Theoretical poetics: concepts and definitions. Reader. Comp. N.D.Tamarchenko. Literary subject: character and literary type

Character(with gr. - literal line) - this is a set of psychological properties that make up the image of a literary character.

Individual details of the image, manifested in action, behavior, in certain circumstances, create a multifaceted world of the hero.

The concept of “character” refers to the category of content of a work. It is appropriate to use this term when an analysis of the idea of ​​a work is given and its pathos is determined. In the broad sense of this term all images and heroes of any text inevitably have a typical character.

In antiquity, long before the emergence of a special science about man (anthropology, ethics, physiognomy), main theme literature was the involvement of man in the sphere of uncompromising laws of fate. In the epic, the hero is still entirely dependent on the deity: he cannot act independently; he, in the words of B. Snell, “may be a character, but not yet a personality.” The hero has the same qualities as the gods, but he is a victim of those properties of which he is the bearer. This explains the designation of character with a mask in the ancient theater.

IN modern literature character is a personality structure formed by individual and typological traits and manifested in behavioral characteristics and distinctive properties of nature.

In antiquity, on the contrary, character is a “stamp”, a “frozen mask”.

Literary type - an image of human individuality, the most possible, typical for a particular society.

The concept of “literary type” first appears in Hegel’s Aesthetics .

In literary theory, “type” and “character” are close, but not interchangeable.;

"Character" in to a greater extent reveals typical personality traits, its psychological properties, A " type" is a generalization of certain social phenomena associated with typical features.



For example, Maxim Maksimych is a typical Russian soldier, “just a decent person,” as L.N. Tolstoy said about him, while Grigory Aleksandrovich Pechorin is a type of “suffering egoist,” the embodiment of “the vices of an entire generation in their full development.” The concept of “typing” includes the process of creating a holistic picture of the world and is the basis of the creative process. Recognizing typification as an internal need and a law of art, writers realize that the typical is not a copy of reality, but an artistic generalization. In Moliere, Harpagon and Tartuffe are typical characters, but these are not social, but psychological types, illustrating neglect of moral requirements. If we want to call someone a miser or a hypocrite, we use these proper names as common nouns. The strict hierarchy of genres of classicism also gives rise to the normalization of literary types. Social conflicts appear in the work reflected in the souls of the heroes.

The division of characters into positive and negative in classic aesthetics is natural. There should be no intermediate types, since art is charged with the task of correcting vices and glorifying virtues ideal person. The psychology of the “little man” was outlined by Pushkin in “ Stationmaster"("Belkin's Tales") in all the evidence of his social existence. An equally significant aspect of the topic is the analysis of dramatic family relationships.

Pushkin’s concept becomes the source of subsequent literary generalizations, predetermines the plots of Gogol (“The Overcoat”), Dostoevsky (Poor People) and Tolstoy about “unhappy families,” conflict situations where “each family is unhappy in its own way.” The “little man” becomes the dominant type in the “natural school.” L. M. Lotman wrote that “man appeared to the writers of the “natural school” as a cast of a social form that distorts human nature.” The further evolution of the literary type of the “little man” is associated with a shift in emphasis, in the words of M. M. Bakhtin, “from the environment to the person.” Already in the early work “Poor People,” F. M. Dostoevsky focuses his main attention on the spiritual world of the hero, although dependence on social circumstances still determines the misfortunes of Makar Devushkin. Dobrolyubov, in his article “Downtrodden People,” noted: “In Dostoevsky’s works we find one common feature, more or less noticeable in everything he wrote: this is pain about a person who recognizes himself as unable or, finally, not even entitled to be a human being.” a real, complete, independent person, in himself.”

The novel “Poor People” combines two views on the “little man” - Pushkin’s and Gogol’s; Makar Devushkin, after reading both stories, comes to the conclusion that “we are all Samson Vyrins.” This recognition points to a dramatic discovery - the tragedy is predetermined, there is no way to fight circumstances that are insurmountable. Dostoevsky’s famous phrase: “We all came out of Gogol’s “Overcoat”” - implies not so much apprenticeship as the continuation and development of the theme of mercy, immeasurable love for a person rejected by society. The world of Akakiy Akakievich is confined to the dream of an overcoat, the world of Makar Devushkin is caring for Varenka. Dostoevsky represents the type of dreamer who is content with little, and all his actions are dictated by the fear of losing the modest gift of fate. Thematic similarity is found between “Poor People” and the story “White Nights”, the hero of which gives himself a derogatory description: “A dreamer is not a person, but, you know, some kind of creature of the neuter kind. For the most part, he settles somewhere in an inaccessible corner, as if he were hiding there even from daylight.”

Dostoevsky reconsiders the well-known type of romantic hero who plunges into the world of an ideal dream, despising reality. Dostoevsky's heroes doomedly preach humility in life, which leads them to death. Another twist on the theme of the little man is associated with the writer’s interest in the topic of drunkenness as an allegory of rebellion against public morality. In the novel “Crime and Punishment,” this type of vice is viewed not as a consequence of social evil, but as a manifestation of selfishness and weakness. Oblivion in drunkenness does not save a person who has “nowhere else to go”; it destroys the destinies of loved ones: Sonya Marmeladova is forced to go to the panel, Katerina Ivanovna goes crazy, and, if not for chance, her children would have faced inevitable death. Chekhov expresses no compassion for " little man”, but shows the real “smallness” of his soul. The story “The Death of an Official” examines the problem of the voluntariness of social obligations undertaken by a person. It is resolved in a grotesque manner. Chervyakov dies not as a “humiliated and insulted” person, but as an official who has lost his natural appearance out of fear. Chekhov proved with all his creativity that a person should not conform his potentialities to the limits allowed by society. The spiritual needs of the individual must triumph over vulgarity and insignificance: “A person needs not three arshins of land, but the entire globe.” The isolation of “case life,” the writer insists, is harmful. The story “The Man in a Case” creates a frightening image of Belikov, an apologist for protective morality. His entire behavior is permeated with the fear that “something might not happen.” The writer exaggerates the image of a defender of social morality; a black suit, glasses, galoshes, and an umbrella are expressive details of the image that create an expressive portrait of a frightening social phenomenon. Belikov's death may seem to bring relief to people who fear the zealous guardian of morality, but an optimistic solution to a tragic collision is alien to Chekhov. The writer sadly admits that hopes to correct people who differ from Belikov in their lifestyle, but not in their inner self-awareness, are vain. At the end of the story, a symbolic emphasis is placed to make sure that protective ideas remain alive. The scene of Belikov's funeral is framed by the image of rain, and all those present open their umbrellas; this is read as the inescapability of what the fearful teacher actually stood for.

Type

The concept of "literary type" first appears in Hegel's Aesthetics. In literary theory, “type” and “character” are close, but not interchangeable; “character” to a greater extent reveals the typical personality traits, its psychological properties, and “type” is a generalization of certain social phenomena and is associated with typical traits. For example, Maxim Maksimych is a typical Russian soldier, “just a decent person,” as L.N. Tolstoy said about him, while Grigory Aleksandrovich Pechorin is a type of “suffering egoist,” the embodiment of “the vices of an entire generation in their full development.”

Concept "typing" includes the process of creating a holistic picture of the world and is the basis of the creative process. Recognizing typification as an internal need and a law of art, writers realize that the typical is not a copy of reality, but an artistic generalization.

In Moliere, Harpagon and Tartuffe are typical characters, but these are not social, but psychological types, illustrating neglect of moral requirements.

If we want to call someone a miser or a hypocrite, we use these proper names as common nouns.

V. G. Belinsky in the article “On the Russian story and the stories of Mr. Gogol” defines the typifying features of a literary hero: “Don’t say: here is a man with a huge soul, with ardent passions, with an extensive mind, but a limited reason, who loves so madly his wife, who is ready to strangle her with his hands at the slightest suspicion of infidelity - say more simply and briefly: here is Othello!.. Don’t say: here is an official who is vile by conviction, malicious with good intentions, criminal in good faith - say: here is Famusov!

The schematism of classic images is associated with the intentional intention of the authors, using the example of a particular character, to illustrate ethical and aesthetic principles. That is why the image, reduced to a theoretical premise, is marked by maximum typicality. However, an image that bears any one dominant feature, while winning in typicality, often loses in artistry.

The aesthetics of classicism are based on the principles of rationalism. Classicists affirm the view of a work of art as a creation that is consciously created, intelligently organized, and logically provable. Having put forward the principle of “imitation of nature,” classicists consider compliance with known rules and restrictions to be an indispensable condition. The goal of art is the artistic transformation of nature, the transformation of nature into a beautiful and ennobled aesthetic reality.

The strict hierarchy of genres of classicism also gives rise to the normalization of literary types. Social conflicts appear in the work reflected in the souls of the heroes. The division of characters into positive and negative in classic aesthetics is natural. There should be no intermediate types, since art is charged with the task of correcting vices and glorifying the virtues of an ideal person.

Playwrights of the era of classicism turn to Aristotle, who argued that tragedy “seeks to depict the best people than existing ones." The heroes of classic plays are forced to struggle with circumstances that, as in the tragedy of antiquity, cannot be prevented. In the classic version of the conflict, the resolution of the tragic situation now depends not on fate, but on the titanic will of the hero, personifying the ideal of the author.

According to the poetics of the genre, the heroes of the tragedy could be mythological characters, monarchs, generals, persons who determined by their will the fate of many people and even an entire nation. It is they who embody the main requirement - to sacrifice selfish interests in the name of the common good. As a rule, the content of character in a tragedy comes down to one essential trait. It determined the moral and psychological appearance of the hero. Thus, in the tragedies of Sumarokov, Kiy ("Khorev"), Mstislav ("Mstislav") are depicted by the playwright only as monarchs who violated their duty to their subjects; Khorev, Truvor, Vysheslav are like heroes who know how to control their feelings and subordinate them to the dictates of duty. Character in classicism is not depicted on its own, but is given in relation to the opposite property. The conflict between duty and feeling, caused by a dramatic combination of circumstances, made the characters of the heroes of the tragedies similar, and sometimes indistinguishable.

In the works of classicism, especially in comedy, the main character trait of the hero is fixed in his behavior and in his name. For example, the image of Pravdin cannot show at least any flaw, and Svinin cannot show the slightest dignity. Vice or virtue take on a specific figurative form in Fonvizin’s comedies: the prude Zhekhvat, the braggart Verkholet.

In the literature of sentimentalism, the emphasis is transferred from the environment to the person, to the sphere of his spiritual life. Preference is given to characters in which “sensitivity” predominates. Sentimentality, according to G. Pospelov’s definition, “is a more complex state, caused mainly by the ideological understanding of a certain inconsistency in the social characters of people. Sensitivity is a personal psychological phenomenon, sentimentality has a general cognitive meaning.” Sentimentality of experience is the ability to recognize the external insignificance of other people’s lives, and sometimes in one’s own own life something intrinsically significant. This feeling requires the hero’s mental reflection (emotional contemplation, the ability of introspection). A striking example of a sentimental character is Werther Goethe. The title of the novel is symptomatic - “The Sorrows of Young Werther.” In Goethe's work, suffering is perceived not as a chain of unfortunate events, but as a spiritual experience that can cleanse the hero's soul and ennoble his feelings. The author did not idealize his hero. At the end of work on the novel, Goethe wrote that he portrayed “a young man immersed in extravagant dreams” who “perishes ... as a result of unhappy passions.”

After a century of “thinking” (as Voltaire called the Age of Enlightenment), authors and readers felt that thought, a logically proven idea does not exhaust the potential of the individual: you can put forward a spectacular idea for improving the world, but this is not enough to correct a vicious world. The era of romanticism is coming. In its content, art reflects the rebellious spirit of man. The romantic theory of genius crystallizes in literature. “Genius and villainy are two incompatible things” - this phrase from Pushkin defines the main types of characters in romanticism. Poets discovered the unusual complexity, the depth of the spiritual world of man, the inner infinity of the individual.

Intense interest in strong feelings and secret movements of the soul, in the mysterious side of the universe, gives rise to an exceptionally intense psychologism of images. The craving for the intuitive encourages writers to imagine heroes in extreme situations and to persistently comprehend the hidden sides of nature. The romantic hero lives by imagination, not reality. Special psychological types are emerging: rebels who oppose a high ideal to a triumphant reality; philistines ("just good people", living surrounded by everyday life and content with their position. Novalis wrote that this type of people "is not capable of rebellion, will never escape from the kingdom of vulgarity"); villains who tempt a person with omnipotence and omniscience; musicians (gifted people who are able to penetrate the world ideas). Many heroes of romanticism become literary myths, symbolizing the thirst for knowledge (Faust), uncompromising devotion (Quasimodo) or absolute evil (Cain). the authors deliberately weaken the fact of a person’s dependence on circumstances caused by social conflicts. The lack of motivation of character is explained by his predetermination and self-sufficiency. “One, but fiery passion” guides the actions of the heroes.

At the center of romantic aesthetics is a creative subject, a genius who rethinks reality, or a villain who is convinced of the infallibility of his vision of reality. Romanticism professes the cult of individualism, placing emphasis not on the universal, but on the exclusive.

The basis of the literary characterology of realism is the social type. The psychological discoveries of romanticism are reinforced in realism by broad social and historical analysis, ideological motivation for the hero’s behavior. The character, as a rule, is determined by circumstances and environment.

In Russian realistic literature, types of literary heroes emerge that have common characterological features, their behavior is determined by similar circumstances, and the disclosure of the image in the text is based on traditional plot collisions and motives. The most striking were the “extra man,” “little man,” and “simple man.”

The literary type of the “superfluous man” arose as a rethinking of the phenomenon of the chosenness of the romantic hero. The name of the type came into general use after I. S. Turgenev wrote the story “The Diary of an Extra Man.” Previously in the literature there was a concept " strange man". This was how the character of the hero was determined, capable of abandoning the "norms public life". Lermontov gives this name to one of his dramas. Interest in the “history of the human soul” in the works of A. S. Pushkin, M. Yu. Lermontov, A. I. Herzen, I. S. Turgenev, I. A. Goncharov determined a specific characterology of the "extra person" type. This is an extraordinary personality, which is reflected both in his appearance and in his actions; the character is tragically aware of the unfulfillment of his own strengths, deception by fate and unwillingness to change anything, which causes the hero to flee from circumstances that require him. decisive actions.

Question: “Why did I live, for what purpose was I born?” remains open. To the hero of this type characterized by a contemptuous attitude towards the world, which is explained by knowledge of human weaknesses. A sense of moral superiority and deep skepticism characterizes the egocentric personality (“we regard everyone as zeros and ourselves as ones”), which contradictorily combines rich intellectual abilities and aversion to “hard work.” Reflection, constant dissatisfaction with oneself and the world, loneliness are explained by the hero’s refusal of sincere friendship, reluctance to lose “hateful freedom”; the desire to share your spiritual experience with someone collides with the conviction that “it is impossible to love forever - for a while it is not worth the effort.” The sad result: spiritual or physical death, not heroic, but senseless death.

The evolution of the image of the “superfluous man” reveals the futility of this literary type, which has already been noted by critics mid-19th V. D.I. Pisarev talks about Onegin’s doom. I. A. Goncharov writes about the weakness of the natures of Pechorin and Onegin. A.V. Druzhinin points to the gradual transformation of the “superfluous person” into the “hospital type”. New “heroes of the century” are emerging, capable of overcoming the weaknesses of their predecessors. Insolvency" extra people"showed Turgenev (Rudin and Lavretsky), Goncharov (Oblomov and Raisky), Chekhov (Laevsky and Ivanov).

The concept of “little man” appears in literature before the type of hero itself takes shape. He was born in the era of sentimentalism. At first, this concept designated representatives of the third estate, who began to interest writers due to the democratization of literature. Many “turned over” stories have appeared, where main character acted as a rogue or a victim. G. I. Chulkov's story "The Pretty Cook" based on Russian material represents the plot of D. Defoe's novel "Mole Flanders", and the adventures of the adventurer attract the reader no less than Sumarokov's tragedies. Gradually, the rogue heroes are replaced by the suffering heroes of sentimentalism.

N. M. Karamzin in “Poor Liza” embodied the main thesis of sentimentalism about the extra-class value of a person - “even peasant women know how to love.” The classical scheme, which extremely expressively reveals the character of the “little man” in the works of sentimentalism, is practically unchanged: the idyllic pictures of the life of “natural people” are disrupted by the invasion of representatives of a vicious civilization.

A new impetus will be given to this topic by realistic literature. “Belkin’s Tales” by Pushkin, “The Overcoat” by Gogol, “Poor People” by Dostoevsky, Chekhov’s stories will present the type of “little man” in a multifaceted way, artistically formulate the characterological features of the literary type: ordinary appearance, age from thirty to fifty years; limited existential possibilities; the wretchedness of material existence; the hero’s conflict with a high-ranking official or offender; the collapse of a lifelong dream; spontaneous rebellion of the character; tragic outcome.

Of course, the discovery of the “little man” type belongs to Pushkin. M. M. Bakhtin noted that Belinsky “overlooked” Samson Vyrin and did not make him the main source of the “little man” theme. The explanation for this may be the successful resolution of the conflict. Dunya is happy, despite logic social relations. Samson Vyrin assumed that his daughter would have to take revenge on the streets, but she quite happily married Minsky. Pushkin deliberately departs from the image social arguments tragedy of the unfortunate official, creates a utopian picture of relations between representatives of different social strata, not devoid of sentimentality. Be that as it may, the psychology of the “little man” was outlined by Pushkin in all the evidence of his social existence. An equally significant aspect of the topic is the analysis of dramatic family relationships. Pushkin's concept becomes the source of subsequent literary generalizations, predetermines the stories of Dostoevsky and Tolstoy about “unhappy families”, conflict situations where “each family is unhappy in its own way.”

The "little man" becomes the dominant type in the "natural school". L. M. Lotman wrote that “man appeared to the writers of the “natural school” as a cast of a social form that distorts human nature.”

The further evolution of the literary type of the “little man” is associated with a shift in emphasis, according to M. M. Bakhtin, “from Wednesday per person.” Already in the early work “Poor People,” F. M. Dostoevsky focuses his main attention on the spiritual world of the hero, although dependence on social circumstances still determines the misfortunes of Makar Devushkin. Dobrolyubov in his article “Downtrodden People” noted: “In Dostoevsky’s works we find one common feature, more or less noticeable in everything he wrote: this is pain about a person who recognizes himself as unable or, finally, not even entitled to be a human being.” a real, complete, independent person, in his own right."

The novel "Poor People" combines two views on the "little man" - Pushkin's and Gogol's; Makar Devushkin, after reading both stories, comes to the conclusion that “we are all Samson Vyrins.” This recognition points to a dramatic discovery - the tragedy is predetermined, there is no way to fight circumstances that are insurmountable. Dostoevsky’s famous phrase: “We all came out of Gogol’s “Overcoat”” - implies not so much apprenticeship as the continuation and development of the theme of mercy, immeasurable love for a person rejected by society.

The world of Akakiy Akakievich is confined to the dream of an overcoat, the world of Makar Devushkin is caring for Varenka. Dostoevsky represents a type of dreamer who is content with little, and all his actions are dictated by the fear of losing the modest gift of fate. Thematic similarity is found between “Poor People” and the story “White Nights”, the hero of which gives himself a derogatory description: “A dreamer is not a person, but, you know, some kind of creature of the neuter kind. He mostly settles somewhere in an inaccessible corner, as if hidden in it even from daylight." Dostoevsky reconsiders the well-known type of romantic hero who plunges into the world of an ideal dream, despising reality. Dostoevsky's heroes doomedly preach humility in life, which leads them to death.

Another twist on the theme of the little man is associated with the writer’s interest in the topic of drunkenness as an allegory of rebellion against public morality. In the novel "Crime and Punishment" this type of vice is not considered as a consequence social evil, but as a manifestation of selfishness and weakness. Oblivion in drunkenness does not save a person who has “nowhere else to go”; it destroys the destinies of loved ones: Sonya Marmeladova is forced to go to the panel, Katerina Ivanovna goes crazy, and, if not for chance, her children would have faced inevitable death.

Chekhov does not express compassion for the “little man,” but shows the real “smallness” of his soul. The story “The Death of an Official” examines the problem of the voluntariness of social obligations undertaken by a person. It is resolved in a grotesque manner. Chervyakov dies not as a “humiliated and insulted” person, but as an official who, out of fear, has lost his natural character.

Chekhov proved with all his creativity that a person should not conform his potentialities to the limits allowed by society. The spiritual needs of the individual must triumph over vulgarity and insignificance: “A person needs not three arshins of land, but the entire globe.” The isolation of “case life,” the writer insists, is harmful.

In the story "The Man in a Case" a frightening image of Belikov, an apologist for protective morality, is created. His entire behavior is permeated with the fear that “something might not happen.” The writer exaggerates the image of a defender of social morality; a black suit, glasses, galoshes, and an umbrella are expressive details of the image that create an expressive portrait of a frightening social phenomenon. Belikov's death may seem to bring deliverance to people who fear the zealous guardian of morality, but an optimistic solution to a tragic collision is alien to Chekhov. The writer sadly admits that hopes to correct people who differ from Belikov in their lifestyle, but not in their inner self-awareness, are vain. At the end of the story, a symbolic emphasis is placed to make sure that protective ideas remain alive. The scene of Belikov's funeral is framed by the image of rain, and all those present open their umbrellas; this is read as the inescapability of what the fearful teacher actually stood for.

F. Sologub, M. Bulgakov will present in their satirical works already a terrifying type of “petty demon”, where “triumphant vulgarity” will be brought to the level of an image-symbol.

IN modern literary criticism, along with traditional social literary types of realism, attention is paid to psychological types that are not carriers of any ideology, but are important for characterizing the depicted era.

Source type " common man"There was sentimentalism with its concept of the extra-class value of a person. In romantic literature"simple man" personifies "immaculate nature." Circassian woman from Pushkin (" Caucasian prisoner"), Georgian in Lermontov ("Mtsyri") embody the ideas of harmony of the world and man, which the rebellious hero lost in his soul. In realistic literature, the image of the "common man" reflects the idea of ​​​​an ordered life based on the laws of patriarchal existence.

N. Strakhov called Pushkin's story "The Captain's Daughter" a family chronicle. Pushkin does not idealize “simple Russian families” who keep “the habits of deep antiquity.” The author also shows the serf character traits of Andrei Petrovich Grinev, and does not hide the cruelty of Captain Mironov, who is ready to torture the Bashkir. But the author’s focus is completely different: in the world of the Grinevs and Mironovs, he finds, first of all, what Gogol clearly outlined when speaking about “The Captain’s Daughter”: “The simple greatness of ordinary people.” These people are attentive to each other, live according to their conscience, and are true to their sense of duty. They do not crave majestic achievements or personal glory, but are able to act decisively and boldly in extreme circumstances. These Pushkin characters are attractive and strong because they live in a world of domestic traditions and customs, which are basically folk.

From this series of Pushkin's heroes threads stretch to a great variety of characters in subsequent Russian literature. These are Lermontov's Maxim Maksimych, Gogol's old-world landowners, L.N. Tolstoy's Rostovs, Leskov's "righteous people". This type of literary hero is called differently in literary criticism. Since it is impossible to identify clear social criteria, it is rather psychological type: these images are not carriers of the main idea of ​​the text; the author’s full attention is not focused on them. An exception is Gogol's story "Old World Landowners". V. E. Khalizev calls characters of this kind “supertypes.” Similar images, according to the researcher, were present in different artistic aesthetics. V. E. Khalizev calls a complex of stable qualities: “This is, first of all, a person’s rootedness in close reality with its joys and sorrows, with communication skills and everyday affairs. Life appears as the maintenance of a certain order and harmony - both in the soul of this particular person, and around him."

A. Grigoriev called such heroes “humble” and contrasted them with “predatory”, “proud and passionate” characters. Then the concepts of “ordinary person” and “eccentric” appear. M. Bakhtin ranked them among the “social everyday heroes", not endowed with an ideological sound. The type of "common man" cannot exhaust its possibilities, since it is a reflection of the world of an ordinary person, but it will constantly transform depending on the priorities of aesthetic theories. Thus, in the literature of existentialism this main image was the artist’s challenge to the inhuman world. The heroes of Camus, Kafka, Sartre lose their names, merging with the crowd of indifferent people, becoming “strangers” to others and to themselves.

- (Greek imprint, model). The problem of T. and typification is not a specific problem of literary criticism. It takes place in the sciences of various fields of knowledge. The question of T. and typification in the literature is characterized by its own characteristics, which ... ... Literary encyclopedia

Type- TYPE (Τυπος blow, sign from a blow, seal, image, Aristotle has a general idea). We consider an object or phenomenon that contains features that are repeated in a large number of other similar phenomena or objects to be typical. Elementary... ... Dictionary of literary terms

type- a, m. type typos imprint, form, sample. 1. outdated Letter, letter, font. The printed sheets were hitherto called their Fryazhsky work. Where did this grydar and its type get its start in Russia, we don’t know for sure... ... Historical Dictionary of Gallicisms of the Russian Language

Literary House- This article is about the house of I. F. Lopatin at 68 Nevsky Prospekt. About the house of I. F. Lopatin at 100 Nevsky Prospect. See Nevsky, 100. This article is about the Dekhterev house on Nevsky Prospect. About Dekhterev’s house by... ... Wikipedia

Literary language- – the basic, supra-dialectal form of the existence of a language, characterized by a greater or lesser degree of processing, normalization, polyfunctionality, stylistic differentiation, and a tendency towards regulation. In its social and... Encyclopedic Dictionary Media

LITERARY LIFE- LITERARY LIFE, special forms of life, human relations and behavior generated by literary process and constituting one of its historical contexts; the term was introduced by B. M. Eikhenbaum and Yu. N. Tynyanov (in 1927 1929). L.b., no... ...

literary character- (Greek character trait, feature) artistic embodiment a set of stable mental characteristics that form the personality of a literary character; in the literary character is imprinted as conditioned by the social historical... ... Terminological dictionary-thesaurus on literary criticism

Literary language- Literary language is the main, supra-dialectal form of existence of a language, characterized by more or less processing, polyfunctionality, stylistic differentiation and a tendency towards regulation. In its cultural and social... Linguistic encyclopedic dictionary

LITERARY PROCESS- LITERARY PROCESS, historical existence, functioning and evolution of literature both in a certain era and throughout the history of a nation, country, region, world. L. p. At every historical moment it includes both verbally... Literary encyclopedic dictionary

Literary language- – the main form of existence of the national language, accepted by its speakers as exemplary; a historically established system of commonly used linguistic means that have undergone long-term cultural processing in the works of authoritative masters... ... Stylistic encyclopedic dictionary of the Russian language

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Topic 19. The problem of the literary hero. Character, character, type

I. Dictionaries

Hero and character (plot function) 1) Sierotwiński S. Słownik terminów literackich. “ Hero. One of the central characters in a literary work, active in incidents that are fundamental to the development of the action, focusing attention on himself. Main hero. The literary character most involved in the action, whose fate is in the center of the plot” (S. 47). “The character is literary. A bearer of a constructive role in a work, autonomous and personified in the imagination (this can be a person, but also an animal, plant, landscape, utensil, fantastic creature, concept), involved in the action (hero) or only occasionally indicated (for example, a person, important for characterizing the environment). Taking into account the role of literary characters in the integrity of the work, we can divide them into main (foreground), secondary (secondary) and episodic, and from the point of view of their participation in the development of the plot - into incoming (active) and passive” (S. 200). 2) Wilpert G. von. Character (lat. figura - image)<...>4. anyone speaking in poetry, esp. in epic and drama, a fictitious person, also called a character; however, one should prefer the area of ​​“literary P.” in contrast to natural personalities and from often only outline characters” (S. 298). “ Hero, original embodiment of heroic deeds and virtues, which, thanks to exemplary behavior, evokes admiration, so in heroic poetry, epic, song And saga, repeatedly stemming from the ancient cult of heroes and ancestors. He assumes due to conditions of rank ändeklausel> high social origin. With the bourgeoisification of lit. in 18th century a representative of the social and characteristic turns into a genre role, so today in general the area for the main characters and roles of drama or epic poetry is the center of action without regard to social origin, gender or person. properties; therefore, also for unheroic, passive, problematic, negative G. or - antihero, which in modern lit. (with the exception of trivial literature and socialist realism) replaced the shining G. of early times as a sufferer or victim. - positive G., - protagonist, - negative G., - Antihero “(S. 365 - 366). 3) Dictionary of World Literary Terms / By J. Shipley. “ Hero. The central figure or protagonist in a literary work; a character with whom the reader or listeners sympathize” (p. 144). 4) The Longman Dictionary of Poetic Terms / By J. Myers, M. Simms. “ Hero(from Greek "protector") - originally a male - or female - heroine - whose supernatural abilities and character elevate him - or her - to the level of a god, demigod, or warrior king. The most common modern understanding of the term also implies a high moral character of a person whose courage, exploits and nobility of purpose make him or her uniquely admired. The term is also often incorrectly used as a synonym for the main character in literature” (p. 133). “ Protagonist(from Greek "first lead") in Greek classical drama, the actor who plays the first role. The term came to mean the main or central character in a literary work, but one that may not be a hero. The protagonist confronts the one with whom he is in conflict, the antagonist” (p. 247). “ Minor hero(deuteragonist) (from Greek "minor character") is a character of secondary importance to the main character (protagonist) in classical Greek drama. Often a minor character is antagonist” (p. 78). 5) Cuddon J.A. The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory. “ Antihero. The "non-hero", or the antithesis of the old-fashioned hero, was capable of heroic deeds, dashing, strong, brave and resourceful. It is a little doubtful whether such a hero has ever existed in any quantity in fiction, with the exception of some pulp fiction and romantic novellas. However, there are many literary heroes who exhibit noble qualities and signs of virtue. An antihero is a person who is endowed with a tendency to fail. The antihero is incompetent, unsuccessful, tactless, clumsy, stupid and ridiculous” (p. 46). “ Hero and heroine. Main male and female characters in a literary work. In criticism, these terms do not have connotations of virtue or honor. Negative characters can also be central” (p. 406). 6) Chernyshev A. Character // Dictionary of literary terms. P. 267. “ P. (French personnage, from Latin persona - personality, face) - a character in a drama, novel, story and other works of art. The term "P." more often used in relation to minor characters.” 7) KLE. A) Baryshnikov E.P. Literary hero. T. 4. Stlb. 315-318. “L. G. - the image of a person in literature. The concepts “character” and “character” are often used unambiguously with L.G. Sometimes they are delimited: L. g. are called characters(characters) drawn more multifaceted and more significant for the idea of ​​the work. Sometimes the concept "L. G." refer only to characters close to the author’s ideal of a person (the so-called “ goodie") or embodying heroic. beginning (see Heroic in the literature). It should be noted, however, that in lit. criticism of these concepts, along with the concepts character, type and image are interchangeable.” “From the point of view. The figurative structure of a literary form combines character as the internal content of the character and his behavior and actions (as something external). Character allows us to consider the actions of the person portrayed as natural, going back to some vital reason; he is the content and the law ( motivation) behavior of L. g.” “Detective, adventure novel<...>- an extreme case, when the literary character becomes the main character, an unfilled shell, which merges with the plot, turning into its function.” b) Shopkeeper E.B. Character // T. 5. Stlb. 697-698. “ P. (French personage from Latin persona - face, personality) - in the usual meaning the same as literary hero. In literary studies, the term “P.” used in a narrower, but not always the same sense.<...>Most often, P. is understood as an actor. But here, too, two interpretations differ: 1) a person represented and characterized in action, and not in descriptions; then the concept of P. most of all corresponds to the heroes of drama, the images-roles.<...>2) Any actor, subject of action in general<...>In this interpretation, the protagonist is opposed only to the “pure” subject of experience appearing in the lyrics<...>That's why the term "P."<...>not applicable to the so-called " to the lyrical hero": you can't say "lyrical character". P. is sometimes understood only as a minor person<...>In this interpretation, the term “P.” correlates with the narrowed meaning of the term “hero” - center. face or one of the center. persons of the work. On this basis, the expression “episodic P.” (and not “episodic hero”!)”. 8) LES. A) Maslovsky V.I. Literary hero. P. 195. “L. G., artist image, one of the designations of the integral existence of a person in the art of words. The term "L. G." has a double meaning. 1) It emphasizes dominance. the position of the character in the work (as main hero compared to character), indicating that the person bears the main problem-thematic load.<...>In some cases, the concept of “L. G." used to designate any character in a work. 2) Under the term “L. G." is understood holistic the image of a person - in the totality of his appearance, way of thinking, behavior and mental world; The term “character”, which is similar in meaning (see. Character), if you take it narrowly and not widen. meaning, denotes internal. psychol. cross-section of personality, its natural properties, nature.” b) [ B.a.] Character. P. 276. “ P. <...>usually the same as literary hero. In literary studies, the term “P.” used in a narrower, but not always the same sense, which is often revealed only in context.” 9) Ilyin I.P. Character // Modern foreign literary criticism: Encyclopedic Dictionary. pp. 98-99. “ P. - fr. personnage, English character, German person, figur - according to ideas narratology, a complex, multi-component phenomenon located at the intersection various aspects of that communicative whole that is the artist. work. As a rule, P. has two functions: action and storytelling. Thus, it fulfills either the role actor, or the narrator- narrator”. Character and type (“content” of the character) 1) Sierotwiński S. Słownik terminów literackich. Wroclaw, 1966. “ Character. 1. Literary character, highly individualized, as opposed to type<...>” (S. 51). “ Type. A literary character presented in a significant generalization, in his most outstanding features” (S. 290). 2) Wilpert G. von. Sachwörterbuch der Literatur. “ Character(Greek - imprint), in literary criticism in general, every character , performing in drama. or a narrative work that copies reality or is fictional, but stands out due to its individual characteristics with its personal identity against the backdrop of a bare, vaguely outlined type”(S. 143). 3) Dictionary of World Literary Terms / By J. Shipley. “ Type. A person (in a novel or drama) who is not a complete single image, but demonstrates characteristic features a certain class of people” (p. 346). 4) The Longman Dictionary of Poetic Terms / By J. Myers, M. Simms. “ Character(from the Greek “to make excellent”) - a person in a literary work whose distinctive features are easily identifiable (though sometimes quite complex) moral, intellectual and ethical qualities” (p. 44). 5) Blagoy D. Type // Dictionary of literary terms: B 2 vol. T. 2. Column. 951-958. “...in the broad sense of the word, all images and faces of any work of art inevitably have a typical character, are literary types.” “...not all characters in poetic works fit the concept of a literary type in its proper meaning, but only images of heroes and persons with realized artistry, that is, those who have enormous generalizing power...” “...in addition to typical images, we find in literary works there are images-symbols and images-portraits.” “While portrait images carry an excess of individual traits to the detriment of their typical meaning, in symbolic images the breadth of this latter completely dissolves their individual forms in itself.” 6) Dictionary of literary terms. A) Abramovich G. Literary type. pp. 413-414. "T. l.(from the Greek typos - image, imprint, sample) - an artistic image of a certain individual, which embodies the features characteristic of a particular group, class, people, humanity. Both sides that make up the organic unity - the living individuality and the universal significance of literary T. - are equally important...” b) Vladimirova N. The character is literary. pp. 443-444. "X. l.(from the Greek charakter - trait, feature) - the image of a person in verbal art, which determines the originality of the content and form of a work of art.” “A special type of Ch. l. represents narrator's image(cm.)". 7) KLE. A) Baryshnikov E.P. Type // T. 7. Stlb. 507-508. “ T. (from the Greek tupoV - sample, imprint) - an image of human individuality, the most possible, typical for a particular society.” “The category T. took shape in the Roman “epic of private life” precisely as a response to the need of the artist. knowledge and classification of the varieties of the common man and his relations to life.” “...class, professional, local circumstances seemed to “complete” the personality of the lit. character<...>and with this “completeness” they questioned its vitality, that is, its ability for unlimited growth and improvement.” b) Tyupa V.I. Literary character // T. 8. Stlb. 215-219. “ X. l. - an image of a person, outlined with a certain completeness and individual certainty, through which they are revealed as conditioned by a given socio-historical. situation type of behavior (actions, thoughts, experiences, speech activity), and the moral and aesthetic nature inherent in the author. human concept. existence. Lit. H. is an artist. integrity, organic unity general, repetitive and individual, unique; objective(nek - paradisesocially - psychological . realityhuman . life , which served as a prototype for lit. X.) and subjective(comprehension and evaluation of the prototype by the author). As a result, lit. H. appears " new reality”, an artistically “created” personality, of the edge, reflecting a real person. type, clarifies it ideologically.” 8) [ B.a.]. Type // Les. P. 440: “ T. <...>in literature and art - a generalized image of human individuality, the most possible, characteristic of a certain society. environment."

II. Textbooks, teaching aids

1) Farino J. Introduction to literary criticism. Part 1. (4. Literary characters. 4.0. General characteristics). “...by the concept of “character” we will mean any person (including anthropomorphic creatures) who receives in a work the status of an object of description (in a literary text), image (in painting), demonstration (in a drama, performance, film)” . “Not all anthropomorphic creatures or persons appearing in the text of a work are present in it in the same way. Some of them have the status of objects of the world of this work. These are, so to speak, “characters-objects”. Others are given only as images, but the works themselves do not appear in the world. These are “image characters”. And others are just mentioned, but are not displayed in the text either as present objects or even as images. These are the "missing characters". They should be distinguished from references to persons who, according to the convention of a given world, cannot appear in it at all. The “absent” ones are not excluded by the convention, but, on the contrary, are allowed. Therefore, their absence is noticeable and thus - significant” (p. 103).

III. Special studies

Character and type 1) Hegel G.W.F. Aesthetics: In 4 volumes. T. I. “We proceeded from universal substantial forces of action. For their active implementation they need human individuality, in which they act as the driving force pathos. The general content of these forces must close in itself and appear in individual individuals as integrity And singularity. Such integrity is a person in his specific spirituality and subjectivity, an integral human individuality as character. The gods become human pathos, and pathos in concrete activity is human character” (p. 244). “Only such versatility gives the character a lively interest. At the same time, this completeness should appear merged into a single subject, and not be scattered, superficial and simply diverse excitability<...>Epic poetry is most suitable for depicting such an integral character, less dramatic and lyrical” (pp. 246-247). “Such versatility within the framework of a single dominant definiteness may seem inconsistent if you look at it with the eyes of reason<...>But for one who comprehends the rationality of a holistic and therefore living character within himself, this inconsistency precisely constitutes consistency and coherence. For man is distinguished by the fact that he not only bears within himself the contradiction of diversity, but also endures this contradiction and remains equal and true to himself in it” (pp. 248-249). “If a person does not have such single center, then the various sides of its diverse inner life disintegrate and appear devoid of any meaning.<...>On this side, firmness and determination are important point ideal portrayal of character” (p. 249). 2) Bakhtin M.M. Author and hero in aesthetic activity // Bakhtin M.M. Aesthetics of verbal creativity. “ Character we call this form of interaction between the hero and the author, which carries out the task of creating the whole of the hero as a specific personality<...>the hero is given as a whole from the very beginning<...>everything is perceived as a moment of characterization of the hero, has a characterological function, everything comes down to and serves as an answer to the question: who is he” (p. 151). “Character building can go in two main directions. We will call the first classic character building, the second romantic. For the first type of character building, the basis is artistic value fate...“ (p. 152). “Unlike the classical romantic character, he is self-initiated and value-intensive<...>The value of fate, which presupposes gender and tradition, is unsuitable for artistic completion here.<..>Here the hero’s individuality is revealed not as fate, but as an idea, or, more precisely, as the embodiment of an idea” (pp. 156-157). “If character is established in relation to the latest values ​​of the worldview<...>expresses the cognitive and ethical attitude of a person in the world<...>, then the type is far from the boundaries of the world and expresses a person’s attitude towards values ​​already specified and limited by the era and environment, to benefits, that is, to a meaning that has already become being (in the act of character, meaning for the first time becomes being). Character in the past, type in the present; the environment of the character is somewhat symbolized, objective world around the inventory type. Type - passive position of the collective personality” (p. 159). “The type is not only sharply intertwined with the world around it (objective environment), but is depicted as conditioned by it in all its moments, the type is a necessary moment of some environment (not a whole, but only a part of the whole).<...>The type presupposes the superiority of the author over the hero and his complete non-involvement in the world of the hero; hence the author is completely critical. The hero’s independence in the type is significantly reduced...” (p. 160). 3) Mikhailov A.V. From the history of character // Man and culture: Individuality in the history of culture. “...character gradually reveals its orientation “inward” and, as soon as this word comes into contact with the “inner” person, it builds this inner from the outside - from the external and superficial. On the contrary, the new European character is built from the inside out: “character” refers to the basis or foundation laid down in human nature, the core, as if the generative scheme of all human manifestations, and the differences can only concern whether “character” is the deepest in a person, or in its interior has an even deeper beginning” (p. 54). Hero and aesthetic appreciation 1) Fry N. Anatomy of criticism. Essay first / Trans. A.S. Kozlov and V.T. Oleynik // Foreign aesthetics and theory of literature of the 19th-20th centuries: Treatises, articles, essays / Comp., total. ed. G.K. Kosikova. “The plot of a literary work is always a story about how someone does something. “Someone,” if it is a person, is the hero, and the “something” he succeeds or fails to accomplish is determined by what he can or might do, depending on the author's intention and the resulting expectations of the audience.<...>1. If the hero is superior to people and their environment in quality, then he is a deity and the story about him is myth in the usual sense of the word, i.e. a story about God<...>2. If the hero is superior to people and his environment in terms of degrees, then this is a typical hero of a legend. His actions are wonderful, but he himself is portrayed as a man. The hero of these tales is transported to a world where the action ordinary laws nature is partly suspended<...>Here we move away from myth in the proper sense of the word and enter the realm of legend, fairy tale, Märchen and their literary derivatives. 3. If a hero is superior to other people in degree, but is dependent on the conditions of earthly existence, then this is a leader. He is endowed with power, passion and power of expression, but his actions are still subject to the criticism of society and are subject to the laws of nature. This is a hero high mimetic mode, first of all, a hero of epic and tragedy<...>4. If the hero is not superior to either other people or his own environment, then he is one of us: we treat him as to an ordinary person, and we demand that the poet observe those laws of verisimilitude that correspond to our own experience. And this is the hero low mimetic mode, first of all - comedies and realistic literature. <...>At this level, it is often difficult for the author to preserve the concept of “hero,” which is used in the above modes in its strict meaning.<...>5. If the hero is below us in strength and intelligence, so that we have the feeling that we are looking down on the spectacle of his lack of freedom, defeats and the absurdity of existence, then the hero belongs ironic mode. This is also true in the case when the reader understands that he himself is or could be in the same position, which, however, he is able to judge from a more independent point of view” (pp. 232-233). 2) Tyupa V.I. Modes of artistry (lecture series outline) // Discourse. Novosibirsk 1998. No. 5/6. pp. 163-173. “The method of such development (artistic integrity. - N.T.) - for example, glorification, satirization, dramatization - and acts as a mode of artistry, an aesthetic analogue of the existential mode of personal existence (the way the “I” is present in the world)” (p. 163). “Heroic<...>represents a certain aesthetic principle meaning generation, consisting in the combination of the internal givenness of being (“I”) and its external givenness ( role-playing border that connects and demarcates the personality with the world order). Basically, the heroic character “is not separated from his fate, they are united, fate expresses the extra-personal side of the individual, and his actions only reveal the content of fate” (A.Ya. Gurevich)” (p. 164). “ Satire is the aesthetic development of the incompleteness of the personal presence of the “I” in the world order, that is, such a discrepancy between the personality and its role in which the internal reality of individual life turns out to be narrower than the external given and is unable to fill one or another role boundary” (p. 165). “ Tragedy- a transformation of heroic artistry diametrically opposed to satire<...>A tragic situation is a situation of excessive “freedom of the “I” within oneself” (Hegel’s definition of personality) regarding one’s role in the world order (fate): an excessively “broad man”<...>The tragic guilt, contrasting with the satirical guilt of imposture, lies not in the act itself, which is subjectively justified, but in its personality, in the unquenchable thirst to remain oneself” (p. 167). “The considered modes of artistry<...>united in their pathetic attitude towards the world order. Fundamentally different aesthetic nature, unpathetic comic, whose penetration into high literature (from the era of sentimentalism) brought “a new mode of relationships between man and man” (Bakhtin), formed on the basis of carnival laughter.” “The laughter attitude brings a person subjective freedom from the bonds of objectivity<...>and, taking living individuality beyond the limits of the world order, establishes “free familiar contact between all people” (Bakhtin)<...>" “The comic gap between the inner and outer sides of the self-in-the-world, between the face and the mask<...>can lead to the discovery of true individuality<...>In such cases we usually talk about humor, making eccentricity (personal uniqueness of self-manifestations) a meaning-generating model of the presence of “I” in the world.<...>However comic effects can also detect the absence of a face under the mask, where there may be an “organ” or “stuffed brains”<...>This kind of comedy can appropriately be called sarcasm <...>Here the masquerade of life turns out to be a lie not of an imaginary role in the world order, but of an imaginary personality” (pp. 168-169). Hero and text 1) Ginzburg L. About a literary hero. (Chapter three. The structure of a literary hero). “A literary character is, in essence, a series of successive appearances of one person within a given text. Throughout one text, the hero can appear in a variety of forms.<...>The mechanism of gradual increase in these manifestations is especially obvious in large novels with a large number of characters. A character disappears, gives way to others, only to reappear a few pages later and add another link to the growing unity. Repeating, more or less stable features form the properties of a character. It appears as one-quality or multi-quality, with qualities unidirectional or multidirectional” (p. 89). “The hero’s behavior and his characterological characteristics are interconnected. Behavior is a reversal of its inherent properties, and properties are stereotypes of behavioral processes. Moreover, a character’s behavior is not only actions, but also any participation in the plot movement, involvement in ongoing events, and even any change in mental states. The properties of a character are reported by the author or narrator; they arise from his self-characterization or from the judgments of other characters. At the same time, the reader himself is left to determine these properties - an act similar to the everyday stereotyping of the behavior of our acquaintances, which we carry out every minute. An act that is similar and at the same time different, because the literary hero is given to us by someone else’s creative will - as a task with a predicted solution” (pp. 89-90). “The unity of a literary hero is not a sum, but a system, with its dominants organizing it.<...>It is impossible, for example, to understand and perceive in its structural unity the behavior of Zola’s heroes without the mechanism of biological continuity or Dostoevsky’s heroes without the prerequisite of the need for a personal solution to the moral and philosophical question of life” (p. 90). 2) Bart R. S/Z / Per. G.K. Kosikov and V.P. Murat. “At the moment when identical semes, having permeated the proper name several times in a row, are finally assigned to it, - at that moment a character is born. The character, then, is nothing more than a product of combinatorics; Moreover, the resulting combination is distinguished by both relative stability (for it is formed by repeating semes) and relative complexity (for these semes are partly consistent and partly contradict each other). This complexity precisely leads to the emergence of a character’s “personality,” which has the same combinatorial nature as the taste of a dish or a bouquet of wine. A proper name is a kind of field in which magnetization occurs; virtually such a name is correlated with a specific body, thereby involving this configuration of semes in the evolutionary (biographical) movement of time” (p. 82). “If we start from a realistic view of character, believing that Sarrazin (the hero of Balzac's novella. - N.T.) lives outside of a piece of paper, then we should start looking for the motives for this suspension (the hero’s inspiration, unconscious rejection of the truth, etc.). If we proceed from a realistic view of discourse, considering the plot as a mechanism whose spring must completely unfold, then we should recognize that the iron law of narration, which presupposes its non-stop unfolding, requires that the word “castrato” not be uttered. Although both of these views are based on different and in principle independent (even opposite) laws of likelihood, they still reinforce each other; as a result, a general phrase arises in which fragments of two different languages ​​are unexpectedly combined: Sarrazine is intoxicated, because the movement of the discourse should not be interrupted, and the discourse, in turn, gets the opportunity to develop further because the intoxicated Sarrazine does not hear anything, but only speaks himself . Two chains of patterns turn out to be “unsolvable.” Good narrative writing represents precisely this kind of embodied undecidability” (pp. 198-199).

QUESTIONS

1. Consider and compare various definitions of the concepts “character” and “hero” in reference and educational literature. What criteria are used to usually distinguish a hero from other characters in a work? Why are “character” and “type” usually opposed to each other? 2. Compare the definitions of the concept of “character” in reference literature and in Hegel’s “Lectures on Aesthetics.” Point out the similarities and differences. 3. How does Bakhtin’s interpretation of character differ from Hegel’s? Which of them is closer to the definition of the concept given by A.V. Mikhailov? 4. How does Bakhtin’s interpretation of type differ from the one we find in reference literature? 5. Compare the solutions to the problem of classifying the aesthetic “modes” of the hero in N. Frei and V.I. Tyups. 6. Compare the judgments about the nature of a literary character expressed by L.Ya. Ginzburg and Roland Barthes. Point out the similarities and differences.

Who is literary character? We devote our article to this issue. In it we will tell you where this name came from, what literary characters and images are, and how to describe them in literature lessons according to your desire or the teacher’s request.

Also from our article you will learn what an “eternal” image is and what images are called eternal.

Literary hero or character. Who is this?

We often hear the concept of “literary character”. But few can explain what we are talking about. And even schoolchildren who have recently returned from a literature lesson often find it difficult to answer the question. What is this mysterious word “character”?

It came to us from ancient Latin (persona, personnage). The meaning is “personality”, “person”, “person”.

So, a literary character is an active person. We are mainly talking about prose genres, since images in poetry are usually called “lyrical hero”.

It is impossible to write a story or poem, novel or story without characters. Otherwise, it will be a meaningless collection of, if not words, then perhaps events. The heroes are people and animals, mythological and fantastic creatures, inanimate objects, for example, Andersen’s steadfast tin soldier, historical figures and even entire nations.

Classification of literary heroes

They can confuse any literature connoisseur with their quantity. And it’s especially hard for secondary school students. And especially those who prefer to play their favorite game instead of doing homework. How to classify heroes if a teacher or, even worse, an examiner demands it?

The most win-win option: classify the characters according to their importance in the work. According to this criterion, literary heroes are divided into main and secondary. Without the main character, the work and its plot will be a collection of words. But if we lose minor characters, we will lose a certain branch storyline or expressiveness of events. But overall the work will not suffer.

The second classification option is more limited and is not suitable for all works, but for fairy tales and fantasy genres. This is the division of heroes into positive and negative. For example, in the fairy tale about Cinderella, poor Cinderella herself is a positive hero, she evokes pleasant emotions, you sympathize with her. But the sisters and the evil stepmother are clearly heroes of a completely different type.

Characteristics. How to write?

Heroes literary works sometimes (especially in a literature lesson at school) they need a detailed description. But how to write it? The option “once upon a time there was such a hero. He is from a fairy tale about this and that” is clearly not suitable if the assessment is important. We will share with you a win-win option writing characteristics of a literary (and any other) hero. We offer you a plan with brief explanations of what and how to write.

  • Introduction. Name the work and the character you will talk about. Here you can add why exactly you want to describe it.
  • The place of the hero in the story (novel, story, etc.). Here you can write whether he is major or minor, positive or negative, a person or a mythical or historical figure.
  • Appearance. It would not be amiss to include quotes, which will show you as an attentive reader, and will also add volume to your description.
  • Character. Everything is clear here.
  • Actions and their characteristics in your opinion.
  • Conclusions.

That's it. Keep this plan for yourself, and it will come in handy more than once.

Famous literary characters

Although the very concept of a literary hero may seem completely unfamiliar to you, if you tell you the name of the hero, you will most likely remember a lot. This is especially true famous characters literature, for example, such as Robinson Crusoe, Don Quixote, Sherlock Holmes or Robin Hood, Assol or Cinderella, Alice or Pippi Longstocking.

Such heroes are called famous literary characters. These names are familiar to children and adults from many countries and even continents. Not knowing them is a sign of narrow-mindedness and lack of education. Therefore, if you don’t have time to read the work itself, ask someone to tell you about these characters.

The concept of image in literature

Along with character, you can often hear the concept of “image”. What is this? Same as the hero or not? The answer will be both positive and negative, because a literary character may well be a literary image, but the image itself does not have to be a character.

We often call this or that hero an image, but nature can appear in the same image in a work. And then the topic of the examination paper can be “the image of nature in the story...”. What to do in this case? The answer is in the question itself: if we are talking about nature, you need to characterize its place in the work. Start with a description, add character elements, for example, “the sky was gloomy,” “the sun was mercilessly hot,” “the night was frightening with its darkness,” and the characterization is ready. Well, if you need a description of the hero’s image, then how to write it, see the plan and tips above.

What are the images?

Our next question. Here we will highlight several classifications. Above we looked at one - images of heroes, that is, people/animals/mythical creatures and images of nature, images of peoples and states.

Also, images can be so-called “eternal”. What's happened " eternal image"? This concept names a hero who was once created by an author or folklore. But he was so “characteristic” and special that after years and eras other authors write their characters from him, perhaps giving them other names, but that doesn’t matter the essence changing. Such heroes include the fighter Don Quixote, the hero-lover Don Juan and many others.

Unfortunately, modern fantasy characters do not become eternal, despite the love of fans. Why? What's better than this funny Don Quixote of Spider-Man, for example? It's difficult to explain this in a nutshell. Only reading the book will give you the answer.

The concept of "closeness" of the hero, or My favorite character

Sometimes the hero of a work or movie becomes so close and loved that we try to imitate him, to be like him. This happens for a reason, and it’s not for nothing that the choice falls on this character. Often a favorite hero becomes an image that somehow resembles ourselves. Perhaps the similarity is in character, or in the experiences of both the hero and you. Or this character is in a situation similar to yours, and you understand and sympathize with him. In any case, it's not bad. The main thing is that you only imitate worthy heroes. And there are plenty of them in the literature. We wish you to meet only good heroes and imitate only the positive traits of their character.