What are the genres of literature. Genres of literature


Literary genres are groups of works collected according to formal and substantive features. Literary works are divided into separate categories according to the form of the narration, according to the content and according to the type of belonging to a particular style. Literary genres make it possible to systematize everything that has been written since the time of Aristotle and his Poetics, first on "birch bark", dressed skins, stone walls, then on parchment paper and scrolls.

Literary genres and their definitions

Definition of genres by form:

A novel is an extensive narrative in prose, reflecting the events of a certain period of time, with a detailed description of the life of the main characters and all other characters who, to one degree or another, participate in the indicated events.

A story is a form of narration that does not have a definite volume. The work usually describes episodes from real life, and the characters are presented to the reader as an integral part of the ongoing events.

A short story (short story) is a widespread genre of short fiction, which is defined as "short stories". Since the short story format is limited in scope, the writer usually manages to unfold the narrative within a single event involving two or three characters. The exception to this rule was the great Russian writer Anton Pavlovich Chekhov, who could describe the events of an entire era with many characters on several pages.

The essay is a literary quintessence that combines the artistic style of narration and elements of journalism. Always presented in a concise manner with a high content of specifics. The subject of the essay, as a rule, is connected with social and social problems and is of an abstract nature, i.e. does not affect specific individuals.

A play is a special literary genre designed for a wide audience. Plays are written for the theatrical stage, television and radio performances. In their structural pattern, the plays are more like a story, since the duration of theatrical performances correlates perfectly with a story of average length. The genre of the play differs from other literary genres in that the narration is conducted on behalf of each character. Dialogues and monologues are marked in the text.

Ode is a lyrical literary genre, in all cases of positive or laudatory content. Dedicated to something or someone, it is often a verbal monument to heroic events or the exploits of patriotic citizens.

An epic is a narrative of an extensive nature, including several stages of state development that are of historical significance. The main features of this literary genre are global events of an epic nature. The epic can be written both in prose and in verse, an example of this is Homer's poems "Odyssey" and "Iliad".

An essay is a short essay in prose in which the author expresses his own thoughts and views in an absolutely free form. An essay is to some extent an abstract work that does not claim to be completely authentic. In some cases, essays are written with a share of philosophy, sometimes the work has a scientific connotation. But in any case, this literary genre deserves attention.

Detectives and fantasy

Detectives are a literary genre based on the eternal confrontation between policemen and criminals, the novels and stories of this genre are action-packed, murders occur in almost every detective work, after which experienced detectives begin an investigation.

Fantasy is a special literary genre with fictional characters, events and an unpredictable ending. In most cases, the action takes place either in space or in the underwater depths. But at the same time, the heroes of the work are equipped with ultra-modern machines and devices of fantastic power and efficiency.

Is it possible to combine genres in literature

All of these types of literary genres have unique features of difference. However, often there is a mixture of several genres in one work. If this is done professionally, a rather interesting, unusual creation is born. Thus, the genres of literary creativity contain a significant potential for updating literature. But these opportunities should be used carefully and thoughtfully, since literature does not tolerate profanity.

Genres of literary works by content

Each literary work is classified according to its belonging to a certain type: drama, tragedy, comedy.


What are comedies

Comedies come in many types and styles:

  1. Farce is a light comedy built on elementary comic tricks. It is found both in literature and on the theater stage. Farce as a special comedy style is used in circus clowning.
  2. Vaudeville is a comedy play with many dance numbers and songs. In the USA, vaudeville became the prototype of the musical; in Russia, small comic operas were called vaudeville.
  3. An interlude is a small comic scene that was played between the actions of the main performance, performance or opera.
  4. Parody is a comedy technique based on the repetition of recognizable features of famous literary characters, texts or music in a deliberately altered form.

Modern genres in literature

Types of literary genres:

  1. Epic - fable, myth, ballad, epic, fairy tale.
  2. Lyrical - stanzas, elegy, epigram, message, poem.

Modern literary genres are periodically updated, and over the past decades, several new branches of literature have appeared, such as political detective story, the psychology of war, as well as paperback literature, which includes all literary genres.

Video lesson 2: Literary genera and genres

Lecture: Literary genera. Genres of literature

Literary genera

epic- a story about past events. Large epic works contain descriptions, reasoning, lyrical digressions, and dialogues. The epic involves the participation of a large number of actors, many events that are not limited by time or space. In works of an epic nature, a significant role is given to the narrator or narrator, who does not interfere in the course of events, assesses what is happening from a distance, objectively (I. Goncharov's novels, A. Chekhov's stories). Often the narrator tells a story heard from the narrator.


Lyrics unites a lot of poetic genres: sonnet, elegy, song, romance. A lyrical work is easy to distinguish from the other two main types of literature - epic and drama - by the absence of events and the presence of an image of a person's inner world, a description of the change in his moods, impressions. In the lyrics, the description of nature, event or object is presented from the standpoint of personal experience.

Between these main types of literature there is an intermediate, lyrical-epic genre. Lyro-epos combines epic narrative and lyrical emotionality into one whole (A. Pushkin "Eugene Onegin").


Drama- the main literary genus, residing in two hypostases - the genus of stage action and the genre of literature. In a dramatic work there is no narrative detailed description, the text consists entirely of dialogues, replicas, monologues of characters. In order for a stage action to have signs of a drama, a conflict is necessary (the main and only one, or several conflict situations). Some playwrights are masterfully able to show the inner action, when the characters only reflect and experience, thereby “moving” the plot to the denouement.


So, remember what is the difference between the main literary genres:

    Epic - the event is told

    Lyrics - the event is experienced

    Drama - the event is depicted


Genres of literature

Novel- belongs to the epic genre of literature, is distinguished by a significant time period in the development of the plot, filled with many characters. Some novels trace the fate of several generations of the same family ("family sagas"). In the novel, as a rule, several storylines develop simultaneously, complex and deep life processes are shown. A work written in the genre of a novel is full of conflicts (internal, external), events do not always keep the chronology of following.

Subject

Structural varieties

autobiographical
parable
historical
feuilleton
adventurous
pamphlet
satirical
novel in verse
philosophical
epistolary, etc.
adventure, etc.

Roman - epic describes the broad layers of folk life at the climax, at the turn of historical eras. Other features of the epic are similar to the features of the novel as an epic work. The genre includes "Quiet Flows the Don" by M. Sholokhov, "War and Peace" by L. Tolstoy.


Tale- a prose work of medium volume (less than a novel in terms of the amount of text and in terms of the number of characters, but more than a story).

Compositional features: the story is characterized by a chronicle development of events, the author does not set large-scale historical tasks for the reader. Compared to the novel, the story is a more "chamber" literary genre, where the main action is focused on the character and fate of the protagonist.


Story is a work of small prose form. Characteristic signs:

    short duration of events

    a small number of characters (there can be only one or two characters),

    one problem,

    one event.

Feature article- a literary prose work of small form, a kind of story. The essay deals mostly with pressing social problems. The plot is based on facts, documents, observations of the author.


Parable- a short prose story of an instructive nature, the content is conveyed with the help of allegories, in an allegorical manner. The parable is very close to a fable, but unlike it, it does not end the story with a ready-made moral, but invites the reader to think and draw a conclusion for himself.


Poetry


Poem- a voluminous poetic plot work. The poem combines the features of lyrics and epic: on the one hand, this is a detailed, voluminous content, on the other hand, the inner world of the hero is revealed in all details, his experiences, the movements of the soul are carefully studied by the author.


Ballad. Works written in the ballad genre are not as common in modern literature as poetry or songs, but in former times ballad creativity was very widespread and popular. In ancient times (presumably in the Middle Ages), the ballad was a folklore work of a ritual nature that combined song and dance. The ballad is easily recognizable by the plot of the narration, subordination to a strict rhythm, repetitions (refrains) of individual words or entire lines. The ballad was especially loved in the era of romanticism: the thematic diversity of the genre allowed romantic poets to create fantastic, fabulous, historical, humorous works. Quite often, plots from translated literature were taken as a basis. The ballad experienced a second birth at the beginning of the 20th century, the genre was developed during the years of the development of the ideas of revolutionary romance.


Lyric poem. The most beloved representative of the poetic genre by readers and listeners is a lyric poem. Small in volume, often written in the first person, the poem conveys the feelings, moods, experiences of the lyrical hero, or directly the author of the verse.


Song. Small-form poetic works containing stanzas (verse) and refrain (chorus). As a literary genre, the song is in the culture of every nation, these are the oldest examples of amateur oral art - folk songs. Songs are composed in a variety of genres: there are historical, heroic, folk, humorous, etc. A song may have an official author - a professional poet, a song may have a collective author (folk art), songs are composed by professional amateurs (the so-called "author's", amateur song).


Elegy. One can guess what an elegy is by translating the meaning of the word from the Greek language - “mournful song”. Indeed, elegies always bear the imprint of a sad mood, sadness, sometimes even grief. Some philosophical experiences of the lyrical hero are turned into an elegiac form. Elegiac verse was very popular among romantic and sentimentalist poets.


Message. A letter in verse addressed to a specific person or group of people received the name “message” in poetry. The content of such a work could be friendly, lyrical, mocking, etc.


Epigram. This poem, small in volume, could be quite capacious in content: often only a few lines contained a capacious, devastating description of some person or several persons. Recognition of the epigram was given by two circumstances: wit and extreme brevity. A. Pushkin, P. Vyazemsky, I. Dmitriev, N. Nekrasov, F. Tyutchev were famous for their magnificent, sometimes unpleasant epigrams. In modern poetry, A. Ivanov, L. Filatov, V. Gaft are considered outstanding masters of the “striking line”.


Oh yeah composed in honor of an event or a particular person. A poetic work of a small form was filled with solemn content, distinguished by grandiloquence of presentation (“high calm”), pomposity. If the Ode was dedicated to the reigning person, the small form could be significantly “enlarged” so that the poet could mark with verse all the excellent qualities of the addressee.


Sonnet- a poem of 14 lines (4 + 4 + 3 + 3), has certain construction rules:


Three-liner. denouement


Three-liner. A denouement is planned

Quatrain. Exposition development


Quatrain. exposition

The final line of the denouement expresses the essence of the poem.


Comedy, tragedy, drama


It's hard to define funny. What exactly creates laughter? Why is it funny?

Comedy(Greek "jolly song") from the moment of its appearance to the present day is the most beloved type of stage work and literary creativity. In works of comedic content, the authors depict human types and various life situations in a comic manifestation: ugliness is presented as beauty, stupidity is presented as a manifestation of a brilliant mind, and so on.

Comedies are of several types:

    "High" ("Woe from Wit") - a serious life situation is presented against the backdrop of the actions of comic characters.

    Satirical ("Inspector") - exposes the characters and actions in a funny, ridiculous light.

    Lyrical ("The Cherry Orchard") - there is no division of heroes into "good" and "bad", there is no action, there is no visible conflict. Sounds, details, symbolism are of great importance.

Tragedy- a special dramatic genre: there is no, and cannot be, a happy denouement in the work. The plot of the tragic work lies in the irreconcilable clash of the hero with society, with Fate, with the outside world. The outcome of a tragedy is always sad - in the end, the hero must die. Especially tragic were the ancient Greek tragedies, created according to strictly prescribed rules. Later (in the 18th century), tragedy began to gradually lose its genre rigor, moving closer to drama. New genres are being formed - heroic historical, tragic drama. At the end of the XIX century. tragedy and comedy were united, a new genre appeared - tragicomedy.

Drama differs as a genre of literature and as a kind of stage performance.

To understand the features of a drama, one can compare the features, characteristic features of a tragedy and a dramatic work.




All literary genres are unique, each of which has a complex of qualities and characteristics inherent exclusively to it. Their first known classification was proposed by Aristotle, the ancient Greek philosopher and naturalist. In accordance with it, the basic literary genres can be arranged into a small list that is not subject to any changes. The author working on any work should simply find similarities between his creation and the parameters of the indicated genres. Over the next two millennia, any changes in the classifier developed by Aristotle were taken with hostility and considered a shift from the norm.

In the 18th century, a large-scale literary restructuring began. The ingrained types of the genre and their system began to undergo major modifications. The current conditions have become the main prerequisite for the fact that some genres of literature have sunk into oblivion, others have gained crazy popularity, and others have just begun to form. The results of this transformation, which continues even now, we can personally observe with our own eyes - types of genres that are dissimilar in meaning, in kind and in many other criteria. Let's try to figure out what genres are in literature and what are their features.

A genre in literature is a historically established set of literary creations, united by a set of similar parameters and formal characteristics.

All existing types and genres of literature can be visually represented in a table in which large groups will appear in one part, and its typical representatives in the other. There are 4 main groups of genres by gender:

  • epic (mostly prose);
  • lyrical (mainly poetics);
  • dramatic (plays);
  • lyroepic (something between lyrics and epic).

Also, types of literary works can be classified according to content:

  • comedy;
  • tragedy;
  • drama.

But to understand what types of literature are, it will become much easier if you understand their forms. The form of a work is a method of presenting the author's ideas underlying the work. There are external and internal forms. The first, in fact, is the language of the work, the second is the system of artistic methods, images and means with which it was created.

What are the genres of books in form: essay, vision, short story, epic, ode, play, epic, essay, sketch, opus, novel, story. Let's consider each in detail.

Essay

An essay is a short piece of prose with a free composition. Its main purpose is to show the personal opinion and concepts of the author on a particular occasion. In this case, the essay is not required to fully disclose the problem of presentation or clearly answer questions. Basic properties:

  • figurativeness;
  • proximity to the reader;
  • aphorism;
  • associativity.

There is an opinion according to which an essay is a separate type of works of art. This genre dominated in the XVIII-XIX centuries in British and Western European journalism. Famous representatives of that time: J. Addison, O. Goldsmith, J. Wharton, W. Godwin.

epic

The epic is at the same time a genus, type and genre of literature. It is a heroic tale about the past, showing the then life of people and the reality of the characters from the epic side. Often the epic talks in detail about a person, about an adventure with his participation, about his feelings and experiences. It also tells about the attitude of the hero to what is happening around him. Representatives of the genre:

  • "Iliad", "Odyssey" by Homer;
  • "Song of Roland" Turold;
  • The Nibelungenlied, author unknown.

The progenitors of the epic are the traditional poems-songs of the ancient Greeks.

epic

Epic - large works with heroic overtones and those that are similar to them. What is the literature of this genre:

  • narration of important historical moments in verse or prose;
  • a story about something, including several descriptions of different significant events.

There is also a moral epic. This is a special kind of narrative in literature, distinguished by its prosaic nature and ridicule of the comic state of society. Rabelais' "Gargantua and Pantagruel" is referred to him.

Sketch

A sketch is a short play in which there are only two (rarely three) main characters. Today, the sketch is used on the stage in the form of a comedy show with miniatures lasting no more than 10 minutes. Such shows regularly appear on television in Britain, the USA and Russia. Well-known example programs on TV are “Unreal Story”, “6 Frames”, “Our Russia”.

Novel

The novel is a separate literary genre. It presents a detailed account of the development and life of key characters (or one hero) in the most critical and difficult periods. The main types of novel in literature are those belonging to a specific era or country, psychological, chivalrous, classical, moral, and many others. Notable examples:

  • "Eugene Onegin" Pushkin;
  • "Doctor Zhivago" Pasternak;
  • "Master and Margarita" Bulgakov.

Novella

The novella or short story is a key genre of fiction, having a smaller volume than the short story or novel. The main properties of the work include:

  • the presence of a small number of heroes;
  • the plot has only one line;
  • cyclicity.

The creator of the stories is a novelist, and the collection of stories is a novelist.

Play

The play is a dramaturgy. It is designed to be shown on the stage of the theater and in other performances. The play consists of:

  • speeches of the main characters;
  • copyright notes;
  • descriptions of places where the main actions take place;
  • characteristics of the appearance of the persons involved, their demeanor and character.

The play includes several acts, which consist of episodes, actions, pictures.

Tale

The story is a work of prose. It has no special restrictions on volume, but is located between the short story and the novel. Usually the plot of the story has a clear chronology, shows the natural course of the character's life without intrigue. All attention belongs to the main person and the specifics of his nature. It is worth noting that the plot line is only one. Famous representatives of the genre:

  • "The Hound of the Baskervilles" by A. Conan Doyle;
  • "Poor Lisa" by N. M. Karamzin;
  • "Steppe" by A.P. Chekhov.

In foreign literature, the concept of "story" is equal to the concept of "short novel".

Feature article

An essay is a concise, truthful artistic tale about several events and phenomena thought out by the author. The basis of the essay is an accurate understanding of the subject of observation directly by the writer. Types of such descriptions:

  • portrait;
  • problematic;
  • travel;
  • historical.

Opus

In the general sense, an opus is a play accompanied by music. Main characteristics:

  • internal completeness;
  • individuality of form;
  • thoroughness.

In the literary sense, an opus is any scientific work or creation of the author.

Oh yeah

Ode - a poem (usually solemn), dedicated to a specific event or person. At the same time, an ode can be a separate work with a similar theme. In ancient Greece, all poetic lyrics, even the singing of the choir, were considered odes. From the time of the Renaissance, only high-flown lyrical poems, focusing on the images of antiquity, began to be called this way.

Vision

Vision is a genre of literature of the Middle Ages, which is based on a “clairvoyant”, who talks about the afterlife and unreal images that appear to him. Many modern researchers attribute visions to narrative didactics and journalism, since in the Middle Ages a person could thus convey his thoughts about the unknown.

These are the main types of literature in form and what their variations are. Unfortunately, it is difficult to fit all the genres of literature and their definitions into a small article - there are really a lot of them. In any case, everyone understands the need and importance of reading a wide variety of works, because they are real vitamins for the brain. With the help of books, you can increase your level of intelligence, expand your vocabulary, improve memory and attentiveness. BrainApps is a resource that will help you develop in this direction. The service features more than 100 effective simulators that will easily pump gray matter.

Over the millennia of cultural development, mankind has created countless literary works, among which some basic types can be distinguished, similar in the way and form of reflection of human ideas about the world around. These are three types (or types) of literature: epic, drama, poetry.

How is each type of literature different?

Epos as a kind of literature

epic(epos - Greek, narration, story) is an image of events, phenomena, processes that are 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 the historical, socio-political, moral, psychological and many other problems that human society as a whole and each of its representatives in particular lives with. Epic works have significant pictorial possibilities, thereby helping the reader to learn about the world around him, to comprehend the deep problems of human existence.

Drama as a kind of literature

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

Related to this features of dramatic works :

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

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

Lyrics as a kind of literature

Lyrics(lyra - Greek, a musical instrument, to the accompaniment of which poetic works, songs were performed) is distinguished by a special type of construction of an 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 kind of literature, because it is addressed to the inner world of a person, his subjective feelings, ideas, ideas. In other words, a lyrical work primarily serves the individual self-expression of the author. The question arises: why are the readers, i.e. other people refer to such works? The thing is that the lyricist, speaking on his own behalf and about himself, surprisingly embodies universal human emotions, ideas, hopes, and the more significant the personality of the author, 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. The names of the genres help the reader navigate the boundless sea of ​​literature: someone loves detective stories, another prefers fantasy, and the third is a fan of memoirs.

How to determine What genre does the particular piece 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: remember that A.P. Chekhov emphasized that The Cherry Orchard is a comedy, and not a drama at all, but A.I. Solzhenitsyn considered "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich" a story, not a story. Some literary critics call Russian literature a collection of genre paradoxes: the novel in verse "Eugene Onegin", the poem in prose "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 critics agree to call the brilliant creation of L.N. Tolstoy's epic novel.

Each literary genre has a number of stable features, the knowledge of which allows us to attribute a particular work to one or another group. Genres develop, change, die off and are born, for example, literally before our eyes, a new genre of blog (web loq English network magazine) - a personal Internet diary - has arisen.

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

Literature of literary works - see table 1).

Table 1.

Genres of literary works

Epic genres of literature

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

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

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

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

Novella(novella ital. news) is in many ways akin to a story and is considered its variety, but it is distinguished by a special dynamism of the narrative, sharp and often unexpected turns in the development of events. Quite often the narration in the short story begins with the finale, is built according to the law of inversion, i.e. the reverse order, when the denouement precedes the main events ("Terrible Revenge" by N. Gogol). This feature of the construction of the short story 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 release of the Code of Theodosius II in 438). The short stories of Justinian and his successors, published after the second edition of the Code of Justinian, later formed part of the code of Roman laws (Corpus iuris civillis). In the modern era, a novel is called a law submitted for consideration by parliament (in other words, a draft law).

Story- the oldest of the small epic genres, one of the main in the oral art of any people. This is a small work of a magical, adventurous or everyday nature, where fiction is clearly emphasized. Another important feature of the folklore tale is its instructive character: "The tale is a lie, but there is a hint in it, a lesson for good fellows." Folk tales are usually divided into magical ("The Tale of the Frog Princess"), household ("Porridge from an ax") and fairy tales about animals ("Zayushkina's hut").

With the development of written literature, literary tales arise in which traditional motifs and the symbolic possibilities of a folk tale are used. The Danish writer Hans Christian Andersen (1805-1875) is rightfully considered a classic of the literary fairy tale genre, his wonderful "The Little Mermaid", "The Princess and the Pea", "The Snow Queen", "The Steadfast 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 a deep philosophical and moral meaning, contained in beautiful symbolic images.

Of the European literary tales of the 20th century, The Little Prince (1942) by the French writer An-toine de Saint-Exupery became a classic. And the famous "Chronicles of Narnia" (1950 - 1956) by the English writer Kl. 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, unsurpassed, of course, are the tales of A.S. 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”. A substitute 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 “The Bear” (another name is “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 a fairy tale, parables contained written monuments: the Talmud, the Bible, the Koran, a monument of Syrian literature "Teaching Akahara". A parable is a work of an instructive, symbolic nature, distinguished by sublimity and seriousness of content. Ancient parables, as a rule, are small in volume; they do not contain a detailed account of the events or the psychological characteristics of the hero's character.

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

Many writers turned to the parable genre, not always, of course, putting a high religious meaning into it, rather trying to express some kind of moralistic edification in an allegorical form, as, for example, L. Tolstoy in his late work. Carry it. V. Rasputin - Farewell to Matera "can also be called a detailed parable in which the writer speaks with anxiety and sorrow about the destruction of the "ecology of conscience" of a person. The story "The Old Man and the Sea" by E. Hemingway is also considered by many critics to be in the tradition of a literary parable. The well-known modern Brazilian writer Paulo Coelho also uses the parable form in his novels and short stories (the novel The Alchemist).

Tale- an average literary genre, widely represented in world literature. The story depicts several important episodes from the life of the hero, as a rule, one storyline and a small number of characters. The stories are characterized by great psychological saturation, the author focuses on the experiences and mood changes of the characters. Very often, the main theme of the story is the love of the protagonist, for example, "White Nights" by F. Dostoevsky, "Asya" by I. Turgenev, "Mitina's Love" by I. Bunin. The 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 very diverse: tragic, addressed to acute social and moral issues (“Everything flows” by V. Grossman, “House on the Embankment” by Y. Trifonov), romantic, heroic (“Taras Bulba” by N. Gogol), philosophical , parable ("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 the Romance language, as opposed to those written in Latin) is a major epic work in which the narrative is focused 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, fantastic, historical, autobiographical, social, philosophical, satirical, etc. All these forms and types of the novel are united by its central idea - the idea of ​​personality, the individuality of a person.

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 affects the character of a person, how he is formed, how his life develops, whether he managed to find his destiny and realize himself.

Many attribute the emergence of the genre to antiquity, these are Long's Daphnis and Chloe, Apuleius' Golden Ass, the chivalrous novel Tristan and Isolde.

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

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

Famous novels of Russian writers of the XIX century .:

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


Of course, none of these enumerations can claim completeness and exhaustive objectivity, especially in modern prose. In this case, the most famous works that glorified both the literature of the country and the name of the writer are named.

epic novel. In ancient times, there were forms of the 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 exploits of the hero were exalted in an idealized, often exaggerated form. The later epic poems "Iliad" and "Odyssey" by Homer, "Shah-name" by Ferdowsi, while retaining the mythological nature of the early epic, nevertheless, had a pronounced connection with real history, and the theme of the interweaving of human fate and the life of the people becomes one of them. main. The experience of the ancients will be in demand in the 19th-20th centuries, when writers will try to comprehend the dramatic relationship between the era and the individual personality, tell about the tests that morality, and sometimes the human psyche, are subjected to at the moment of the greatest historical upheavals. Let us recall the lines of F. Tyutchev: "Blessed is he who visited this world in its fatal moments." The romantic formula of the poet in reality meant the destruction of all habitual 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 recall Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace. Other examples can be mentioned: Quiet Flows the Don by M. Sholokhov, Life and Fate by V. Grossman, The Saga of the Forsytes by the English writer Galsworthy; the book of the American writer Margaret Mitchell "Gone with the Wind" can also be reckoned with good reason in this genre.

The very name of the genre indicates a synthesis, a combination of two main principles in it: the novel and the 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 fates of the heroes (as a rule, the heroes themselves and their fates 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 (Rostovs, Bolkonskys), favorite heroes (Prince Andrei, Pierre Bezukhov, Natasha and Princess Mary) in the turning point for Russia and all of Europe, the historical period of 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 intrude into the life of the Cossack farm, the Melekhov family, the fate of the main characters: Grigory, Aksinya, Natalya. V. Grossman talks about the Great Patriotic War and its main event - the Battle of Stalingrad, about the tragedy of the Holocaust. In "Life and Fate" the historical and family theme is also intertwined: the author traces the history of the Shaposhnikovs, trying to understand why the fate of the members of this family developed so differently. Galsworthy describes the life of the Forsyte family during the legendary Victorian era in England. Margaret Mitchell is a central event in US history, the 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 the ancient theater and tragedy is associated with the worship 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, satyrs, whom the ancient Greeks represented as bipedal goat-like creatures. It is assumed that it was this appearance of the satyrs, who sang hymns to the glory of Dionysus, that gave such a strange name in translation to this serious genre. Theatrical action in Ancient Greece was given a 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: they ate, drank, loudly expressed their approval or condemnation of the spectacle presented. The heyday of ancient Greek tragedy is associated with the names of three great tragedians: Aeschylus (525-456 BC) - the author of the tragedies Chained Prometheus, Oresteia, etc.; Sophocles (496-406 BC) - the author of "Oedipus Rex", "Antigone" and others; and Euripides (480-406 BC) - the creator of Medea, Troy Nok, etc. Their creations will remain examples of the genre for centuries, they will be tried to imitate, but they will remain unsurpassed. Some of them ("Antigone", "Medea") are staged even 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 took on 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, embodying the opposing forces, are not ready for reconciliation, compromise, and therefore there are often many deaths at the end of the tragedy. This is how the tragedies of the great English playwright William Shakespeare (1564-1616) were built, let us recall the most famous of them: Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, Othello, King Lear, Macbeth, Julius Caesar, etc.

In the tragedies of the French playwrights of the 17th century Corneille ("Horace", "Polyeuctus") and Racine ("Andromache", "Britanic") this conflict received a different interpretation - as a conflict of duty and feeling, rational and emotional in the souls of the main characters, i.e. . received 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 sharply posed the problem of the “real misfortune” of the Moscow state - a chain reaction of impostors 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; to this day, discussions continue about what Pushkin wanted to say by this. Based on the tragedy, an opera of the same name by M. P. Mussorgsky was written, which became a masterpiece of Russian opera classics.

Comedy(Greek komos - a cheerful crowd, oda - a song) - a genre that originated in ancient Greece a little later than tragedy (5th century BC). The most famous comedian of that time is 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 tend to be topical; addressed to social issues, exposing the shortcomings of power. Distinguish between 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 characters, their absurdity, one-sidedness, as in the comedies "The Undergrowth" by D. Fonvizin, "The Tradesman in the Nobility", "Tartuffe", written by the classic genre, French comedian of the 17th century Jean-Baptiste Molière. In Russian dramaturgy, satirical comedy with its sharp social criticism, such as N. Gogol's The Inspector General, M. Bulgakov's Crimson Island, turned out to be especially in demand. Many wonderful comedies were created by A. Ostrovsky (“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 a lesedrama (in German) - a play for reading. The drama is addressed to the everyday life of a 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, it is also the most literary of the stage genres, for example, the plays of A. Chekhov are largely perceived more as texts for reading, and not as theatrical performances.

Lyrical genres of literature

The division into genres in the 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 by their thematic features: landscape, love, philosophical, friendly, intimate lyrics, etc. However, we can name some genres that have pronounced individual characteristics: elegy, sonnet, epigram, message, epitaph.

Elegy(elegos Greek mournful song) - a poem of medium length, as a rule, moral-philosophical, love, confessional content.

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

The longed-for moment has come: my long-term work is over, Why is an 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. In terms of content, the elegy goes back to the form of ancient funeral “weeps”, in which, while mourning the deceased, they simultaneously recalled his extraordinary virtues. This origin predetermined the main feature of the elegy - the combination of sorrow with faith, regret with hope, the acceptance of being 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 is "Elegy" by A.S. Pushkin:

Crazy years faded fun

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

But, like wine - the sadness of bygone days

In my soul, the older, the stronger.

My path is sad. Promises me labor and sorrow

The coming turbulent sea.

But I don't want, oh friends, to die;

I want to live in order to think and suffer;

And I know I will enjoy

Between sorrows, worries and anxiety:

Sometimes I'll get drunk again with harmony,

I will shed tears over fiction,

And maybe - at my sad sunset

Love will shine with a farewell smile.

Sonnet(sonetto, ital. song) - the so-called "solid" poetic form, which has strict construction rules. The sonnet has 14 lines, divided into two quatrains (quatrains) and two three-line verses (tercet). In quatrains only two rhymes are repeated, in terzets 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. Petrarch, the 14th-century Italian poet, 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, beautiful sonnets were also created by the poets of the Silver Age.

Epigram(Greek epigramma, inscription) is 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 around for A.S. Pushkin by the hatred of this nobleman and, ultimately, expulsion from Odessa to Mikhailovskoye:

Popu-my lord, half-merchant,

Half wise, half ignorant,

Semi-scoundrel, but there is hope

What will be complete at last.

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

Could Bice create like Dante,

Were Laura to glorify the heat of love?

I taught women to speak...

But, God, how to silence them!

There are even cases of a kind of duel of epigrams. When the famous Russian lawyer A.F. Horses were appointed to the Senate, ill-wishers extended an evil epigram to him:

Caligula brought the horse to the Senate,

He stands dressed in both velvet and gold.

But I will say, we have the same arbitrariness:

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

What A.F. Koni, who was distinguished by his extraordinary literary talent, replied:

(Greek epitafia, tombstone) - a farewell poem for a dead person, intended for a tombstone. Initially, this word was used in a literal sense, but later it acquired a more figurative meaning. For example, I. Bunin has a lyrical miniature in prose "Epitaph", dedicated to farewell to the writer's dear, but forever receding Russian estate. Gradually, the epitaph is transformed into a poem-dedication, 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 the "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 lyrics 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, with the transfer of feelings and experiences of the author. It is customary to refer to the lyric-epic genres poem, ode, ballad, fable .

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

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, a plot, but their purpose is somewhat different than in a prose story: in the poem they help the author's lyrical self-expression. Perhaps that is 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 an ancient origin. The ode goes back to the ancient genre of the dithyramb - a hymn glorifying a folk hero or the winner of the Olympic Games, i.e. an outstanding person.

Poets of the 18th-19th centuries created odes on various occasions. It could be an appeal to the monarch: M. Lomonosov dedicated his odes to Empress Elizabeth, G. Derzhavin to Catherine P. While glorifying their deeds, the poets at the same time taught the empresses, inspired them with 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 “Thunder of victory, resound!”, Which for some time was the unofficial anthem of the Russian Empire. There was a kind of spiritual ode: "Morning reflection on God's greatness" by M. Lomonosov, "God" by G. Derzhavin. Civic, 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 M. Lomonosov’s “Ode on the Day of Accession to the All-Russian Throne of Her Majesty Empress Elizabeth Petrovna in 1747”, written in the year when Elizabeth approved the new charter of the 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, 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 the French Provence as a folk dance of love content with obligatory refrains-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 is 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 novella: it must have an unusual love, legendary, heroic plot that captures the imagination. Quite often, fantastic, even mystical images and motifs are used in ballads: let us recall the famous "Lyudmila" and "Svetlana" by V. Zhukovsky. No less famous are "The Song of the Prophetic Oleg" by A. Pushkin, "Borodino" by M. Lermontov.

In Russian lyrics of the 20th century, a ballad is a love romantic poem, often accompanied by musical accompaniment. Ballads are especially popular in "bardic" poetry, the anthem 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 from ancient times were present in the folklore of all peoples as fairy tales about animals, and then transformed into anecdotes. The literary fable took shape in ancient Greece, its founder is Aesop (V century BC), after his name allegorical speech began to be called "Aesopian language". In a fable, as a rule, there are two parts: plot and moralizing. The first contains a story about some funny or absurd incident, the second - morality, teaching. The heroes of fables are often animals, under the masks of which quite recognizable moral and social vices are hidden, which are ridiculed. The great fabulists were Lafontaine (France, 17th century), Lessing (Germany, 18th century). In Russia, I.A. Krylov (1769-1844). The main advantage of his fables is a lively, folk language, a combination of cunning and wisdom in the author's intonation. The plots and images of many of I. Krylov's fables look quite recognizable even today.

Literature is an amoebic concept (in equal terms, as well as types of literature): throughout the centuries-old development of human civilization, it inevitably changed both in form and in content. One can confidently speak about the evolution of this type of art on a global scale or be strictly limited to certain periods of time or a specific region (ancient literature, the Middle Ages, Russian literature of the 19th century and others), nevertheless, one must perceive it as a true art of the word and an integral part of the global cultural process.

word art

Traditionally, when talking about literature, the individual means fiction. This concept (often used as a synonym - "the art of the word") arose on the fertile soil of oral folk art. However, unlike him, literature currently exists not in oral form, but in written form (from Latin lit(t)eratura - literally “written”, from lit(t)era - literally “letter”). Fiction uses words and constructions of written (natural human) language as a single material. Literature and other art forms are similar to each other. But its specificity is determined in comparison with the types of art that use other material instead of linguistic-verbal (fine arts, music) or together with it (songs, theater, cinema), on the other hand - with other types of verbal text: scientific, philosophical, journalistic, etc. In addition, fiction combines any author's (including anonymous) works, in contrast to folklore creations that clearly do not have a specific author.

Three main genera

Types and types of literature are significant associations according to the category of the relationship of the "speech carrier" (speaking) to the artistic whole. There are three main genera:


Types and genres of literature

In the most common classification, all types of fiction are divided into frames. They can be epic, which includes a story, a novel, and a short story; lyrical poems include; ballads and poems are lyrical; dramaturgy can be divided into drama, tragedy and comedy. Literary types can be distinguished from each other by the number of characters and storylines, volume, functions and content. In different periods of the history of literature, one species can be represented in different genres. For example: philosophical and psychological novels, detective novels, social and picaresque novels. Theoretically, Aristotle began to divide works into types of literature in his treatise called Poetics. His work was continued in modern times by the French poet-critic Boileau and Lessing.

Literature typification

Editorial and publishing preparation, i.e., the selection of written essays for subsequent editions, is usually carried out by the publishing editor. But it is quite difficult for an ordinary user to accurately navigate in the boundless sea. It is more expedient to use a systematic approach, namely, you need to clearly distinguish between the types of literature and their purpose.

  • The novel is an impressive form of work, having a huge number of characters with a fairly developed and closely connected system of relationships between them. A novel can be historical, family, philosophical, adventure and social.
  • An epic is a series of works, less often a single one, invariably covering a significant historical era or a significant large-scale event.
  • Novela - the primary genre of narrative prose, much shorter than a novel or short story. The collection of stories is usually called short stories, and the writer is called a short story writer.

Not the last of the significant

  • Comedy is a creation that ridicules individual or social shortcomings, focusing on especially awkward and ridiculous situations.
  • The song is the oldest type of poetry, without which the category "types of fiction" would not be complete. The work is a poetic form with many verses and refrains. There are: folk, lyrical, heroic and historical.
  • A fable is a prose, but more often a poetic, work of a moralistic, moralistic and satirical nature.
  • A story is a literary work of a certain, often small, size, which tells about a separate event in the life of a character.
  • Myth - narration is also included in the section "types of literature" and carries to future generations the idea of ​​​​ancestors about the universe, heroes and gods.
  • A lyric poem is an expression of the author's emotional experiences in a poetic form convenient for him.
  • Essay - a narrative, a subspecies of the epic, which reliably tells about real events, facts.
  • A story is a work similar in structure to a story, but differing in volume. The story can tell about several events from the life of the main characters at once.
  • Melodrama - deservedly continues the list of the category "types of literature", this is a narrative dramatic work, characterized by a categorical division of heroes into positive and negative.

Literature and modernity

Life itself every day more and more insistently convinces everyone that the level of consistency and unity of book publications, newspaper and magazine materials is one of the main criteria for the effectiveness of society education. Naturally, the initial stage of acquaintance with literature (not counting children's literature) starts at school. Therefore, any literature for teachers contains a variety of literature, which help to convey the necessary knowledge in an accessible form for the perception of the child.

individual choice

It is difficult to overestimate the role of literature in the life of a modern person, because books have brought up more than one generation. It was they who helped people comprehend both the world around them and themselves, stimulated the desire for truth, moral principles and knowledge, taught them to respect the past. Unfortunately, literature and other art forms are often underestimated in modern society. There is a certain category of individuals who declare that literature has already outlived its usefulness, it has been fully replaced by television and cinema. But whether to take advantage of the opportunity that books provide or not is an individual choice for everyone.

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