Literature and interethnic relations at the turn of the 20th-21st centuries in collections of essays by E. Goryukhina
- Authors: Muslimova M.S.1, Yakhiyaeva S.K.2,3
-
Affiliations:
- Dagestan Scientific Research Institute of Pedagogy named after A.A. Takho-Godi
- Dagestan State University
- Republican Multidisciplinary Lyceum
- Issue: Vol 29, No 1 (2024)
- Pages: 56-65
- Section: LITERARY CRITICISM
- URL: https://journals.rudn.ru/literary-criticism/article/view/40025
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.22363/2312-9220-2024-29-1-56-65
- EDN: https://elibrary.ru/ADDEDW
Cite item
Full Text
Abstract
The authors investigate the problem of reflecting the Caucasian local wars of the turn of the XX and XXI centuries in the essays by E. Goryukhina included in the books “The teachers journey to the Caucasus” and “Don’t divide us, Lord, don’t divide us”. The purpose of the study is to analyze the author’s disclosure of the peculiarities of interethnic relations during military conflicts in the Caucasus and to identify the value meanings of the lessons of the events that took place. As a methodological basis, a literary analysis of the content and form of the texts studied, a comparative analysis of documentary-historical and essay literature is chosen. The genre originality of E. Goryukhina’s essays is substantiated, the author's position on the raised problem and the position of the peoples involved in the military conflict are identified, the alienness of war to the genuine interests of the people is shown, the mental features of the concept of “Caucasian man” are revealed, the influence of war on the specifics of historically formed national relations between the peoples of the Caucasus, the Caucasus and Russia is discovered. Conclusions are drawn about the high importance of E. Goryukhina’s essays for understanding the humanistic psychology of the Caucasian peoples and establishing mutual understanding between peoples, for overcoming stereotypes. The complexity and depth of historically formed relations between ethnic groups requiring consideration and careful preservation are disclosed.
Keywords
About the authors
Miyasat Sh. Muslimova
Dagestan Scientific Research Institute of Pedagogy named after A.A. Takho-Godi
Email: miya31@rambler.ru
ORCID iD: 0009-0005-4014-2665
Doctor of Pedagogical Sciences, senior researcher, Sector of Russian Language and Literature
5 Pushkina St, Makhachkala, 367013, Russian FederationSaidat Kh. Yakhiyaeva
Dagestan State University; Republican Multidisciplinary Lyceum
Author for correspondence.
Email: saidat58@mail.ru
ORCID iD: 0000-0002-4341-7469
Doctor of Pedagogical Sciences, Associate Professor, Associate Professor of the Department of Methods of Teaching Russian Language and Literature, Dagestan State University; Associate Professor of the Department of Teaching Methods of Russian Language and Literature, Republican Multidisciplinary Lyceum for Gifted Children
45 M. Gadzhieva St, Makhachkala, 367000, Russian Federation; 16 Aziza Aliyeva St, Makhachkala, 367000, Russian FederationReferences
- Garunova, N.N. (2013). Discussions about the term Caucasian War. In V.V. Chernous (Ed.), Materials of the International Forum of Historians of the Caucasus (Rostov-on-Don, October 14–15, 2013) (p. 39). Rostov-on-Don. (In Russ.)
- Ginzburg, L.Ya. (1979). About the literary hero. Leningrad: Sovetskii Pisatel'. Leningradskoe Otdelenie Publ. (In Russ.)
- Gordin, Ya.A. (2008). Why Russia needed the Caucasus. Illusions and reality. St. Petersburg. (In Russ.)
- Grodno, N.N. (2009). The Caucasian war of the XXI century. Moscow. (In Russ.)
- Kokoshin, A.A. (2018). Questions of the applied theory of war. Moscow: Vysshaya Shkola Ekonomiki Publ. (In Russ.) http://doi.org/10.24411/2410-9916-2021-10101
- Kopichev, O.A., & Nikolaev, A.E. (2021). Modern wars: Analysis of trends in the development of interstate confrontation, classification of forms and methods of struggle, formation of signs and criteria of military conflict. Management, Communication and Security Systems, (1), 1–32. (In Russ.) http://doi.org/10.24411/2410-9916-2021-10101
- Makarenko, S.I. (2017). Information warfare and electronic warfare in network-centric wars of the beginning of the XXI century. St. Petersburg: Naukoemkie Tekhnologii Publ. (In Russ.)
- Myalo, K.G. (2002). Russia and the last wars of the twentieth century. Moscow. (In Russ.)
- Orlova, E.I. (2022). Literature and journalism in Russia (interaction and research approaches). Medi@l'manakh, (5), 18–25. (In Russ.)
- Orlova, E.I. (2023). Literary process and journalism: questions of terminology. Journalism in 2022: Creativity, Profession, Industry: Materials of the International Scientific and Practical Conference (Moscow, February 3–4, 2023) (pp. 584–585). Moscow. (In Russ.)
- Provatorova, O.N. (2017). “Sakhalin Island” by A.P. Chekhov – “The thought of an artist and a man about his time”. Bulletin of the Orenburg State University, (1), 108–113. (In Russ.)
- Safronova, E.Yu. (2014). F.M. Dostoevsky's artistic “Code”: The system of punishments in “Notes from the Dead House”. Philology and Man, (1), 77–89. (In Russ.)
- Savchenko, T.D. (2009). Travel literature about the Caucasus of the second half of the XX century (dissertation of the Candidate of Philological Sciences). Krasnodar. (In Russ.)
- Shcherbakova, M.I. (2022). Sevastopol stories by L.N. Tolstoy: Spiritual meanings of the Crimean War. Studia Litterarum, 7(2), 162–173. (In Russ.) http://doi.org/10.22455/2500-4247-2022-7-2-162-173