s Drama (1970) by L. E. Pinsky and a summary of W. Schmid’s review of the book The Poetics of Composition (1971) by B. A. Uspensky. It is important to note that the texts studied in the article are later ones, they were created after 1965 — the year of Bakhtin’s Rabelais was published and after the beginning of his rehabilitation from Saransk. They were published posthumously. In both cases the author considers Bakhtin’s response to works which were important for his own refle...
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This article considers one of the earliest attempts of Soviet editors to resume the relationship wit...
In 1916, Fyodor Sologub visited the Urals as part of a tour with the lecture Russia in Dreams and Ex...
The mythological image of Russia in British fiction has been historically shaped and recurrently rep...
Referring to the memoirs of Dmitry Grigorovich, this article considers the general principles of axi...
This article puts forward etymological interpretations of several Northern Russian lexemes: порочка ...
Pearls are some of the most frequently encountered gems in Russian folklore. This reflects their imp...
The article analyses the essay of the German romantic Novalis (Hartmann von Hardenberg, 1772–1801) C...
The article deals with the inconsistency of the assessments that are encountered in the scientific l...
This article addresses the issue of translation of Nadezhda Teffi’s translation into the Hungarian l...
This article analyses paintings by artist and Napoleonic general L.-F. Lejeune (1775–1848) as a hist...
This article studies the tendency behind the emergence of various “literary projects” in Germany’s c...
This article examines film adaptation of a literary work, which is regarded as an “intersemiotic tra...
After the February Revolution of 1917 and the abdication of tsar Nicholas II, the Winter Palace foun...
This article analyses the ego-documentary narratives authored by writers of the younger generation o...
The article examines the career of Fyodor Sergeev son Basov as an outstanding master of manuscript a...
This article considers one of the earliest attempts of Soviet editors to resume the relationship wit...
In 1916, Fyodor Sologub visited the Urals as part of a tour with the lecture Russia in Dreams and Ex...
The mythological image of Russia in British fiction has been historically shaped and recurrently rep...