Epic works of their types. Epic genres of literature. Examples and features of the epic genre

Since ancient times (Aristotle’s “Poetics”) it has been customary to divide literature into three types:

  1. Epic- covering existence in all its diversity: spatio-temporal extent and event richness (a distinctive feature is plot-basedness).
  2. Lyrics- imprinting inner world personality in the formation and change of impressions, dreams, moods, associations (emotionality, expressiveness, lack of a clearly defined plot).
  3. Drama- recording the speech acts of the characters, originally intended for stage production; possessing, on the one hand, expressiveness, and on the other, plotting, which allows us to see in this type of literature a merging of the features of lyricism and epic.

Each of these types of literature is characterized by its own specific genres (that is, established forms of works).

Epic genres

Epic is characterized by the following genres: epic, epic poem, story, short story, short story, novel, some types of essay. Specific trait epic - the organizing role of the narrative: the speaker reports events and their details as something past and remembered, simultaneously resorting to descriptions of the situation, actions and appearance of the characters, and sometimes to reasoning. The main difference between the listed genres is the volume of the work, as well as the scale of the events and philosophical generalizations depicted.

Epic- a work of monumental form on national issues (for example, “War and Peace” by L. N. Tolstoy, “ Quiet Don" M. A. Sholokhova).

Epic poem- poetic, in some cases prose work, having a plot; as a rule, a work glorifying the glorious past of the people, their spiritual formation or aspirations, etc. (for example, “Poltava” by A. S. Pushkin, “ Dead Souls"N.V. Gogol).

Novel- a work in which the narrative is focused on the fate of an individual in the process of its formation and development. According to Belinsky’s definition, a novel is an “epic of private life” (for example, “Oblomov” by A. I. Goncharov, “Fathers and Sons” by I. S. Turgenev).

Tale- “average” genre epic kind literature. In volume, as a rule, it is smaller than a novel, but larger than a short story or short story. If in a novel the center of gravity lies in the holistic action, in the actual and psychological movement of the plot, then in a story the main gravity is often transferred to the static components of the work - positions, mental states, landscapes, descriptions, etc. (for example, “Steppe” A . P. Chekhov, “Notes from “ House of the Dead"F. M. Dostoevsky). It is often quite difficult to distinguish between a novel and a story; in Western literary criticism, the “story” genre is not distinguished at all (there the division occurs into two main categories: “novel” - “novel”, and “short story” - “story”).

Novella- small prose genre, comparable in volume to a story (which sometimes gives rise to their identification - there is a point of view on a short story as a type of story), but differs from it in a sharp centripetal plot (often paradoxical), lack of descriptiveness and compositional rigor. By poeticizing the incident, the short story extremely exposes the core of the plot, bringing life material into the focus of one event (for example, early stories A. P. Chekhov, N. V. Gogol, the cycle “Dark Alleys” by I. A. Bunin).

Story- small epic genre form fiction- a prose work that is small in terms of the volume of depicted phenomena of life, and hence in terms of the volume of text (for example, stories by V. M. Garshin, A. P. Chekhov, I. A. Kuprin, etc.).

Lyrical genres

  1. Oh yeah- a genre that usually glorifies some important historical event, person or phenomenon (for example, A. S. Pushkin’s ode “Liberty”, M. V. Lomonosov’s ode “On the Day of the Ascension...”). The origins of the genre go back to antiquity (for example, the odes of Horace). It received special development in classicism.
  2. Song- can act as both an epic and a lyrical genre. An epic song has a plot (see definition of epic genres) and, as a rule, it large volumes, rather than lyrical (for example, “Song of the Prophetic Oleg” by A. S. Pushkin), the lyrical song is based on the experiences of the main character or author (for example, Mary’s song from “A Feast during the Plague” by A. S. Pushkin) .
  3. Elegy- a genre of romantic poetry, the poet’s sad reflection on life, fate, his place in this world (for example, “It went out daylight"A.S. Pushkin).
  4. Message- a genre not associated with a specific tradition (romantic, classic, etc.). The main characteristic feature is the appeal to any person (for example, “Pushchin”, “To Chaadaev” by A.S. Pushkin).
  5. Sonnet - special kind lyric poem, characterized by strict requirements for form: the sonnet must have 14 lines (for example, “The stern Dante did not despise the sonnet...” by A. S. Pushkin). There are two types of sonnet: 1. English sonnet, consisting of three quatrains and one couplet at the end (for example, sonnets by W. Shakespeare). 2. French sonnet, consisting of two quatrains and two tercets. This variety, as the name suggests, was widely used French poets(for example, by the poets of the Pleiades - P. Ronsard, J. Du Bellay, etc., later by the French symbolists - P. Verlaine, C. Baudelaire, etc.). In Russia, this variety was especially popular during the era of symbolism; almost all Russian symbolists used it in their work (for example, K. D. Balmont, V. Ya. Bryusov, A. A. Blok and others).
  6. Epigram- a short poem, usually no more than a quatrain, ridiculing or presenting a specific person in a humorous way - (for example, “On Vorontsov” by A. S. Pushkin).
  7. Satire- a more detailed poem, both in volume and in the scale of what is depicted. Usually in satire it is not the shortcomings of any particular person that are ridiculed, but social vices. Satire is characterized by civil pathos (for example, the satires of A. D. Kantemir, “My ruddy critic, fat-bellied scoffer...” by A. S. Pushkin). The origins of epigrams and satire go back to antiquity, especially to ancient Roman literature (for example, the works of Martiallus, Catullus, etc.).

Such a division into genres is arbitrary, since in its pure form listed genres are quite rare. Usually a poem combines features of several genres. For example, “To the Sea” by A. S. Pushkin combines the signs of elegy and message, while Pushkin’s “Village” is an elegy, but at the same time raises civil issues.

Genres of drama

Dramaturgy originated in ancient times. Even then, two most important dramatic genres arose - tragedy and comedy. The main conflict in the tragedy was the conflict in the soul of the protagonist between duty and conscience. However, ancient drama had its own distinctive features, the most important of which is the idea of ​​fate, predetermination, destiny. The choir played an important role in ancient drama - it formulated the audience’s attitude to what was happening on stage, pushing them toward empathy (i.e., the audience seemed to themselves be participants in the action). It is assumed that the enactment of tragedies was originally an integral part of the so-called “Dionysia” or, in the Roman version, “Bacchanalia”, festivals associated with the veneration of the god of winemaking and viticulture, Dionysus (Bacchus); the presentation of scenes from the life of this god was an important link in the so-called “orgaistic” (i.e. erotic) rituals, the ultimate goal of which was: by releasing pent-up instinctual desires, to experience purification, the so-called “catharsis”, which is defined in Aristotle’s “Poetics” as “purification through fear and compassion.”

The comedy was based mainly on everyday stories, which were based on funny misunderstandings, mistakes, comic incidents, etc.

In the Middle Ages, the Christian Church contributed to the emergence of new dramatic genres - liturgical drama, mystery, miracle, morality, school drama. In the 18th century, drama emerged as a genre (see below), and melodramas, farces, and vaudevilles also became widespread. After ancient times, drama reached a special flowering in the era of classicism. It was in the era of classicism that special rules of drama were formulated, the main of which was the so-called “unity of place, time and action” (see section “Classicism”). IN modern dramaturgy All higher value acquires such a genre as tragicomedy. The drama of the last century also includes a lyrical beginning - the so-called “ lyrical dramas"(M. Maeterlinck, A. A. Blok).

Currently, dramaturgy traditionally distinguishes three. main genres: tragedy, comedy and drama.

  1. Tragedy- a genre that shows reality and the depicted characters in their tragic development. Tragedy is characterized by the so-called tragic conflict. Events lead the hero of the tragedy to the point that, for example, his ideas about duty come into conflict with his concepts of conscience, with his personal feelings, etc. These contradictions cannot be resolved by the hero himself, therefore they are called “tragic” . An attempt to resolve them usually leads the hero to death - a natural way out of deadlock. The main pathos of the tragedy lies not in its plot, not in the content of the conflict, but in how the hero tries to resolve insoluble contradictions. That is why the pathos of tragedy is usually heroic. The concept of tragic contradictions is very often associated with the concept of the tragic guilt of the protagonist. Having embarked on the path of resolving the insoluble, the main character commits actions that aggravate his internal discord; the more efforts he makes to get out of the conflict, the more acute this conflict becomes. In this regard, the idea of ​​predestination, fate, doom arises. For example, W. Shakespeare's tragedy "Hamlet". Duty calls on Hamlet to avenge his father, but his concepts of humanity, his love for his mother and Ophelia conflict with the need to take revenge. Having embarked on the path of revenge, Hamlet, wanting to kill Claudius (the new king), accidentally kills Polonius (the father of his beloved). Now he bears a tragic guilt, aggravated by the fact that Ophelia goes crazy and commits suicide (as a result of the same tragic contradictions - duty towards her father and love for Hamlet are fighting in her), and Laertes (her brother) vows to take revenge on Hamlet for father's blood. As a result of his oath, Laertes becomes a blind instrument in the hands of Claudius (this is Laertes’ tragic guilt), and then dies. Claudius, trying to get rid of Hamlet, bribes his friends - Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, who die because they betrayed their friend, Hamlet (this is their tragic fault). Hamlet's mother also bears a tragic guilt - she connived with the murderer Claudius, which is why she dies after drinking poison instead of Hamlet.

    Currently, the concept of “tragic guilt” has gone far beyond the boundaries of drama, becoming one of the characteristic features, for example, of epic genres. As an example, we can cite the novel by F. M. Dostoevsky “Crime and Punishment”, where the idea of ​​​​obligatory retribution, even for unintentional evil, with “the best intentions”, is carried out quite clearly: for example, Raskolnikov, having decided to kill the old money-lender, is forced to kill her sister Lizaveta, one of those “humiliated and insulted” for whose sake he, in fact, decides to commit a crime; Mikolka confesses to the murder that Raskolnikov committed in order to “suffer for others”; Svidrigailov commits suicide, etc. (see the section dedicated to F. M. Dostoevsky). Thus, Raskolnikov, as it were, initially bears the tragic guilt. Just as it begins to dominate Hamlet from the very moment when he decides to take revenge, so it appears to Raskolnikov when he decides to kill the old money-lender. The genius of both works, not least of all, lies in the fact that they especially acutely raise the problem of a person’s free choice of his own path, the choice of one or another “scenario” later life(Unlike ancient tragedy, where the hero did not decide anything, but everything was predetermined by the gods - for example, in the famous tragedy of Sofola “Oedipus” all the tragic events that happen to Oedipus do not depend on his personal will, they are predetermined by the “curse of the family”).

    It is conscious and free choice - and freedom of choice consists of imagining its consequences and being ready to “pay the bills” - that are characteristic of the modern understanding of tragic pathos, starting from the Renaissance. Perhaps this is precisely the answer to one of the most famous riddles Shakespeare's "Hamlet", namely, why Hamlet takes so long to make a decision and hesitates to take revenge. Perhaps he behaves this way because he makes a conscious choice, consciously takes on the tragic guilt, understanding from the very beginning that he will have to pay the highest price for the right to take revenge. He understands that before making a choice, several paths lie before him (for example, leave Denmark or marry Ophelia and lead a happy life). family life etc.), while after making a decision, all other paths will be closed to him and only one will remain, leading to death. In this context, the famous monologue “To be or not to be” takes on a very important meaning: it raises with particular poignancy the problem of a person’s choice of his own destiny. This is precisely the main and main meaning of Shakespeare's great tragedy, and at the same time its fundamental difference from everything that came before it. "Hamlet" is not a work about revenge, not about tragic circumstances and ways to resolve them, but about the greatness of the human spirit and freedom of choice, including one’s own destiny.

  2. Comedy- a genre in which characters, situations and action are presented in funny forms or imbued with the comic. Until classicism, comedy meant a work opposite to tragedy, with an obligatory happy ending; her heroes, as a rule, were from the lower class (see the article “Classicism”). For a long time, comedy was considered a “low genre,” and only in the Age of Enlightenment (starting with J.B. Molière) this was broken by the recognition of a “middle genre,” the so-called “philistine drama.” In the 19th and especially in the 20th centuries, comedy was a free and very diverse genre. Comedy is aimed primarily at ridiculing the ugly (“improper”, contrary to a social ideal or norm); The heroes of the comedy are internally bankrupt, incongruous, do not correspond to their position, purpose, and thus are sacrificed to laughter, which debunks them, thereby fulfilling their “ideal” mission. However, even in acute social comedy(for example, in “Woe from Wit” by A. S. Griboyedov) the depiction of human suffering (“millions of torments” by Chatsky) is permissible only to a certain extent; otherwise, compassion crowds out laughter and comedy turns into drama.
  3. Drama- like comedy, it mainly reproduces the private life of people, but its main goal is not to ridicule morals, but to depict the individual in his dramatic relationship with society. Like tragedy, drama tends to recreate acute contradictions, but at the same time its conflicts are not so intense and insoluble and allow the possibility of a successful ending, and its characters are not so exceptional. As an independent genre, drama emerged in the 18th century among enlighteners (“bourgeois drama” in France and Germany); her interest in the social structure and life, moral ideals democratic environment, to the psychology of the “average person” contributed to the strengthening of realistic principles in European art. As the drama develops, its internal drama thickens, a successful outcome becomes less and less common, the hero usually remains at odds with society and himself (“The Thunderstorm”, “Dowry” by A. N. Ostrovsky, plays by A. P. Chekhov, A. M. Gorky). Drama of the 19th-20th centuries. is predominantly psychological.

What is the epic genre? The fact is that it is impossible to answer this question unambiguously. This is due to the fact that this genre contains several varieties. Let's figure out what this epic genre is, and what directions does it contain? And also in what connects epic and lyric poetry.

What is a literary genre?

It seems that at the beginning of the story about the genres of epic works it would be advisable to understand the concept of a literary genre as such. The word "genre" comes from the French genre, taken from the Latin, which contains the word genus, both of which mean "kind, genus."

As for the literary genre, it is such groups of works of literature that develop historically and are united by a set of a number of properties. Such properties are both substantive and formal in nature. In this they differ from literary forms, which are distinguished only on the basis of formal characteristics. Genre is often confused with a type of literature, which is incorrect.

Now let's move on to a direct consideration of the question of what this is - an epic genre.

What is the essence of the concept?

An epic (this is also the name of the genre we are considering) is one (just like drama and lyrics) that tells about events that supposedly happened in the past. And the narrator remembers them. A characteristic feature of the epic is the coverage of existence in such various aspects as:

  • Plastic volume.
  • Extension in time and space.
  • Plot content, or eventfulness.

Aristotle on the nature of the epic

Ancient Greek philosopher of the 4th century BC. e. Aristotle in his work “Poetics” wrote that the epic genre is (in contrast to dramatic and lyrical works) the impartiality and objectivity of the author at the time of narration. According to Aristotle, the features of the epic are the following:

  1. A wide coverage of reality, which means the depiction of both the private lives of individual characters and phenomena occurring in public life.
  2. The revelation of people's characters during the course of the plot.
  3. Objectivity in storytelling, in which the author’s attitude towards his characters and the world depicted in the work occurs through the selection of artistic details.

Varieties of epic

As mentioned above, there are several types of epic genres that can be combined based on their volume. These are large, medium and small. Each of these types includes the following varieties:

  • The major ones include epic, novel, epic poem (poem-epic).
  • The type of story that belongs to the middle category is the story.
  • Small ones include short stories, short stories, and essays.

Some more details about the types of works that belong to the epic genres will be discussed below.

Anything else to note? There are also folklore, folk- epic genres, such as epics, fairy tales and historical songs.

What else is the meaning of the epic?

The features of this genre are also the following:

  • A work classified as epic is not limited in its scope. As V. E. Khalizev, who was a Soviet and Russian literary critic, said, epic refers to a type of literature that contains not only short stories, but also works designed for long-term reading or listening - epics, novels.
  • In the epic genre, a large role belongs to the image of the storyteller (narrator). He, talking about the events themselves, about the characters, at the same time separates himself from what is happening. But at the same time, in the narration itself, not only what is being told is reproduced, imprinted, but also the mindset of the narrator, his manner of presentation.
  • In the epic genre, it is possible to use almost any artistic means known in literature. Its inherent narrative form allows for the deepest penetration into the inner world of an individual.

Two large forms

The leading genre of epic literature until the 18th century was the source of its plot is folk legend, whose images are generalized and idealized. The speech reflects a relatively unified national consciousness, and the form is usually poetic. An example is Homer's poems "Iliad" and "Odyssey".

In the 18th and 19th centuries, it was replaced as the leading genre by the novel. The plots of the novels are mainly drawn from modern reality, and the images become more individualized. The speech of the characters reflects the multilingualism of social consciousness, which is sharply differentiated. The form of the novel is prosaic. Examples include novels written by Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoevsky.

Looping

Epic works strive for the most complete reflection of life's realities, so they tend to be combined into cycles. An illustration of this trend is the epic novel called “The Forsyte Saga.”

It represents a monumental series of diverse works describing the life of the wealthy Forsyth family. In 1932, for Galsworthy's inherent art of storytelling, of which The Forsyte Saga is the pinnacle, the writer was awarded Nobel Prize on literature.

Epic means “narration”

An epic (from the ancient Greek ἔπος - “word, narration” and ποιέω - “I create”) is an extensive narrative, which is presented either in verse or in prose, and is dedicated to outstanding historical events on a national scale. IN in a general sense An epic is a complex, long history that includes a series of large-scale events.

The predecessors of the epic were epic songs that were half lyrical and half narrative in nature. They were caused by the exploits of a tribe or clan, dedicated to the heroes around whom they were grouped. Such songs were formed into large-scale poetic units called epics.

In heroic-romantic epics, their main characters purposefully and actively participate in significant historical events, in the process of which their personality is formed, as, for example, in the novel “Peter I” by A. N. Tolstoy. There are also “moral descriptive” epics, which tell about the state of society in a comic way, such as “Gargantua and Pantagruel” by Rabelais or “Dead Souls” by Gogol.

Epic and lyrical genres

The two genres are interconnected and in some cases can form a kind of symbiosis. To understand this, let's define lyrics. This word comes from the Greek λυρικός, which means “performed to the sound of a lyre.”

This type of literature, also called lyric poetry, reproduces a person’s personal feeling, his attitude towards something, or the mood of the author himself. Works in this genre are characterized by emotionality, sincerity, and excitement.

But there is also an intermediate option between poetry and the epic genre - this is lyric-epic. There are two sides to such works. One of them is observation and evaluation by the reader from the side of the plot narrative, presented in the form of poetry. And the second, which, however, is closely related to the first, is that he receives a certain lyrical (emotional) assessment of the narrator. Thus, lyric-epic is characterized by both epic and lyrical principles in displaying the surrounding reality.

Lyric-epic genres include such genres as:

  • Poem.
  • Ballad.
  • Stanzas.

Epic also includes folklore genres: fairy tale, epic, epic, historical song.

In the epic genre of literature (Old Greek epos - word, speech), the organizing principle of the work is the narrative about the characters (actors), their destinies, actions, mentalities, and the events in their lives that make up the plot. This is a chain of verbal messages or, more simply, a story about what happened earlier. Narration is characterized by a temporary distance between the conduct of speech and the subject of verbal designations.

An epic work can “absorb” such a number of characters, circumstances, events, destinies, and details that are inaccessible to either other types of literature or any other type of art.

An epic work that has no limitations in its scope. According to V.E. Khalisev, “Epic as a type of literature includes both short stories (...) and works designed for long-term listening or reading: epics, novels (...).”

A significant role for the epic genres is played by the image of the narrator (storyteller), who talks about the events themselves, about the characters, but at the same time demarcates himself from what is happening. The epic, in turn, reproduces and captures not only what is being told, but also the narrator (his manner of speaking, his mentality).

An epic work can use almost any artistic means known to literature. The narrative form of an epic work “promotes the deepest penetration into the inner world of man.”

Until the 18th century, the leading genre of epic literature was the epic poem. The source of its plot is folk legend, the images are idealized and generalized, the speech reflects a relatively monolithic popular consciousness, the form is poetic (Homer’s Iliad). In the XVIII-XIX centuries. The leading genre is the novel. The plots are borrowed mainly from modern times, the images are individualized, the speech reflects a sharply differentiated multilingual social consciousness, and the form is prosaic.

Lyrics- one of the three main types of literature, highlighting the subjective image of reality: individual states, thoughts, feelings, impressions of the author, caused by certain circumstances, impressions. In lyric poetry, life is reflected in the experiences of the poet (or lyrical hero): it is not narrated about it, but an image-experience is created. The most important property of lyrics is the ability to convey an individual (feeling, state) as universal. Characteristic features of the lyrics: poetic form, rhythm, lack of plot, small size.


In the lyrics (Old Greek lyra - musical instrument, to the sounds of which poems were sung) in the foreground are individual states of human consciousness1: emotionally charged reflections, volitional impulses, impressions, non-rational sensations and aspirations. If any sequence of events is indicated in a lyrical work (which is not always the case), then it is very sparingly

Lyrics are by no means confined to the sphere of people’s inner life, their psychology as such. She is invariably attracted to states of mind that signify a person’s concentration on external reality. Therefore, lyric poetry turns out to be the artistic mastery of states not only of consciousness (which, as G.N. Pospelov insistently says, is the primary, main, dominant one in it), but also of being. Such are philosophical, landscape and civic poems.

Speech expression in the lyrical genre of poetry is often taken to its maximum limit. So many bold and unexpected allegories

Elegy is a genre of lyric poetry: a poem of meditative (from the Latin meditatio - in-depth reflection) or emotional content, conveying deeply personal, intimate experiences of a person, usually imbued with moods of sadness and light sadness. Most often written in the first person. The most common themes of the elegy are contemplation of nature, accompanied by philosophical thoughts, love, as a rule, unrequited, life and death, etc. The greatest popularity of this arose in ancient times the genre was used in the poetry of sentimentalism and romanticism; the elegies of V.A. became especially famous. Zhukovsky, K.N. Batyushkova, A.A. Pushkina, E.A. Baratynsky, N.M. Yazykova.

Message is a poetic genre: a poetic letter, a work written in the form of an appeal to someone and containing appeals, requests, wishes, etc. (“To Chaadaev”

Lyric-epic

Poem is a lyric-epic genre: a large or medium-sized poetic work (a poetic story, a novel in verse), the main features of which are the presence of a plot (as in an epic) and an image of a lyrical hero (as in lyric poetry)

Ballad is a genre of lyric-epic poetry: a narrative song or poem of a relatively small volume, with a dynamic development of the plot, the basis of which is an extraordinary incident. Often in a ballad there is an element of the mysterious, fantastic, inexplicable, unspoken, even tragically insoluble. By origin, ballads are associated with traditions, folk legends, and combine the features of a story and a song. Ballads are one of the main genres in the poetry of sentimentalism and romanticism. For example: ballads by V.A. Zhukovsky, M.Yu. Lermontov.

essays. Here the authors' attention is focused on external reality, which gives literary scholars some reason to place them among the epic genres. However, in essays, sequences of events and the narrative itself do not play an organizing role: descriptions dominate, often accompanied by reasoning. These are “Khor and Kalinich” from Turgenev’s “Notes of a Hunter”

“stream of consciousness” literature, where it is not the narrative presentation of events that predominates, but endless chains of impressions, memories, and emotional movements of the speaker. Here consciousness, which most often appears disordered and chaotic, seems to appropriate and absorb the world: reality turns out to be “covered” by the chaos of its contemplations, the world placed in consciousness. The works of M. Proust, J. Joyce, and Andrei Bely have similar properties. Later, representatives of the “new novel” in France (M. Butor, N. Sarraute) turned to this form.

essays. a casually free combination of summative messages about individual facts, descriptions of reality and (most importantly) reflections on it. Thoughts expressed in essayistic form, as a rule, do not pretend to be an exhaustive interpretation of the subject; they allow for the possibility of completely different judgments.

Over the millennia cultural development humanity has created countless literary works, among which we can distinguish some basic types, similar in the way and form of reflecting a person’s ideas about the world around him. These are three types (or types) of literature: epic, drama, lyric.

What is different about each type of literature?

Epic as a type of literature

Epic(epos - Greek, narrative, story) is a depiction of events, phenomena, processes external to the author. Epic works reflect the objective course of life, human existence as a whole. Using various artistic means, the authors of epic works express their understanding of historical, socio-political, moral, psychological and many other problems that live with human society in general and each of its representatives in particular. Epic works have significant visual potential, thereby helping the reader to understand the world around them and comprehend the deep problems of human existence.

Drama as a genre of literature

Drama(drama - Greek, action, action) is a type of literature, the main feature of which is the stage nature of the works. Plays, i.e. dramatic works are created specifically for the theater, for production on stage, which, of course, does not exclude their existence in the form of independent literary texts intended for reading. Like the epic, drama reproduces the relationships between people, their actions, and the conflicts that arise between them. But unlike epic, which is narrative in nature, drama has a dialogical form.

Related to this features of dramatic works :

2) the text of the play consists of conversations between the characters: their monologues (the speech of one character), dialogues (a conversation between two characters), polylogues (simultaneous exchange of remarks by several participants in the action). That is why speech characterization turns out to be one of the most important means of creating a memorable character of a hero;

3) the action of the play, as a rule, develops quite dynamically, intensively, as a rule, it is allocated 2-3 hours of stage time.

Lyrics as a type of literature

Lyrics(lyra - Greek, musical instrument, to the accompaniment of which poetic works and songs were performed) is distinguished by a special type of construction artistic image- this is an image-experience in which the individual emotional and spiritual experience of the author is embodied. Lyrics can be called the most mysterious type of literature, because it is addressed to the inner world of a person, his subjective feelings, ideas, and ideas. In other words, a lyrical work serves primarily the individual self-expression of the author. The question arises: why do readers, i.e. other people turn to such works? The whole point is that the lyricist, speaking on his own behalf and about himself, miraculously embodies universal human emotions, ideas, hopes, and the more significant the author’s personality, the more important his individual experience is for the reader.

Each type of literature also has its own system of genres.

Genre(genre - French genus, type) - a historically established type of literary work that has similar typological features. Genre names help the reader navigate the vast sea of ​​literature: some people love detective stories, others prefer fantasy, and still others are a fan of memoirs.

How to determine What genre does a particular work belong to? Most often, the authors themselves help us in this, calling their creation a novel, story, poem, etc. However, some author’s definitions seem unexpected to us: let us remember that A.P. Chekhov emphasized that “ The Cherry Orchard"is a comedy, not a drama at all, but A.I. Solzhenitsyn considered One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich to be a story, not a novella. Some literary scholars call Russian literature a collection of genre paradoxes: the novel in verse “Eugene Onegin”, the prose poem “Dead Souls”, the satirical chronicle “The History of a City”. There was a lot of controversy regarding “War and Peace” by L.N. Tolstoy. The writer himself said only about what his book is not: “What is War and Peace? This is not a novel, still less a poem, still less a historical chronicle. “War and Peace” is what the author wanted and could express in the form in which it was expressed.” And only in the 20th century did literary scholars agree to call brilliant creation L.N. Tolstoy's epic novel.

Each literary genre has a number of stable characteristics, knowledge of which allows us to classify a specific work into one group or another. Genres develop, change, die out and are born, for example, literally before our eyes arose new genre blog (web loq English online journal) - personal online diary.

However, for several centuries there have been stable (also called canonical) genres.

Literature of literary works - see table 1).

Table 1.

Genres of literary works

Epic genres of literature

Epic genres are primarily distinguished by their volume; on this basis they are divided into small ones ( essay, story, short story, fairy tale, parable ), average ( story ), large ( novel, epic novel ).

Feature article- a small sketch from life, the genre is both descriptive and narrative. Many essays are created on a documentary, life basis, often they are combined into cycles: the classic example is “A Sentimental Journey through France and Italy” (1768) by the English writer Laurence Sterne, in Russian literature it is “A Journey from St. Petersburg to Moscow” (1790) A . Radishcheva, “Frigate Pallada” (1858) by I. Goncharov” “Italy” (1922) by B. Zaitsev and others.

Story- small narrative genre, which usually depicts one episode, incident, human character, or an important incident in the life of the hero that influenced him future fate(“After the Ball” by L. Tolstoy). Stories are created both on a documentary, often autobiographical basis (“Matryonin’s Dvor” by A. Solzhenitsyn) and through pure fiction (“The Gentleman from San Francisco” by I. Bunin).

The intonation and content of the stories can be very different - from comic, curious (the early stories of A.P. Chekhov) to deeply tragic (" Kolyma stories"V. Shalamov). Stories, like essays, are often combined into cycles (“Notes of a Hunter” by I. Turgenev).

Novella(novella Italian news) is in many ways akin to a short story and is considered its variety, but is distinguished by the special dynamism of the narrative, sharp and often unexpected turns in the development of events. Often the narrative in a short story begins with the ending and is built according to the law of inversion, i.e. reverse order, when the denouement precedes the main events (“Terrible Revenge” by N. Gogol). This feature of the construction of the novella will later be borrowed by the detective genre.

The word “novella” has another meaning that future lawyers need to know. IN Ancient Rome The phrase “novellae leges” (new laws) was used to refer to laws introduced after the official codification of law (after the publication of the Code of Theodosius II in 438). The novellas of Justinian and his successors, published after the second edition of the Justinian Code, later formed part of the code of Roman laws (Corpus iuris civillis). IN modern era a novel is a law submitted to parliament (in other words, a draft law).

Fairy tale- the most ancient of the small epic genres, one of the main ones in oral creativity any people. This is a small work of a magical, adventurous or everyday nature, where fiction is clearly emphasized. Another important feature folk tale- its edifying character: “A fairy tale is a lie, but there is a hint in it, good fellows lesson". Folk tales are usually divided into fairy tales (“The Tale of the Frog Princess”), everyday ones (“Porridge from an Ax”) and tales about animals (“Zayushkina’s Hut”).

With the development of written literature, literary tales arise that use traditional motifs and symbolic possibilities folk tale. The Danish writer Hans Christian Andersen (1805-1875) is rightfully considered a classic of the genre of literary fairy tales, his wonderful “The Little Mermaid”, “The Princess and the Pea”, “ The Snow Queen", "Persistent tin soldier", "Shadow", "Thumbelina" are loved by many generations of readers, both very young and quite mature. And this is far from accidental, because Andersen’s fairy tales are not only extraordinary and sometimes strange adventures of heroes, they contain deep philosophical and moral meaning, enclosed in beautiful symbolic images.

From European literary fairy tales XX century became a classic " A little prince"(1942) by the French writer Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. And the famous “Chronicles of Narnia” (1950 - 1956) by the English writer Cl. Lewis and “The Lord of the Rings” (1954-1955), also by the Englishman J.R. Tolkien, are written in the fantasy genre, which can be called a modern transformation of an ancient folk tale.

In Russian literature, the fairy tales of A.S., of course, remain unsurpassed. Pushkin: “About the dead princess and seven heroes”, “About the fisherman and the fish”, “About Tsar Saltan...”, “About the golden cockerel”, “About the priest and his worker Balda”. An excellent storyteller was P. Ershov, the author of “The Little Humpbacked Horse.” E. Schwartz in the 20th century creates the form of a fairy tale play, one of them is “The Bear” (another name is “ An ordinary miracle") is well known to many thanks to the wonderful film directed by M. Zakharov.

Parable- also a very ancient folklore genre, but, unlike fairy tales, parables contained written monuments: the Talmud, the Bible, the Koran, the monument of Syrian literature “Teachings of Akahara”. A parable is a work of instructive, symbolic nature, distinguished by sublimity and seriousness of content. Ancient parables, as a rule, are small in volume, they do not contain detailed story about events or psychological characteristics of the hero’s character.

The purpose of the parable is edification or, as they once said, teaching wisdom. IN European culture The most famous parables from the Gospels are: prodigal son, about the rich man and Lazarus, about the unrighteous judge, about the crazy rich man and others. Christ often spoke to his disciples allegorically, and if they did not understand the meaning of the parable, he explained it.

Many writers turned to the genre of parables, not always, of course, putting a high religious meaning into it, but rather trying to express in an allegorical form some kind of moralistic edification, as, for example, L. Tolstoy in his late creativity. Carry it. V. Rasputin - Farewell to Matera" can also be called an expanded parable, in which the writer speaks with anxiety and sorrow about the destruction of the "ecology of conscience" of man. Many critics also consider the story “The Old Man and the Sea” by E. Hemingway to be part of the tradition of literary parables. The famous contemporary Brazilian writer Paulo Coelho also uses the parable form in his novels and stories (the novel “The Alchemist”).

Tale- a medium literary genre, widely represented in world literature. The story depicts several important episodes from the hero's life, usually one storyline and a small number of characters. The stories are characterized by great psychological intensity; the author focuses on the experiences and changes in mood of the characters. Often main theme The love of the protagonist becomes the story, for example, “White Nights” by F. Dostoevsky, “Asya” by I. Turgenev, “Mitya’s Love” by I. Bunin. Stories can also be combined into cycles, especially those written on autobiographical material: “Childhood”, “Adolescence”, “Youth” by L. Tolstoy, “Childhood”, “In People”, “My Universities” by A. Gorky. The intonations and themes of the stories are extremely diverse: tragic, addressing acute social and moral issues (“Everything Flows” by V. Grossman, “House on the Embankment” by Yu. Trifonov), romantic, heroic (“Taras Bulba” by N. Gogol), philosophical , parables (“The Pit” by A. Platonov), mischievous, comic (“Three in a Boat, Not Counting the Dog” by the English writer Jerome K. Jerome).

Novel(gotap French originally, in the late Middle Ages, any work written in a Romance language, as opposed to those written in Latin) - large epic work, in which the narrative focuses on the fate of an individual. The novel is the most complex epic genre, which is distinguished by an incredible number of themes and plots: love, historical, detective, psychological, fantasy, historical, autobiographical, social, philosophical, satirical, etc. All these forms and types of the novel are united by its central idea - the idea of ​​personality, human individuality.

The novel is called the epic of private life because it depicts the diverse connections between the world and man, society and the individual. The reality surrounding a person is presented in the novel in different contexts: historical, political, social, cultural, national, etc. The author of the novel is interested in how the environment influences a person’s character, how he is formed, how his life develops, whether he managed to find his purpose and realize himself.

Many attribute the origin of the genre to antiquity, such as Long's Daphnis and Chloe, Apuleius's The Golden Ass, and the knightly romance Tristan and Isolde.

In the works of classics of world literature, the novel is represented by numerous masterpieces:

Table 2. Examples of classic novels by foreign and Russian writers (XIX, XX centuries)

Famous novels of Russian writers of the 19th century .:

In the 20th century, Russian writers develop and enhance the traditions of their great predecessors and create no less wonderful novels:


Of course, none of such enumeration can claim completeness and exhaustive objectivity, this especially applies to modern prose. IN in this case named the most famous works, which glorified both the country’s literature and the name of the writer.

Epic novel. In ancient times there were forms heroic epic: folklore sagas, runes, epics, songs. These are the Indian “Ramayana” and “Mahabharata”, the Anglo-Saxon “Beowulf”, the French “Song of Roland”, the German “Song of the Nibelungs”, etc. In these works, the hero’s exploits were exalted in an idealized, often hyperbolic form. The later epic poems “Iliad” and “Odyssey” by Homer, “Shah-name” by Ferdowsi, while retaining the mythological character of the early epic, nevertheless had expressed connection with real history, and the theme of the intertwining of human destiny and the life of the people becomes one of the main ones in them. The experience of the ancients will be in demand in XIX-XX centuries, when writers try to comprehend the dramatic relationship between the era and the individual personality, talk about what tests morality, and sometimes the human psyche, are subjected to at the time of the greatest historical upheavals. Let us remember the lines of F. Tyutchev: “Blessed is he who visited this world in its fatal moments.” The poet's romantic formula in reality meant the destruction of all familiar forms of life, tragic losses and unfulfilled dreams.

The complex form of the epic novel allows writers to artistically explore these problems in all their completeness and inconsistency.

When we talk about the genre of the epic novel, of course, we immediately remember “War and Peace” by L. Tolstoy. Other examples can be mentioned: “Quiet Don” by M. Sholokhov, “Life and Fate” by V. Grossman, “The Forsyte Saga” by the English writer Galsworthy; book by American writer Margaret Mitchell gone With the Wind"can also with good reason be classified as part of this genre.

The very name of the genre indicates a synthesis, a combination of two main principles in it: novel and epic, i.e. related to the theme of the life of an individual and the theme of the history of the people. In other words, the epic novel tells about the destinies of the heroes (as a rule, the heroes themselves and their destinies are fictitious, invented by the author) against the background and in close connection with epoch-making historical events. So, in “War and Peace” - these are the fates of individual families (Rostov, Bolkonsky), beloved heroes (Prince Andrei, Pierre Bezukhov, Natasha and Princess Marya) at a turning point for Russia and all of Europe historical period the beginning of the 19th century, the Patriotic War of 1812. In Sholokhov's book, the events of the First World War, two revolutions and a bloody civil war tragically invade the life of the Cossack farm, the Melekhov family, and the fate of the main characters: Grigory, Aksinya, Natalya. V. Grossman talks about the Great Patriotic War and its main event - Battle of Stalingrad, about the tragedy of the Holocaust. “Life and Fate” also intertwines historical and family themes: the author traces the history of the Shaposhnikovs, trying to understand why the destinies of the members of this family turned out so differently. Galsworthy describes the life of the Forsyte family during the legendary Victorian era in England. Margaret Mitchell - a central event in US history, Civil War between North and South, which dramatically changed the lives of many families and the fate of the most famous heroine of American literature - Scarlett O'Hara.

Dramatic genres of literature

Tragedy(tragodia Greek goat song) is a dramatic genre that originated in Ancient Greece. The emergence of ancient theater and tragedy is associated with the worship of the cult of the god of fertility and wine Dionysus. A number of holidays were dedicated to him, during which ritual magical games were played with mummers and satyrs, whom the ancient Greeks imagined as two-legged goat-like creatures. It is assumed that it was precisely this appearance of the satyrs singing hymns to the glory of Dionysus that gave such a strange name in translation to this serious genre. Theatrical performance in Ancient Greece was given magical religious significance, and theaters, built in the form of large open-air arenas, were always located in the very center of cities and were one of the main public places. Spectators sometimes spent the whole day here: eating, drinking, loudly expressing their approval or censure of the spectacle being presented. Heyday ancient Greek tragedy associated with the names of three great tragedians: this is Aeschylus (525-456 BC) - the author of the tragedies “Chained Prometheus”, “Oresteia”, etc.; Sophocles (496-406 BC) - author of “Oedipus the King”, “Antigone”, etc.; and Euripides (480-406 BC) - the creator of “Medea”, “Troyanok”, etc. Their creations will remain examples of the genre for centuries; they will be tried to imitate them, but they will remain unsurpassed. Some of them (“Antigone”, “Medea”) are still staged today.

What are the main features of the tragedy? The main one is the presence of an insoluble global conflict: in ancient tragedy this is the confrontation between fate, fate, on the one hand, and man, his will, free choice, on the other. In the tragedies of later eras, this conflict acquired a moral and philosophical character, as a confrontation between good and evil, loyalty and betrayal, love and hatred. It has an absolute character; the heroes who embody the opposing forces are not ready for reconciliation or compromise, and therefore the ending of the tragedy often involves a lot of death. This is how the tragedies of the great English playwright William Shakespeare (1564-1616) were constructed; let us remember the most famous of them: “Hamlet”, “Romeo and Juliet”, “Othello”, “King Lear”, “Macbeth”, “Julius Caesar”, etc.

In the tragedies of the 17th century French playwrights Corneille (Horace, Polyeuctus) and Racine (Andromache, Britannicus), this conflict received a different interpretation - as a conflict of duty and feelings, rational and emotional in the souls of the main characters, i.e. . acquired a psychological interpretation.

The most famous in Russian literature is the romantic tragedy “Boris Godunov” by A.S. Pushkin, created on historical material. In one of his best works, the poet acutely raised the problem of the “real trouble” of the Moscow state - a chain reaction of impostures and “terrible atrocities” that people are ready for for the sake of power. Another problem is the attitude of the people to everything that happens in the country. The image of the “silent” people in the finale of “Boris Godunov” is symbolic; discussions continue to this day about what Pushkin wanted to say. Based on the tragedy, the opera of the same name by M. P. Mussorgsky was written, which became a masterpiece of Russian opera classics.

Comedy(Greek komos - cheerful crowd, oda - song) - a genre that originated in Ancient Greece a little later tragedy(V century BC). The most famous comedian of that time was Aristophanes (“Clouds”, “Frogs”, etc.).

In comedy with the help of satire and humor, i.e. comic, moral vices are ridiculed: hypocrisy, stupidity, greed, envy, cowardice, complacency. Comedies, as a rule, are topical, i.e. addressed to social issues, exposing the shortcomings of the government. There are sitcoms and character comedies. In the first, a cunning intrigue, a chain of events (Shakespeare’s Comedy of Errors) are important; in the second, the characters of the heroes, their absurdity, one-sidedness, as in the comedies “The Minor” by D. Fonvizin, “The Tradesman in the Nobility”, “Tartuffe”, written by the classic genre, French comedian of the 17th century Jean Baptiste Moliere. In Russian drama, it turned out to be especially popular satirical comedy with her sharp social criticism, such as, for example, “The Inspector General” by N. Gogol, “The Crimson Island” by M. Bulgakov. A. Ostrovsky created many wonderful comedies (“Wolves and Sheep”, “Forest”, “Mad Money”, etc.).

The comedy genre invariably enjoys success with the public, perhaps because it affirms the triumph of justice: in the finale, vice must certainly be punished and virtue must triumph.

Drama- a relatively “young” genre that appeared in Germany in the 18th century as lesedrama (German) - a play for reading. The drama is addressed to Everyday life person and society, everyday life, family relationships. Drama is primarily interested in the inner world of a person; it is the most psychological of all dramatic genres. At the same time, this is also the most literary of stage genres, for example, the plays of A. Chekhov are largely perceived more as texts for reading, rather than as theatrical performances.

Lyrical genres of literature

The division into genres in lyrics is not absolute, because the differences between genres in this case are conditional and not as obvious as in epic and drama. More often we distinguish lyrical works according to their thematic features: landscape, love, philosophical, friendly, intimate lyrics, etc. However, we can name some genres that have pronounced individual characteristics: elegy, sonnet, epigram, epistle, epitaph.

Elegy(elegos Greek: plaintive song) - a poem of medium length, usually of moral, philosophical, love, confessional content.

The genre arose in antiquity, and its main feature was considered to be the elegiac distich, i.e. dividing a poem into couplets, for example:

The longed-for moment has arrived: my long-term work is over. Why is this incomprehensible sadness secretly disturbing me?

A. Pushkin

In the poetry of the 19th-20th centuries, the division into couplets is no longer such a strict requirement; now the semantic features that are associated with the origin of the genre are more significant. Content-wise, the elegy goes back to the form of the Ancient funeral “laments”, in which, while mourning the deceased, they simultaneously remembered his extraordinary virtues. This origin predetermined the main feature of the elegy - the combination of grief with faith, regret with hope, acceptance of existence through sadness. The lyrical hero of the elegy is aware of the imperfection of the world and people, his own sinfulness and weakness, but does not reject life, but accepts it in all its tragic beauty. A striking example- “Elegy” by A.S. Pushkin:

Crazy years of faded fun

It's hard for me, like a vague hangover.

But like wine - the sadness of days gone by

In my soul, the older I get, the stronger it is.

My path is sad. Promises me work and grief

The coming troubled sea.

But I don’t want, O friends, to die;

I want to live so that I can think and suffer;

And I know I will have pleasure

Between sorrows, worries and worries:

Sometimes I’ll get drunk again with harmony,

I will shed tears over the fiction,

And maybe - at my sad sunset

Love will flash with a farewell smile.

Sonnet(sonetto Italian song) - the so-called “solid” poetic form, which has strict rules of construction. The sonnet has 14 lines, divided into two quatrains and two tercets. In quatrains only two rhymes are repeated, in terzettos two or three. The methods of rhyming also had their own requirements, which, however, varied.

The birthplace of the sonnet is Italy; this genre is also represented in English and French poetry. The 14th century Italian poet Petrarch is considered the luminary of the genre. He dedicated all his sonnets to his beloved Donna Laura.

In Russian literature, the sonnets of A.S. Pushkin remain unsurpassed; poets of the Silver Age also created beautiful sonnets.

Epigram(epigramma Greek, inscription) - a short mocking poem, usually addressed to a specific person. Many poets write epigrams, sometimes increasing the number of their ill-wishers and even enemies. The epigram on Count Vorontsov turned out to be bad for A.S. Pushkin by the hatred of this nobleman and, ultimately, expulsion from Odessa to Mikhailovskoye:

Popu, my lord, half-merchant,

Half-sage, half-ignorant,

Semi-scoundrel, but there is hope

Which will be complete at last.

Mocking poems can be dedicated not only to a specific person, but also to a general addressee, as, for example, in the epigram of A. Akhmatova:

Could Biche, like Dante, create?

Did Laura go to praise the heat of love?

I taught women to speak...

But, God, how to silence them!

There are even known cases of a kind of duel of epigrams. When the famous Russian lawyer A.F. Kony was appointed to the Senate, his ill-wishers spread an evil epigram against him:

Caligula brought his horse to the Senate,

It stands, dressed in both velvet and gold.

But I will say, we have the same arbitrariness:

I read in the newspapers that Kony is in the Senate.

To which A.F. Kony, who was distinguished by his extraordinary literary talent, replied:

(epitafia Greek, gravestone) - a farewell poem to a deceased person, intended for a gravestone. Initially, this word was used in the literal sense, but later received to a greater extent figurative meaning. For example, I. Bunin has a lyrical miniature in prose “Epitaph”, dedicated to farewell to the Russian estate that was dear to the writer, but forever a thing of the past. Gradually, the epitaph is transformed into a dedication poem, a farewell poem (“Wreath to the Dead” by A. Akhmatova). Perhaps the most famous poem of this kind in Russian poetry is “The Death of a Poet” by M. Lermontov. Another example is “Epitaph” by M. Lermontov, dedicated to the memory of Dmitry Venevitinov, a poet and philosopher who died at the age of twenty-two.

Lyric-epic genres of literature

There are works that combine some features of lyric and epic, as evidenced by the very name of this group of genres. Their main feature is the combination of narration, i.e. a story about events, conveying the feelings and experiences of the author. The lyric-epic genres are usually classified as poem, ode, ballad, fable .

Poem(poeo Greek: create, create) is a very famous literary genre. The word "poem" has many meanings, both direct and figurative. In ancient times, large epic works were called poems, which today are considered epics (the poems of Homer already mentioned above).

In the literature of the 19th-20th centuries, a poem is a large poetic work with a detailed plot, for which it is sometimes called a poetic story. The poem has characters and a plot, but their purpose is somewhat different than in a prose story: in a poem they help the author’s lyrical self-expression. This is probably why romantic poets loved this genre so much (“Ruslan and Lyudmila” by early Pushkin, “Mtsyri” and “Demon” by M. Lermontov, “Cloud in Pants” by V. Mayakovsky).

Oh yeah(oda Greek song) - a genre represented mainly in the literature of the 18th century, although it also has ancient origins. The ode goes back to ancient genre dithyramb - a hymn glorifying folk hero or the winner Olympic Games, i.e. an outstanding person.

Poets of the 18th-19th centuries created odes based on different cases. This could be an appeal to the monarch: M. Lomonosov dedicated his odes to Empress Elizabeth, G. Derzhavin to Catherine P. Glorifying their deeds, the poets simultaneously taught the empresses, instilled in them important political and civil ideas.

Significant historical events could also become the subject of glorification and admiration in the ode. G. Derzhavin after the capture by the Russian army under the command of A.V. Suvorov of the Turkish fortress, Izmail wrote the ode “The thunder of victory, ring out!”, which for some time was the unofficial anthem of the Russian Empire. There was a type of spiritual ode: “Morning reflection on God’s greatness” by M. Lomonosov, “God” by G. Derzhavin. Civilian, political ideas could also become the basis of an ode (“Liberty” by A. Pushkin).

This genre has a pronounced didactic nature; it can be called a poetic sermon. Therefore, it is distinguished by the solemnity of style and speech, the leisurely narration. An example is the famous excerpt from “Ode on the day of the accession to the All-Russian throne of Her Majesty Empress Elizabeth Petrovna 1747” by M. Lomonosov, written in the year when Elizabeth approved new charter Academy of Sciences, significantly increasing funds for its maintenance. The main thing for the great Russian encyclopedist is the enlightenment of the younger generation, the development of science and education, which, according to the poet’s conviction, will become the key to the prosperity of Russia.

Ballad(balare Provence - to dance) was especially popular at the beginning of the 19th century, in sentimental and romantic poetry. This genre originated in French Provence as a folk dance of love content with obligatory choruses and repetitions. Then the ballad migrated to England and Scotland, where it acquired new features: now it is a heroic song with a legendary plot and heroes, for example, the famous ballads about Robin Hood. The only constant feature remains the presence of refrains (repetitions), which will be important for ballads written later.

Poets of the 18th and early 19th centuries fell in love with the ballad for its special expressiveness. If we use an analogy with epic genres, a ballad can be called a poetic short story: it must have an unusual love, legendary, heroic plot that captures the imagination. Often fantastic, even mystical images and motifs are used in ballads: let us remember the famous “Lyudmila” and “Svetlana” by V. Zhukovsky. No less famous are “Song of prophetic Oleg"A. Pushkin, "Borodino" by M. Lermontov.

In Russian lyricism of the 20th century, a ballad is a love romantic poem, often accompanied by musical accompaniment. Ballads in “bardic” poetry are especially popular, the hymn of which can be called the ballad of Yuri Vizbor, beloved by many.

Fable(basnia lat. story) - a short story in verse or prose of a didactic, satirical nature. Elements of this genre have been present in the folklore of all nations since ancient times as tales about animals, and then transformed into jokes. The literary fable took shape in Ancient Greece, its founder was Aesop (5th century BC), after his name the allegorical speech began to be called “Aesopian language.” In a fable, as a rule, there are two parts: plot and moral. The first contains a story about some funny or absurd incident, the second contains a moral, a lesson. The heroes of fables are often animals, under whose masks there are quite recognizable moral and social vices that are ridiculed. The great fabulists were Lafontaine (France, 17th century), Lessing (Germany, 18th century). In Russia, the luminary of the genre will forever remain I.A. Krylov (1769-1844). The main advantage of his fables is that they are alive, vernacular, a combination of slyness and wisdom in the author's intonation. The plots and images of many of I. Krylov’s fables look quite recognizable today.

Epic genres.

Parable. Moral teaching in allegorical (allegorical) form. A parable always contains a certain idea. The parable does not depict, but communicates; there is no depiction of characters, no showing of phenomena in development.

Story.- small epic genre: a prose work of small volume, which, as a rule, depicts one or more events in the hero’s life. The circle of characters in the story is limited, the action described is short in time. Sometimes a work of this genre may have a narrator. The masters of storytelling were A.P. Chekhov, V.V. Nabokov, A.P. Platonov, K.G. Paustovsky, O.P. Kazakov, V.M. Shukshin.

Novella. A type of story with a sharp plot and an unexpected ending.

Feature article. A type of story, an artistic description of specific phenomena of reality, mainly social, as typical for a given time. The basis is documentary, “writing from life”

Tale- a middle (between short story and novel) epic genre, in which a number of episodes from the life of the hero (heroes) are presented. In terms of volume, the story is larger than a story and depicts reality more broadly, depicting a chain of episodes that make up a certain period in the life of the main character; it has more events and characters, however, unlike a novel, as a rule, there is one storyline.

Novel- a large epic work in which the life of people in a certain period of time or during an entire human life is comprehensively depicted. Characteristic properties of the novel: multi-linear plot, covering the fate of a number of characters; the presence of a system of equivalent characters; covering a wide range of life phenomena, staging social significant problems; significant duration of action.

Epic novel- the largest genre form of epic. The epic is characterized by:

1. Wide coverage of the phenomena of reality, depiction of the life of the people at a historically significant, turning point

2. Global problems of universal significance are raised

3. National content

4. Multiple storylines

5. Very often - relying on history and folklore

Lyrical genres Oh yeah(Greek "Song") - a monumental solemn poem glorifying a great event or a great person; There are spiritual odes (arrangements of psalms), moralizing, philosophical, satirical, epistle odes, etc. An ode is tripartite: it must have a theme stated at the beginning of the work; development of the theme and arguments, as a rule, allegorical (second part); final, didactic (instructive) part.; The ode came to Russia in the 18th century, the odes of M. Lomonosov (“On the day of the accession to the Russian throne of Empress Elisaveta Petrovna”), V. Trediakovsky, A. Sumarokov, G. Derzhavin (“Felitsa”, “God”), A. .Radishcheva (“Liberty”). He paid tribute to the ode of A. Pushkin (“Liberty”). By the middle of the 19th century, ode lost its relevance and gradually became an archaic genre.

Hymn- a poem of laudatory content; also came from ancient poetry, but if in ancient times hymns were composed in honor of gods and heroes, then in later times hymns were written in honor of solemn events, celebrations, often not only of a state, but also of a personal nature (A. Pushkin. “Feasting Students” ).

Elegy(Phrygian "reed flute") - a genre of lyrics dedicated to reflection. Originated in ancient poetry; originally this was the name for crying over the dead. The elegy was based on the life ideal of the ancient Greeks, which was based on the harmony of the world, proportionality and balance of being, incomplete without sadness and contemplation; these categories passed into modern elegy. An elegy can embody both life-affirming ideas and disappointment. Poetry of the 19th century continued to develop elegy in its “pure” form; in the lyrics of the 20th century, elegy is found, rather, as a genre tradition, as a special mood. In modern poetry, an elegy is a plotless poem of a contemplative, philosophical and landscape nature. A. Pushkin. "To the Sea" N. Nekrasov. "Elegy" Epigram(Greek “inscription”) - a small poem of satirical content. Initially, in ancient times, epigrams were inscriptions on household objects, tombstones and statues. Subsequently, the content of the epigrams changed. Examples of epigrams: Message(or epistole) is a poem, the content of which can be defined as “a letter in verse.” The genre also came from ancient lyrics. A. Pushkin. Pushchin ("My first friend, my priceless friend...") V. Mayakovsky. "To Sergei Yesenin"; "Lilichka! (Instead of a letter)" S. Yesenin. "Letter to Mother" by M. Tsvetaev. Poems to Blok

Sonnet- this is a poetic genre of the so-called rigid form: a poem consisting of 14 lines, specially organized into stanzas, having strict rhyming principles and stylistic laws.

This lyrical genre was born in Italy in the 13th century. Its creator was the lawyer Jacopo da Lentini; a hundred years later Petrarch's sonnet masterpieces appeared. The sonnet came to Russia in the 18th century; a little later it receives serious development in the works of Anton Delvig, Ivan Kozlov, Alexander Pushkin. Poets of the “Silver Age” showed particular interest in the sonnet: K. Balmont, V. Bryusov, I. Annensky, V. Ivanov, I. Bunin, N. Gumilev, A. Blok, O. Mandelstam... In the art of versification, the sonnet is considered one of the most difficult genres. In the last 2 centuries, poets rarely adhered to any strict rhyme scheme, often proposing a mixture of different schemes.

    vocabulary and intonation should be sublime;

    rhymes - accurate and, if possible, unusual, rare;

    significant words should not be repeated with the same meaning, etc.

: In school literary criticism this genre of lyricism is called lyric poem. In classical literary criticism such a genre does not exist. It was introduced into the school curriculum to somewhat simplify the complex system of lyrical genres: if bright genre features the work cannot be distinguished and the poem is not in the strict sense either an ode, a hymn, an elegy, a sonnet, etc., it will be defined as a lyric poem. In this case, you should pay attention to the individual characteristics of the poem: the specifics of the form, theme, image of the lyrical hero, mood, etc. Thus, lyric poems (in the school understanding) should include poems by Mayakovsky, Tsvetaeva, Blok, etc. Almost all lyric poetry of the twentieth century falls under this definition, unless the authors specifically stipulated the genre of the works.

Satire(Latin “mixture, all sorts of things”) - as a poetic genre: a work whose content is denunciation - social phenomena, human vices or individuals - through ridicule. In Russian literature, A. Kantemir, K. Batyushkov (XVIII-XIX centuries) worked in the genre of satire; in the 20th century, Sasha Cherny and others became famous as the author of satires. Many poems from “Poems about America” by V. Mayakovsky can also be called satires ( "Six Nuns", "Black and White", "Skyscraper in Section", etc.).

Ballad- lyric-epic plot poem of the fantastic, satirical, historical, fairy-tale, legendary, humorous, etc. character. The ballad arose in ancient times (presumably in the early Middle Ages) as a folk ritual dance and song genre, and this determines its genre features: strict rhythm, plot (in ancient ballads they talked about heroes and gods), the presence of repetitions (entire lines or individual words were repeated as an independent stanza), called refrain. In the 18th century, the ballad became one of the most beloved poetic genres in Romantic literature. Ballads were created by F. Schiller ("Cup", "Glove"), I. Goethe ("The Forest Tsar"), V. Zhukovsky ("Lyudmila", "Svetlana"), A. Pushkin ("Anchar", "Groom") , M. Lermontov ("Borodino", "Three Palms"); at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, the ballad was revived again and became very popular, especially in the revolutionary era, during the period of revolutionary romance. Among the poets of the 20th century, ballads were written by A. Blok (“Love” (“The Queen lived on high mountain..."), N. Gumilyov ("Captains", "Barbarians"), A. Akhmatova ("The Gray-Eyed King"), M. Svetlov ("Grenada"), etc.

Note! A work can combine the characteristics of some genres: a message with elements of elegy (A. Pushkin, “To *** (“I remember a wonderful moment ...”)), a lyrical poem of elegiac content (A. Blok. “Motherland”), an epigram-message, etc. .d.

Dramatic genres

Tragedy- (from Greek tragodia - goat song< греч. tragos - козел и ode - песнь) - один из основных жанров драмы: пьеса, в которой изображаются крайне острые, зачастую неразрешимые жизненные противоречия. В основе сюжета трагедии - непримиримый конфликт Героя, сильной личности, с надличными силами (судьбой, государством, стихией и др.) или с самим собой. В этой борьбе герой, как правило, погибает, но одерживает нравственную победу. Цель трагедии - вызвать в зрителе потрясение увиденным, что, в свою очередь, рождает в их сердцах скорбь и сострадание: такое душевное состояние ведет к катарсису – очищение благодаря потряснию.

Comedy- (from the Greek from komos - a cheerful crowd, a procession at Dionysian festivals and odie - a song) - one of the leading genres of drama: a work based on ridicule of social and human imperfection.

Drama– (in the narrow sense) one of the leading genres of drama; a literary work written in the form of a dialogue between characters. Intended for performance on stage. Focused on spectacular expressiveness. The relationships between people and the conflicts that arise between them are revealed through the actions of the heroes and are embodied in a monologue-dialogue form. Unlike tragedy, drama does not end in catharsis.