Various types and genres. Types of genres of literary works


Literary genres- groups of literary works united by a set of formal and content properties (in contrast to literary forms, the selection of which is based only on formal features).

If at the folklore stage the genre was determined from an extra-literary (cult) situation, then in literature the genre receives a characteristic of its essence from its own literary norms, codified by rhetoric. The entire nomenclature of ancient genres that had developed before this turn was then vigorously rethought under its influence.

Since the time of Aristotle, who gave the first systematization of literary genres in his Poetics, the idea has been strengthened that literary genres are a regular, once and for all fixed system, and the author’s task is only to achieve the most complete correspondence of his work to the essential properties of the chosen genre. Such an understanding of the genre - as a ready-made structure offered to the author - led to the emergence of a whole series of normative poetics, containing instructions for authors on how exactly an ode or tragedy should be written; the pinnacle of this type of writing is Boileau's treatise The Poetic Art (1674). This does not mean, of course, that the system of genres as a whole and the features of individual genres really remained unchanged for two thousand years - however, the changes (and very significant ones) were either not noticed by theorists, or they were interpreted by them as damage, deviation from the necessary patterns. And only by the end of the 18th century, the decomposition of the traditional genre system, connected, in accordance with the general principles of literary evolution, both with internal literary processes and with the influence of completely new social and cultural circumstances, went so far that normative poetics could no longer describe and curb literary reality.

Under these conditions, some traditional genres began to rapidly die off or become marginalized, while others, on the contrary, moved from the literary periphery to the very center of the literary process. And if, for example, the rise of the ballad at the turn of the 18th-19th centuries, associated in Russia with the name of Zhukovsky, turned out to be rather short-lived (although it then gave an unexpected new surge in Russian poetry in the first half of the 20th century - for example, in Bagritsky and Nikolai Tikhonov) , then the hegemony of the novel - a genre that normative poetics for centuries did not want to notice as something low and insignificant - dragged on in European literature for at least a century. Works of a hybrid or indefinite genre nature began to develop especially actively: plays about which it is difficult to say whether this is a comedy or a tragedy, poems that cannot be given any genre definition, except that it is a lyrical poem. The fall of clear genre identifications was also manifested in deliberate authorial gestures aimed at destroying genre expectations: from Lawrence Stern’s novel The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman, which breaks off in mid-sentence, to N. V. Gogol’s Dead Souls, where the subtitle is paradoxical for a prose text the poem can hardly fully prepare the reader for the fact that he will be knocked out of the rather familiar rut of a picaresque novel every now and then with lyrical (and sometimes epic) digressions.

In the 20th century, literary genres were especially strongly influenced by the separation of mass literature from literature oriented towards artistic search. Mass literature again felt an urgent need for clear genre prescriptions that significantly increase the predictability of the text for the reader, making it easy to navigate it. Of course, the old genres were not suitable for mass literature, and it rather quickly formed a new system, which was based on the very plastic genre of the novel that had accumulated a lot of diverse experience. At the end of the 19th century and in the first half of the 20th, a detective story and a police novel, science fiction and a ladies' ("pink") novel are being drawn up. It is not surprising that contemporary literature, aimed at artistic search, strove to deviate as far as possible from mass literature and therefore moved as far as possible from genre specificity. But since the extremes converge, the desire to be farther from genre predestination sometimes led to a new genre formation: for example, the French anti-novel did not want to be a novel so much that the main works of this literary movement, represented by such original authors as Michel Butor and Nathalie Sarraute, are clearly observed signs of a new genre. Thus, modern literary genres (and we already meet such an assumption in the reflections of M. M. Bakhtin) are not elements of any predetermined system: on the contrary, they arise as points of concentration of tension in one place or another of the literary space, in accordance with artistic tasks set here and now by this circle of authors. A special study of such new genres remains a matter for tomorrow.

List of literary genres:

  • By shape
    • visions
    • Novella
    • Tale
    • Story
    • joke
    • novel
    • epic
    • play
    • sketch
  • content
    • comedy
      • farce
      • vaudeville
      • sideshow
      • sketch
      • parody
      • sitcom
      • comedy of characters
    • tragedy
    • Drama
  • By birth
    • epic
      • Fable
      • Bylina
      • Ballad
      • Novella
      • Tale
      • Story
      • Novel
      • epic novel
      • Story
      • fantasy
      • epic
    • lyrical
      • Oh yeah
      • Message
      • stanzas
      • Elegy
      • Epigram
    • Lyro epic
      • Ballad
      • Poem
    • dramatic
      • Drama
      • Comedy
      • Tragedy

Poem- (Greek póiema), a large poetic work with a narrative or lyrical plot. A poem is also called an ancient and medieval epic (see also Epos), nameless and author's, which was composed either through the cyclization of lyric-epic songs and legends (the point of view of A. N. Veselovsky), or by "swelling" (A. Heusler) of one or several folk legends, or with the help of complex modifications of the most ancient plots in the process of the historical existence of folklore (A. Lord, M. Parry). The poem developed from an epic depicting an event of national historical significance (the Iliad, the Mahabharata, the Song of Roland, the Elder Edda, etc.).

Many genre varieties of the poem are known: heroic, didactic, satirical, burlesque, including heroic-comic, a poem with a romantic plot, lyrical-dramatic. For a long time, the leading branch of the genre was considered a poem on a national historical or world historical (religious) theme (Virgil's Aeneid, Dante's Divine Comedy, L. di Camões' Lusiades, T. Tasso's Jerusalem Liberated, Paradise Lost ” by J. Milton, “Henriad” by Voltaire, “Messiad” by F. G. Klopstock, “Rossiyada” by M. M. Kheraskov, etc.). At the same time, a very influential branch in the history of the genre was a poem with romantic features of the plot ("The Knight in a Leopard's Skin" by Shota Rustaveli, "Shahnameh" by Ferdowsi, to a certain extent - "Furious Roland" by L. Ariosto), connected to one degree or another with the tradition of medieval , predominantly chivalric, novel. Gradually, personal, moral and philosophical problems come to the fore in the poems, lyrical and dramatic elements are strengthened, the folklore tradition is discovered and mastered - features already characteristic of pre-romantic poems (“Faust” by I. V. Goethe, poems by J. MacPherson, V. Scott). The heyday of the genre occurs in the era of romanticism, when the greatest poets of various countries turn to the creation of a poem. The “peak” in the evolution of the romantic poem genre acquire a socio-philosophical or symbolic-philosophical character (“Child Harold’s Pilgrimage” by J. Byron, “The Bronze Horseman” by A. S. Pushkin, “Dzyady” by A. Mickiewicz, “The Demon” by M. Yu. Lermontov, "Germany, a winter fairy tale" by G. Heine).

In the 2nd half of the XIX century. the decline of the genre is obvious, which does not exclude the appearance of individual outstanding works (“The Song of Hiawatha” by G. Longfellow). In the poems of N. A. Nekrasov (“Frost, Red Nose”, “Who Lives Well in Russia”), genre tendencies are manifested that are characteristic of the development of the poem in realistic literature (a synthesis of moralistic and heroic principles).

In a 20th century poem the most intimate experiences are correlated with great historical upheavals, imbued with them as if from the inside (“Cloud in Pants” by V. V. Mayakovsky, “The Twelve (poem)” by A. A. Blok, “First Date” by A. Bely).

In Soviet poetry, there are various genre varieties of the poem: reviving the heroic principle (“Vladimir Ilyich Lenin” and “Good!” Mayakovsky, “Nine Hundred and Fifth Year” by B. L. Pasternak, “Vasily Terkin” by A. T. Tvardovsky); lyric-psychological poems (“About this” by V. V. Mayakovsky, “Anna Snegina” by S. A. Yesenin), philosophical (N. A. Zabolotsky, E. Mezhelaitis), historical (“Tobolsk chronicler” L. Martynov) or combining moral and socio-historical issues ("Middle of the Century" by V. Lugovsky).

The poem as a synthetic, lyrical and monumental genre that allows you to combine the epic of the heart and "music", the "element" of world upheavals, innermost feelings and historical concept, remains a productive genre of world poetry: "Repairing the Wall" and "Into the Storm" by R. Frost, " Landmarks" by Saint-John Perse, "Hollow Men" by T. Eliot, "Universal Song" by P. Neruda, "Niobe" by K. I. Galchinsky, "Continuous Poetry" by P. Eluard, "Zoya" by Nazim Hikmet.

epic(ancient Greek έπος - “word”, “narration”) - a collection of works of a mostly epic kind, united by a common theme, era, national identity, etc. For example, the Homeric epic, the medieval epic, the animal epic.

The emergence of the epic is stadial in nature, but due to historical circumstances.

The origin of the epic is usually accompanied by the addition of panegyrics and laments, close to the heroic worldview. The great deeds immortalized in them often turn out to be the material that heroic poets use as the basis of their narrative. Panegyrics and laments are usually composed in the same style and size as the heroic epic: in Russian and Turkic literature, both types have almost the same manner of expression and lexical composition. Lamentations and panegyrics are preserved in the composition of epic poems as decoration.

The epic claims not only for objectivity, but also for the veracity of its story, while its claims, as a rule, are accepted by listeners. In his Prologue to The Circle of the Earth, Snorri Sturluson explained that among his sources are “ancient poems and songs that were sung to people for fun,” and added: “Although we ourselves do not know whether these stories are true, we know for sure that the wise men of old held them to be true."

Novel- a literary genre, as a rule, prosaic, which involves a detailed narrative about the life and development of the personality of the protagonist (heroes) in a crisis / non-standard period of his life.

The name "Roman" arose in the middle of the XII century, along with the genre of chivalric romance (Old French. romanz from Late Latin romance"in the (folk) Romance language"), as opposed to historiography in Latin. Contrary to popular belief, this name from the very beginning did not refer to any work in the vernacular (heroic songs or lyrics of the troubadours were never called novels), but to one that could be opposed to the Latin model, even if very remote: historiography, fable ( "The Romance of Renard"), vision ("The Romance of the Rose"). However, in the XII-XIII centuries, if not later, the words roman and estoire(the latter also means "image", "illustration") are interchangeable. In a reverse translation into Latin, the novel was called (liber) romanticus, from where the adjective “romantic” came from in European languages, until the end of the 18th century it meant “inherent in novels”, “such as in novels”, and only later the meaning, on the one hand, was simplified to “love”, but on the other hand gave rise to the name of romanticism as a literary movement.

The name "novel" was preserved even when, in the 13th century, the verse novel being performed was replaced by a prose novel for reading (with the complete preservation of the knightly topic and plot), and for all subsequent transformations of the knightly novel, up to the works of Ariosto and Edmund Spenser, which we called poems, and contemporaries considered novels. It persists even later, in the 17th-18th centuries, when the "adventure" novel is replaced by the "realistic" and "psychological" novels (which in itself problematizes the supposed break in continuity).

However, in England the name of the genre is also changing: the name remains behind the “old” novels. romance, and for the "new" novels from the middle of the 17th century the name novel(from Italian novella - "short story"). Dichotomy novel/romance means a lot to English-language criticism, but rather introduces additional uncertainty into their actual historical relationship than clarifies. Generally romance is considered rather a kind of structural-plot variety of the genre novel.

In Spain, by contrast, all varieties of the novel are called novela, and descended from the same romance word romance from the very beginning belonged to the poetic genre, which was also destined to have a long history - to the romance.

Bishop Yue at the end of the 17th century, in search of the predecessors of the novel, first applied this term to a number of phenomena of ancient narrative prose, which since then have also come to be called novels.

visions

Fabliau dou dieu d'Amour"(The Tale of the God of Love)," Venus la deesse d'amors

visions- narrative and didactic genre.

The plot is presented on behalf of the person to whom he allegedly revealed himself in a dream, hallucination or lethargic dream. The core is mostly made up of real dreams or hallucinations, but already in ancient times, fictional stories appeared, dressed in the form of visions (Plato, Plutarch, Cicero). The genre gets a special development in the Middle Ages and reaches its climax in Dante's Divine Comedy, which in form represents the most detailed vision. An authoritative sanction and a strong impetus to the development of the genre were given by the Dialogues of Miracles by Pope Gregory the Great (VI century), after which visions began to appear en masse in the church literature of all European countries.

Until the 12th century, all visions (except Scandinavian ones) were written in Latin, translations appeared from the 12th century, and original visions in vernacular languages ​​from the 13th century. The most complete form of visions is presented in the Latin poetry of the clergy: this genre, in its origins, is closely connected with canonical and apocryphal religious literature and is close to church preaching.

The editors of the visions (they are always from the clergy and must be distinguished from the “clairvoyant” himself) took the opportunity on behalf of the “higher power” that sent the vision to propagate their political views or fall upon personal enemies. There are also purely fictitious visions - topical pamphlets (for example, the vision of Charlemagne, Charles III, etc.).

However, since the 10th century, the form and content of visions have caused protest, often coming from the declassed layers of the clergy themselves (poor clerics and goliard schoolchildren). This protest results in parodic visions. On the other hand, courtly chivalrous poetry in folk languages ​​takes over the form of visions: visions acquire new content here, becoming a frame for a love-didactic allegory, such as, for example, “ Fabliau dou dieu d'Amour"(The Tale of the God of Love)," Venus la deesse d'amors"(Venus - the goddess of love) and finally - the encyclopedia of courtly love - the famous "Roman de la Rose" (Roman of the Rose) by Guillaume de Lorris.

The new content puts the “third estate” into the form of visions. Thus, the successor to the unfinished novel by Guillaume de Lorris, Jean de Meun, turns the refined allegory of his predecessor into a ponderous combination of didactics and satire, the edge of which is directed against the lack of "equality", against the unjust privileges of the aristocracy and against the "robber" royal power). Such are the "Hopes of the common people" by Jean Molinet. No less pronounced are the moods of the “third estate” in Langland’s famous “Vision of Peter the Ploughman,” which played an agitational role in the English peasant revolution of the 14th century. But unlike Jean de Meun, a representative of the urban part of the "third estate", Langland - the ideologist of the peasantry - turns his gaze to the idealized past, dreaming of the destruction of capitalist usurers.

As a complete independent genre, visions are characteristic of medieval literature. But as a motif, the form of visions continues to exist in the literatures of modern times, being especially favorable for the introduction of satire and didactics, on the one hand, and fantasy, on the other (for example, Byron's "Darkness").

Novella

The sources of the novel are primarily Latin exempla, as well as fablios, stories interspersed in the "Dialogue about Pope Gregory", apologists from the "Biographies of the Church Fathers", fables, folk tales. In 13th-century Occitan, the term nova.Hence - Italian novella(in the most popular collection of the end of the 13th century, Novellino, also known as the Hundred Ancient Novels), which has been distributed throughout Europe since the 15th century.

The genre was established after the appearance of the book by Giovanni Boccaccio "The Decameron" (c. 1353), the plot of which was that several people, fleeing the plague outside the city, tell each other short stories. Boccaccio in his book created the classic type of Italian short story, which was developed by his many followers in Italy itself and in other countries. In France, under the influence of the translation of the Decameron, around 1462, the collection One Hundred New Novels appeared (however, the material was more indebted to the facets of Poggio Bracciolini), and Margarita Navarskaya, modeled on the Decameron, wrote the book Heptameron (1559).

In the era of romanticism, under the influence of Hoffmann, Novalis, Edgar Allan Poe, a short story with elements of mysticism, fantasy, fabulousness spread. Later, in the works of Prosper Mérimée and Guy de Maupassant, this term began to be used to refer to realistic stories.

For American literature, beginning with Washington Irving and Edgar Allan Poe, the novella or short story (eng. short story), is of particular importance - as one of the most characteristic genres.

In the second half of the 19th-20th centuries, the traditions of the short story were continued by such different writers as Ambrose Bierce, O. Henry, H. G. Wells, Arthur Conan Doyle, Gilbert Chesterton, Ryunosuke Akutagawa, Karel Capek, Jorge Luis Borges.

The short story is characterized by several important features: extreme brevity, a sharp, even paradoxical plot, a neutral style of presentation, a lack of psychologism and descriptiveness, and an unexpected denouement. The action of the novel takes place in the author's modern world. The plot structure of the novel is similar to the dramatic one, but usually simpler.

Goethe spoke about the action-packed nature of the short story, giving it the following definition: "an unheard-of event that has taken place."

The story emphasizes the significance of the denouement, which contains an unexpected turn (pointe, “falcon turn”). According to the French researcher, "ultimately, one can even say that the whole novella is conceived as a denouement." Viktor Shklovsky wrote that the description of a happy mutual love does not create a short story; a short story needs love with obstacles: “A loves B, B does not love A; when B loves A, then A no longer loves B. He singled out a special type of denouement, which he called "false ending": it is usually made from a description of nature or weather.

Among the predecessors of Boccaccio, the short story had a moralizing attitude. Boccaccio retained this motif, but his morality followed from the short story not logically, but psychologically, and often was only a pretext and a device. The later short story convinces the reader of the relativity of moral criteria.

Tale

Story

Joke(fr. anecdote- tale, fiction; from the Greek τὸ ἀνέκδοτоν - unpublished, lit. "not issued") - a genre of folklore - a short funny story. Most often, an anecdote is characterized by an unexpected semantic resolution at the very end, which gives rise to laughter. It can be a play on words, different meanings of words, modern associations that require additional knowledge: social, literary, historical, geographical, etc. Anecdotes cover almost all spheres of human activity. There are jokes about family life, politics, sex, and so on. In most cases, the authors of the jokes are unknown.

In Russia XVIII-XIX centuries. (and in most languages ​​of the world until now) the word "anecdote" had a slightly different meaning - it could just be an entertaining story about some famous person, not necessarily with the task of ridiculing him (cf. Pushkin: "Jokes of the past days"). Such “jokes” about Potemkin became classics of that time.

Oh yeah

epic

Play(French pièce) - a dramatic work, usually of a classical style, created to stage some kind of action in the theater. This is a general specific name for works of drama intended to be performed from the stage.

The structure of the play includes the text of the characters (dialogues and monologues) and functional author's remarks (notes indicating the place of action, interior features, appearance of the characters, their behavior, etc.). As a rule, the play is preceded by a list of actors, sometimes with an indication of their age, profession, titles, family ties, etc.

A separate complete semantic part of the play is called an act or action, which may include smaller components - phenomena, episodes, pictures.

The very concept of a play is purely formal, it does not include any emotional or stylistic meaning. Therefore, in most cases, the play is accompanied by a subtitle that defines its genre - classic, main (comedy, tragedy, drama), or author's (for example: My poor Marat, dialogues in three parts - A. Arbuzov; Let's wait and see, a pleasant play in four acts - B. Shaw, The Good Man from Sezuan, parabolic play - B. Brecht, etc.). The genre designation of the play not only serves as a "hint" to the director and actors in the stage interpretation of the play, but helps to enter the author's style, the figurative structure of the dramaturgy.

Essay(from fr. essai"attempt, trial, essay", from lat. exagium"weighing") - a literary genre of prose writing of a small volume and free composition. The essay expresses the individual impressions and thoughts of the author on a specific occasion or subject and does not pretend to be an exhaustive or defining interpretation of the topic (in the parodic Russian tradition, “a look and something”). In terms of volume and function, it borders, on the one hand, on a scientific article and a literary essay (with which an essay is often confused), on the other hand, on a philosophical treatise. The essayistic style is characterized by figurativeness, mobility of associations, aphoristic, often antithetical thinking, an attitude towards intimate frankness and colloquial intonation. Some theorists consider it as the fourth, along with the epic, lyrics and drama, kind of fiction.

Based on the experience of his predecessors, Michel Montaigne introduced it as a special genre form in his "Experiments" (1580). His works, published in book form in 1597, 1612 and 1625, Francis Bacon for the first time in English literature gave the name English. essays. English poet and playwright Ben Jonson first used the word essayist (eng. essayist) in 1609.

In the 18th-19th centuries, the essay was one of the leading genres in English and French journalism. The development of essays was promoted in England by J. Addison, Richard Steele, Henry Fielding, in France by Diderot and Voltaire, in Germany by Lessing and Herder. The essay was the main form of philosophical and aesthetic controversy among romantics and romantic philosophers (G. Heine, R. W. Emerson, G. D. Thoreau).

The essay genre is deeply rooted in English literature: T. Carlyle, W. Hazlitt, M. Arnold (19th century); M. Beerbom, G. K. Chesterton (XX century). In the 20th century, essay writing is flourishing: major philosophers, prose writers, and poets turned to the essay genre (R. Rolland, B. Shaw, G. Wells, J. Orwell, T. Mann, A. Maurois, J. P. Sartre).

In Lithuanian criticism, the term essay (lit. esė) was first used by Balis Sruoga in 1923. The book Smiles of God (lit. Dievo šypsenos, 1929) by Juozapas Albinas Gerbachiauskas and Gods and Troublemakers (lit. Dievai ir smūtkeliai", 1935) by Jonas Kossu-Aleksandravičius. Examples of essays include “poetic anti-commentaries” “Lyrical Etudes” (lit. “Lyriniai etiudai”, 1964) and “Antakalnis baroque” (lit. “Antakalnio barokas”, 1971) by Eduardas Mezhelaitis, “Diary without dates” (lit. “Dienoraštis be datų", 1981) by Justinas Marcinkevičius, "Poetry and Word" (lit. "Poezija ir žodis", 1977) and Papyri from the Graves of the Dead (lit. "Papirusai iš mirusiųjų kapų", 1991) by Marcelijus Martinaitis. An anti-conformist moral position, conceptuality, accuracy and polemic characterize the essay of Thomas Venclova

For Russian literature, the essay genre was not typical. Samples of the essay style are found in A. S. Pushkin (“Journey from Moscow to St. Petersburg”), A. I. Herzen (“From the Other Shore”), F. M. Dostoevsky (“A Writer's Diary”). At the beginning of the 20th century, V. I. Ivanov, D. S. Merezhkovsky, Andrey Bely, Lev Shestov, V. V. Rozanov turned to the essay genre, later - Ilya Erenburg, Yuri Olesha, Viktor Shklovsky, Konstantin Paustovsky. Literary and critical assessments of modern critics, as a rule, are embodied in a variety of the essay genre.

In the art of music, the term piece, as a rule, is used as a specific name for works of instrumental music.

Sketch(English) sketch, literally - a sketch, sketch, sketch), in the XIX - early XX centuries. a short play with two, rarely three characters. The sketch has received the greatest distribution on the stage.

In the UK, sketch comedy television shows are very popular. Similar programs have recently begun to appear on Russian television (“Our Russia”, “Six Frames”, “Give Youth!”, “Dear Program”, “Gentleman Show”, “Gorodok”, etc.) A vivid example sketch show is the television series Monty Python's Flying Circus.

A.P. Chekhov was a famous creator of sketches.

Comedy(Greek κωliμωδία, from Greek κῶμος, kỗmos, "feast in honor of Dionysus" and Greek. ἀοιδή / Greek ᾠδή, aoidḗ / ōidḗ, "song") - a genre of fiction, characterized by a humorous or satirical approach, as well as a type of drama in which the moment of effective conflict or struggle of antagonistic characters is specifically resolved.

Aristotle defined comedy as "imitation of the worst people, but not in all their viciousness, but in a ridiculous way" ("Poetics", ch. V).

The types of comedy include such genres as farce, vaudeville, sideshow, sketch, operetta, parody. Today, many comedy films are an example of such a primitive, built solely on external comicity, the comic of the situations into which the characters find themselves in the course of the development of the action.

Distinguish situation comedy and comedy of characters.

Sitcom (situation comedy, situation comedy) is a comedy in which events and circumstances are the source of the funny.

Comedy of characters (comedy of manners) is a comedy in which the source of the funny is the inner essence of characters (mores), funny and ugly one-sidedness, an exaggerated trait or passion (vice, flaw). Very often a comedy of manners is a satirical comedy that makes fun of all these human qualities.

Tragedy(Greek τραγωδία, tragōdía, literally - goat song, from tragos - goat and öde - song), a dramatic genre based on the development of events, which, as a rule, is inevitable and necessarily leads to a catastrophic outcome for the characters, often full of pathos; a form of drama that is the opposite of comedy.

The tragedy is marked by severe seriousness, depicts reality most pointedly, as a clot of internal contradictions, reveals the deepest conflicts of reality in an extremely intense and rich form, which acquires the meaning of an artistic symbol; It is no coincidence that most tragedies are written in verse.

Drama(Greek Δρα´μα) - one of the genres of literature (along with lyrics, epic, and lyre-epic). It differs from other types of literature in the way the plot is conveyed - not through narration or monologue, but through the dialogues of the characters. Any literary work built in a dialogical form, including comedy, tragedy, drama (as a genre), farce, vaudeville, etc., refers to drama in one way or another.

Since ancient times, it has existed in folklore or literary form among various peoples; independently of each other, the ancient Greeks, the ancient Indians, the Chinese, the Japanese, and the Indians of America created their own dramatic traditions.

In Greek, the word "drama" reflects a sad, unpleasant event or situation of one particular person.

Fable- a poetic or prose literary work of a moralizing, satirical nature. At the end of the fable there is a brief moralizing conclusion - the so-called morality. The actors are usually animals, plants, things. In the fable, the vices of people are ridiculed.

The fable is one of the oldest literary genres. In ancient Greece, Aesop (VI-V centuries BC) was famous for writing fables in prose. In Rome - Phaedrus (I century AD). In India, the Panchatantra collection of fables dates back to the 3rd century. The most prominent fabulist of modern times was the French poet J. Lafontaine (XVII century).

In Russia, the development of the fable genre dates back to the middle of the 18th - early 19th centuries and is associated with the names of A.P. Sumarokov, I.I. Khemnitser, A.E. Izmailov, I.I. century by Simeon of Polotsk and in the 1st half. XVIII century by A. D. Kantemir, V. K. Trediakovsky. In Russian poetry, a fable free verse is developed, conveying the intonations of a laid-back and crafty tale.

The fables of I. A. Krylov, with their realistic liveliness, sensible humor and excellent language, marked the heyday of this genre in Russia. In Soviet times, the fables of Demyan Bedny, S. Mikhalkov and others gained popularity.

There are two theories about the origin of the fable. The first is represented by the German school of Otto Crusius, A. Hausrath, and others, the second by the American scientist B. E. Perry. According to the first concept, the story is primary in the fable, and morality is secondary; the fable comes from the animal tale, and the animal tale comes from the myth. According to the second concept, morality is primary in a fable; the fable is close to comparisons, proverbs and sayings; like them, the fable emerges as an aid to argumentation. The first point of view goes back to the romantic theory of Jacob Grimm, the second one revives Lessing's rationalistic concept.

Philologists of the 19th century were long occupied with the controversy about the priority of the Greek or Indian fable. Now it can be considered almost certain that the common source of the material of the Greek and Indian fables was the Sumero-Babylonian fable.

epics- Russian folk epic songs about the exploits of heroes. The basis of the epic plot is some heroic event, or a remarkable episode of Russian history (hence the popular name of the epic - “ antiquity”, “old lady”, implying that the action in question took place in the past).

Epics are usually written in tonic verse with two to four stresses.

For the first time the term "epic" was introduced by Ivan Sakharov in the collection "Songs of the Russian people" in 1839, he proposed it based on the expression "according to epics" in "The Tale of Igor's Campaign", which meant "according to the facts".

Ballad

Myth(ancient Greek μῦθος) in literature - a legend that conveys people's ideas about the world, man's place in it, about the origin of all things, about gods and heroes; certain idea of ​​the world.

The specificity of myths appears most clearly in primitive culture, where myths are the equivalent of science, an integral system in terms of which the whole world is perceived and described. Later, when such forms of social consciousness as art, literature, science, religion, political ideology, etc., are singled out from mythology, they retain a number of mythological models that are uniquely rethought when included in new structures; myth is experiencing its second life. Of particular interest is their transformation in literary work.

Since mythology masters reality in the forms of figurative narration, it is close in its essence to fiction; historically, it anticipated many of the possibilities of literature and had a comprehensive influence on its early development. Naturally, literature does not part with mythological foundations even later, which applies not only to works with mythological foundations of the plot, but also to realistic and naturalistic life writing of the 19th and 20th centuries (it is enough to name Oliver Twist by C. Dickens, Nana by E. Zola, "The Magic Mountain" by T. Mann).

Novella(Italian novella - news) - a narrative prose genre, which is characterized by brevity, a sharp plot, a neutral style of presentation, a lack of psychologism, and an unexpected denouement. Sometimes it is used as a synonym for a story, sometimes it is called a kind of story.

Tale- a prose genre of unstable volume (mainly an average between a novel and a short story), gravitating towards a chronicle plot that reproduces the natural course of life. The plot devoid of intrigue is centered around the protagonist, whose personality and fate are revealed within a few events.

The story is an epic prose genre. The plot of the story tends more towards epic and chronicle plot and composition. Possible verse form. The story depicts a series of events. It is amorphous, events often simply join each other, and extra-fabule elements play a large independent role. It does not have a complex, tense and complete plot knot.

Story- a small form of epic prose, correlated with the story as a more detailed form of narration. Goes back to folklore genres (fairy tale, parable); how the genre became isolated in written literature; often indistinguishable from the novel, and from the 18th century. - and an essay. Sometimes the short story and the essay are considered as polar varieties of the story.

A story is a work of small volume, containing a small number of characters, and also, most often, having one storyline.

Story: 1) a kind of narrative, mostly prose folklore ( fabulous prose), which includes works of different genres, in the content of which, from the point of view of folklore carriers, there is no strict reliability. Fairy-tale folklore is opposed to "rigorous" folklore narrative ( fairy tale prose) (see myth, epic, historical song, spiritual poems, legend, demonological stories, tale, blasphemer, tradition, bylichka).

2) genre of literary narration. A literary fairy tale either imitates a folklore one ( a literary tale written in folk poetic style), or creates a didactic work (see didactic literature) based on non-folklore stories. The folk tale historically precedes the literary one.

Word " story” is attested in written sources no earlier than the 16th century. From the word " say". It mattered: a list, a list, an exact description. It acquires modern significance from the 17th-19th centuries. Previously, the word fable was used, until the 11th century - blasphemer.

The word "fairy tale" suggests that they learn about it, "what it is" and find out "for what" it, a fairy tale, is needed. A fairy tale with a purpose is needed for the subconscious or conscious teaching of a child in the family the rules and purpose of life, the need to protect their "area" and a worthy attitude towards other communities. It is noteworthy that both the saga and the fairy tale carry a colossal informational component, passed down from generation to generation, faith in which is based on respect for one's ancestors.

There are different types of fairy tales.

fantasy(from English. fantasy- "fantasy") - a type of fantastic literature based on the use of mythological and fairy tale motifs. In its modern form, it was formed at the beginning of the 20th century.

Fantasy works most often resemble a historical adventure novel, the action of which takes place in a fictional world close to the real Middle Ages, whose characters encounter supernatural phenomena and creatures. Fantasy is often based on archetypal plots.

Unlike science fiction, fantasy does not seek to explain the world in which the work takes place in terms of science. This world itself exists in the form of some kind of assumption (most often its location relative to our reality is not specified at all: whether it is a parallel world, or another planet), and its physical laws may differ from the realities of our world. In such a world, the existence of gods, witchcraft, mythical creatures (dragons, gnomes, trolls), ghosts and any other fantastic creatures can be real. At the same time, the fundamental difference between the "miracles" of fantasy and their fairy-tale counterparts is that they are the norm of the described world and act systematically, like the laws of nature.

Nowadays, fantasy is also a genre in cinema, painting, computer and board games. Such genre versatility is especially characteristic of Chinese fantasy with elements of martial arts.

epic(from epic and Greek poieo - I create)

  1. An extensive narrative in verse or prose about outstanding national historical events ("Iliad", "Mahabharata"). The roots of the epic in mythology and folklore. In the 19th century an epic novel appears (“War and Peace” by L.N. Tolstoy)
  2. A complex, long history of something, including a number of major events.

Oh yeah- poetic, as well as musical and poetic work, distinguished by solemnity and sublimity.

Originally in ancient Greece, any form of lyric poetry intended to accompany music was called an ode, including choral singing. Since the time of Pindar, the ode has been a choral epinic song in honor of the winner in the sports competitions of the sacred games with a three-part composition and underlined solemnity and grandiloquence.

In Roman literature, the most famous are the odes of Horace, who used the dimensions of the Aeolian lyric poetry, primarily the Alcaean stanza, adapting them to the Latin language, the collection of these works in Latin is called Carmina - songs, they began to be called odes later.

Since the Renaissance and in the Baroque era (XVI-XVII centuries), odes began to be called lyric works in a pathetically high style, focusing on antique samples, in classicism the ode became the canonical genre of high lyrics.

Elegy(Greek ελεγεια) - a genre of lyric poetry; in early ancient poetry, a poem written in elegiac distich, regardless of content; later (Callimach, Ovid) - a poem of sad content. In the new European poetry, the elegy retains stable features: intimacy, motives of disappointment, unhappy love, loneliness, the frailty of earthly existence, determines the rhetoric in the depiction of emotions; the classical genre of sentimentalism and romanticism (“Recognition” by E. Baratynsky).

A poem with the character of thoughtful sadness. In this sense, it can be said that most of Russian poetry is tuned to an elegiac mood, at least up to the poetry of modern times. This, of course, does not deny that in Russian poetry there are excellent poems of a different, non-elegiac mood. Initially, in ancient Greek poetry, e. meant a poem written in a stanza of a certain size, namely, a couplet - a hexameter-pentameter. Having the general character of lyrical reflection, E. among the ancient Greeks was very diverse in content, for example, sad and accusatory in Archilochus and Simonides, philosophical in Solon or Theognis, militant in Callinus and Tyrtheus, political in Mimnerm. One of the best Greek authors E. - Callimachus. Among the Romans, E. became more definite in character, but also freer in form. The significance of amorous E. has greatly increased. The famous Roman authors of E. - Propertius, Tibull, Ovid, Catullus (they were translated by Fet, Batyushkov, and others). Subsequently, there was, perhaps, only one period in the development of European literature, when the word E. began to mean poems with a more or less stable form. And it began under the influence of the famous elegy of the English poet Thomas Gray, written in 1750 and caused numerous imitations and translations in almost all European languages. The revolution produced by this E. is defined as the onset in literature of the period of sentimentalism, which replaced false classicism. In essence, this was the inclination of poetry from rational mastery in once established forms to the true sources of inner artistic experiences. In Russian poetry, Zhukovsky's translation of Gray's elegy ("Rural Cemetery"; 1802) definitely marked the beginning of a new era that finally went beyond rhetoric and turned to sincerity, intimacy and depth. This inner change was also reflected in the new methods of versification introduced by Zhukovsky, who is thus the founder of the new Russian sentimental poetry and one of its great representatives. In the general spirit and form of Gray's elegy, i.e. in the form of large poems filled with mournful reflection, such poems by Zhukovsky were written, which he himself called elegies, such as “Evening”, “Slavyanka”, “On the death of Kor. Wirtembergskaya". His “Theon and Aeschylus” are also considered elegies (more precisely, this is an elegy-ballad). Zhukovsky called his poem "The Sea" an elegy. In the first half of the XIX century. it was common to give their poems the names of elegies, especially often their works were called elegies by Batyushkov, Boratynsky, Yazykov, etc. ; subsequently, however, it fell out of fashion. Nevertheless, many poems of Russian poets are imbued with an elegiac tone. And in world poetry there is hardly an author who does not have elegiac poems. Goethe's Roman Elegies are famous in German poetry. Elegies are Schiller's poems: "Ideals" (translated by Zhukovsky's "Dreams"), "Resignation", "Walk". Much belongs to elegies in Mathisson (Batyushkov translated it "On the ruins of castles in Sweden"), Heine, Lenau, Herweg, Platen, Freiligrath, Schlegel and many others. others. The French wrote elegies: Milvois, Debord-Valmor, Kaz. Delavigne, A. Chenier (M. Chenier, the brother of the previous one, translated Gray's elegy), Lamartine, A. Musset, Hugo, and others. In English poetry, apart from Gray, there are Spencer, Jung, Sydney, later Shelley and Byron. In Italy, the main representatives of elegiac poetry are Alamanni, Castaldi, Filican, Guarini, Pindemonte. In Spain: Boscan Almogaver, Gars de les Vega. In Portugal - Camões, Ferreira, Rodrigue Lobo, de Miranda.

Before Zhukovsky, attempts to write elegies in Russia were made by such authors as Pavel Fonvizin, the author of Darling Bogdanovich, Ablesimov, Naryshkin, Nartov and others.

Epigram(Greek επίγραμμα "inscription") - a small satirical poem ridiculing a person or social phenomenon.

Ballad- a lyrical epic work, that is, a story presented in poetic form, of a historical, mythical or heroic nature. The plot of the ballad is usually borrowed from folklore. Ballads are often set to music.



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    Since the time of Aristotle, who gave the first systematization of literary genres in his Poetics, the idea has been strengthened that literary genres are a regular, once and for all fixed system, and the author’s task is only to achieve the most complete correspondence of his work to the essential properties of the chosen genre. Such an understanding of the genre - as a ready-made structure offered to the author - led to the emergence of a whole series of normative poetics, containing instructions for authors on how exactly an ode or tragedy should be written; the pinnacle of this type of writing is Boileau's treatise "Poetic Art" (). This does not mean, of course, that the system of genres as a whole and the features of individual genres really remained unchanged for two thousand years - however, the changes (and very significant ones) were either not noticed by theorists, or they were interpreted by them as damage, deviation from the necessary patterns. And only by the end of the 18th century, the decomposition of the traditional genre system, connected, in accordance with the general principles of literary evolution, both with internal literary processes and with the influence of completely new social and cultural circumstances, went so far that normative poetics could no longer describe and curb literary reality.

    Under these conditions, some traditional genres began to rapidly die out or become marginalized, while others, on the contrary, moved from the literary periphery to the very center of the literary process. And if, for example, the rise of the ballad at the turn of the 18th-19th centuries, associated in Russia with the name of Zhukovsky, turned out to be rather short-lived (although in Russian poetry it then gave an unexpected new surge in the first half of the 20th century - for example, in Bagritsky and Nikolai Tikhonov, - and then at the beginning of the 21st century with Maria Stepanova, Fyodor Svarovsky and Andrey Rodionov), the hegemony of the novel - a genre that normative poetics for centuries did not want to notice as something low and insignificant - dragged on in European literatures for at least a century. Works of a hybrid or indefinite genre nature began to develop especially actively: plays about which it is difficult to say whether this is a comedy or a tragedy, poems that cannot be given any genre definition, except that it is a lyrical poem. The fall of clear genre identifications was also manifested in deliberate authorial gestures aimed at destroying genre expectations: from Lawrence Stern’s novel The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman, which breaks off in mid-sentence, to N. V. Gogol’s Dead Souls, where the subtitle is paradoxical for a prose text the poem can hardly fully prepare the reader for the fact that he will be knocked out of the rather familiar rut of a picaresque novel every now and then with lyrical (and sometimes epic) digressions.

    In the 20th century, literary genres were especially strongly influenced by the separation of mass literature from literature oriented towards artistic search. Mass literature again felt an urgent need for clear genre prescriptions, which significantly increase the predictability of the text for the reader, making it easy to navigate it. Of course, the old genres were not suitable for mass literature, and it rather quickly formed a new system, which was based on the very plastic genre of the novel that had accumulated a lot of diverse experience. At the end of the 19th century and in the first half of the 20th, detective and police novels, science fiction and women's ("pink") novels are being drawn up. It is not surprising that actual literature, aimed at artistic search, strove to deviate as far as possible from mass literature and therefore quite consciously departed from genre definition. But since the extremes converge, the desire to be farther from genre predetermination sometimes led to a new genre formation: for example, the French anti-novel did not want to be a novel so much that the main works of this literary movement, represented by such original authors as Michel Butor and Nathalie Sarrot, are clearly observed signs of a new genre. Thus, modern literary genres (and we already meet such an assumption in the reflections of M. M. Bakhtin) are not elements of any predetermined system: on the contrary, they arise as points of concentration of tension in one place or another of the literary space in accordance with artistic tasks. , here and now put by this circle of authors, and can be defined as "a stable thematically, compositionally and stylistically type of statement" . A special study of such new genres remains a matter for tomorrow.

    Typology of literary genres

    A literary work can be attributed to a particular genre according to various criteria. Below are some of these criteria and examples of genres.

    Hierarchy of genres in classicism

    Classicism, for example, also establishes a strict hierarchy of genres, which are divided into high(ode, tragedy, epic) and low(comedy, satire, fable). Each genre has strictly defined features, mixing of which is not allowed.

    see also

    Notes

    Literature

    • Darwin M. N., Magomedova D. M., Tyupa V. I., Tamarchenko N. D. Theory of literary genres / Tamarchenko N. D. - M .: Academy, 2011. - 256 p. - (Higher professional education. Bachelor's degree). - ISBN 978-5-7695-6936-4.
    • Genre as a reading tool / Kozlov V.I. - Rostov-on-Don: Innovative Humanitarian Projects, 2012. - 234 p. - ISBN 978-5-4376-0073-3.
    • Lozinskaya E.V. Genre // Western literary criticism of the XX century. Encyclopedia / Tsurganova E. A. - INION RAS: Intrada, 2004. - S. 145-148. - 560 p. - ISBN 5-87604-064-9.
    • Leiderman N. L. Theory of the genre. Research and analysis / Lipovetsky M. N., Ermolenko S. I. - Yekaterinburg: Ural State Pedagogical University, 2010. - 904 p. - ISBN 978-5-9042-0504-1.
    • Smirnov I. P. literary time. (Hypo) theory of literary genres. - M. : Publishing house of the Russian Christian Humanitarian Academy, 2008. - 264 p. - ISBN 978-5-88812-256-3.
    • Tamarchenko N. D. Genre // Literary encyclopedia of terms and concepts / Nikolyukin A. N. . - INION RAN: Intelvak, 2001. - S. 263-265. - 1596 p. - ISBN 5-93264-026-X.
    • Todorov Ts. An introduction to fantasy literature. - M. : House of Intellectual Books, 1999. - 144 p. - ISBN 5-7333-0435-9.
    • Freudenberg O. M. Poetics of plot and genre. - M. : Labyrinth, 1997. - 450 p. - ISBN 5-8760-4108-4.
    • Schaeffer J.-M. What is a literary genre? - M. : Editorial URSS, 2010. - ISBN 9785354013241.
    • Chernets L.V. Literary genres (problems of typology and poetics). - M. : Publishing House MGU, 1982.
    • Chernyak V. D. , Chernyak M.A. . Genres of mass literature, Formality of mass literature// Mass literature in concepts and terms. - Science, Flint, 2015. - S. 50, 173-174. - 193 p. -

    Genre is the type of content form that determines the integrity of a literary work, which is determined by the unity of the theme, composition and style; a historically established group of literary works, united by a set of features of content and form.

    Genre in literature

    In the artistic structure, the genre category is a modification of the literary type; the view, in turn, is a variety of the literary genre. There is another approach to the generic relationship: - genre - genre variety, modification or form; in some cases, it is proposed to distinguish only between genus and genre.
    The belonging of genres to traditional literary genres (epos, lyrics, drama, lyrical epic) determines their content and thematic orientation.

    Genre in ancient literature

    In ancient literature, the genre was an ideal artistic norm. The ancient ideas about the genre norm were addressed mainly to poetic forms, prose was not taken into account, as it was considered trivial reading matter. Poets often followed the artistic patterns of their predecessors, trying to surpass the pioneers of the genre. Ancient Roman literature relied on the poetic experience of ancient Greek authors. Virgil (1st century BC) continued the epic tradition of Homer (8th century BC), since the Aeneid is oriented towards the Odyssey and the Iliad. Horace (I century BC) owns odes written in the manner of the ancient Greek poets Arion (VII-VI centuries BC) and Pindar (VI-V centuries BC). Seneca (І century BC) developed the dramatic art, reviving the work of Aeschylus (VI-V century BC) and Euripides (V century BC).

    The origins of the systematization of genres go back to the treatises of Aristotle “Poetics” and Horace “The Science of Poetry”, in which the genre denoted a set of artistic norms, their regular and fixed system, and the author believed the purpose of the composition to be in accordance with the properties of the chosen genre. Understanding the genre as a constructed model of a work led to the subsequent emergence of a number of normative poetics, including dogmas and laws of poetry.

    Renewal of the European genre system in the 11th-17th centuries

    The European genre system began its renewal in the Middle Ages. In the XI century. new lyrical genres of troubadour poets arose (serenades, albs), later the genre of the medieval novel was born (chivalrous novels about King Arthur, Lancelot, Tristan and Isolde). In the XIV century. Italian poets had a significant impact on the development of new genres: Dante Alighieri wrote the poem "The Divine Comedy" (1307-1321), which combines the narrative and the genre of vision, Francesco Petrarca approved the genre of the sonnet ("Book of Songs", 1327-1374), Giovanni Boccaccio canonized the novel genre (The Decameron, 1350-1353). At the turn of the XVI-XVII centuries. genre varieties of drama were expanded by the English poet and playwright W. Shakespeare, whose famous plays - Hamlet (1600-1601), King Lear (1608), Macbeth (1603-1606) - contain in themselves signs of tragedy and comedy and belong to tragicomedies.

    Code and hierarchy of genres in classicism

    The most complete, systematic and significant set of genre norms was formed in the 17th century. with the advent of the treatise poem by the French poet Nicolas Boileau-Despreo "Poetic Art" (1674). The work defines the genre system of classicism, regulated by reason, a generally understood style with the division of literary genres into epic, dramatic, lyrical genera. The structure of the canonical genres of classicism goes back to ancient forms and images.

    The literature of classicism was characterized by a strict hierarchy of genres, delimiting them into high (ode, epic, tragedy) and low (fable, satire, comedy). Mixing of genre features was not allowed.

    Genres of literary aesthetics of romanticism

    Literature of the Romantic era in the 18th century. did not obey the canons of classicism, as a result of which the traditional genre system lost its advantage. In the context of a change in literary trends, deviations from the rules of normative poetics, classical genres are being rethought, as a result of which some of them ceased to exist, while others, on the contrary, were entrenched.

    At the turn of the XVIII-XIX centuries. in the center of the literary aesthetics of romanticism were lyrical genres - ode ("Ode on the capture of Khotin" by M. Lomonosov, 1742; "Felitsa" by G. R. Derzhavin, 1782, "Ode to Joy" by F. Schiller, 1785 .), a romantic poem (“Gypsies” by A. S. Pushkin, 1824), a ballad (“Lyudmila” (1808), “Svetlana” (1813) by V. A. Zhukovsky), an elegy (“Rural cemetery” by V. A. Zhukovsky, 1808); comedy prevailed in the drama (“Woe from Wit” by A. S. Griboyedov, 1825).

    Prose genres flourished: epic novel, story, short story. The most common type of epic literature of the XIX century. considered a novel, which was called the "eternal genre". The novels of Russian writers L. N. Tolstoy ("War and Peace", 1865-1869; "Anna Karenina", 1875-1877; "Resurrection", 1899) and F. M Dostoevsky ("Crime and Punishment", 1866; "The Idiot", 1868; "Demons", 1871-1872; "The Brothers Karamazov", 1879-1880).

    The Formation of Genres in the Literature of the 20th Century

    The formation of popular literature in the twentieth century, its need for stable thematic, compositional and stylistic prescriptions led to the formation of a new system of genres, based primarily on the "absolute center of the genre system of literature" according to the Russian scientist M. M. Bakhtin - the novel.
    Within the framework of popular literature, new genres have developed: romance novel, sentimental novel, crime novel (action movie, thriller), dystopian novel, anti-novel, science fiction, fantasy, etc.

    Modern literary genres are not part of a predetermined structure, they arise as a result of the embodiment of the author's ideas in verbal and artistic works.

    The origins of genre varieties

    The appearance of genre varieties can be associated both with the literary direction, trend, school - a romantic poem, classic ode, symbolist drama, etc., and with the names of individual authors who introduced genre-stylistic forms of the artistic whole into literary circulation (Pindaric ode , Byron's poem, Balzac's novel, etc.), which form traditions, and this means the possibility of different types of their assimilation (imitation, stylization, etc.).

    The word genre comes from French genre, which means genus, species.

    Instruction

    Study the epic genre of literature. It includes the following: - story: a relatively small prose work (from 1 to 20 pages), describing a case, a small incident or an acute dramatic situation in which the hero finds himself. The action of the story usually takes no more than one or two days in duration. The scene may not change throughout the story;
    - a story: a work is enough (an average of 100 pages), where from 1 to 10 characters are considered. The location may change. The duration of action can cover a significant period, from one month to a year or more. The story in the story unfolds vividly in time and space. Significant changes can occur in the lives of heroes - moving, and meetings;
    - novel: large epic form from 200 pages. The novel can trace the life of the characters from birth to death. Includes an extensive system of storylines. Time can affect past epochs and be carried far into the future;
    - an epic novel can consider the life of several generations.

    Familiarize yourself with the lyrical genre of literature. It includes the following genres:
    - ode: a poetic form, the theme of which is the glorification of a person or event;
    - satire: a poetic form that aims to ridicule some vice, situation or person worthy of ridicule
    - sonnet: a poetic form with a strict compositional structure. For example, the English model of a sonnet, which ends with two obligatory stanzas containing some kind of aphorism;
    - the following poetic genres are also known - elegy, epigram, free verse, haiku, etc.

    The following genres belong to the dramatic genre of literature: - tragedy: a dramatic work, in the final of which there is the death of the hero. Such an ending for the tragedy is the only possible solution to the dramatic situation;
    - comedy: a dramatic work in which the main meaning and essence is laughter. It may be satirical or kinder in nature, but every incident in a comedy makes the viewer/reader laugh;
    - drama: a dramatic work, in the center of which is the inner world of a person, the problem of choice, the search for truth. Drama is the most widespread genre in our time.

    Types of Literature- this is a commonality of verbal and artistic works according to the type of the author's attitude to the artistic whole.

    There are three genres in literature: drama, epic, lyric.

    epic- (translated from ancient Greek - word, narration) - an objective image of reality, a story about events, the fate of heroes, their actions and adventures, an image of the external side of what is happening. The text has a mostly descriptive-narrative structure. The author directly expresses his attitude to the events depicted.

    Drama- (from the ancient Greek - action) - the image of events and relationships between the characters on the stage in actions, clashes, conflicts; features are: the expression of the author's position through remarks (explanations), characters are created due to the replicas of the characters, monologue and dialogic speech.

    Lyrics(from the ancient Greek “performed to the sounds of a lyre, sensitive”) experiencing events; depiction of feelings, inner world, emotional state; feeling becomes the main event; external life is presented subjectively, through the perception of the lyrical hero. The lyrics have a special language organization (rhythm, rhyme, size).

    Each type of literature in turn includes a number of genres.

    Genre- characteristic of a particular genus. This is a historically established group of works, united by common features of content and form. Literary genres are divided into epic, dramatic and lyrical.

    Epic genres:

    • epic novel - a comprehensive depiction of people's life in a critical historical era;
    • the novel is a depiction of life in all its fullness and diversity;
    • a story is a depiction of events in their natural sequence;
    • essay - a documentary depiction of the events of one person's life;
    • short story - an action-packed story with an unexpected ending;
    • story - a short work with a limited number of characters;
    • a parable is a moral teaching in allegorical form.

    Drama genres:

    • tragedy - literal translation - a goat's song, an insoluble conflict that causes suffering and death of the heroes in the finale;
    • drama - connects the tragic and the comic. At the core is a sharp but solvable conflict.

    Lyric genres:

    • ode - (genre of classicism) a poem, a song of praise, praising the achievements, dignity of an outstanding person, hero;
    • elegy - a sad, sad poem containing philosophical reflections on the meaning of life;
    • sonnet - a lyrical poem of a strict form (14 lines);
    • song - a poem consisting of several verses and a chorus;
    • message - a poetic letter addressed to one person;
    • epigram, epithalama, madrigal, epitaph, etc. - small forms of well-aimed short verses dedicated to specific goals of the writer.

    Lyric-epic genres: works that combine elements of poetry and epic:

    • ballad - a plot poem on a legendary, historical theme;
    • a poem is a voluminous poem with a detailed plot, with a large number of characters, which has lyrical digressions;
    • a novel in verse is a novel in poetic form.

    Genres, being historical categories, appear, develop, and eventually "leave" from the "active reserve" of artists, depending on the historical era: the ancient lyric poets did not know the sonnet; in our time, an ode born in antiquity and popular in the 17th-18th centuries has become an archaic genre; nineteenth-century romanticism gave rise to detective literature, and so on.

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