Biographies Characteristics Analysis

Lyrics and its genres. Lyrics as a literary genre

LYRICS- a kind of literature, in which the world is mastered aesthetically as the realm of subjectivity. The object is the inner world of a person. Content - experience (thoughts, feelings). The objective world in lyrics is a reason for experiencing or its external imprint. The main values ​​are spiritual: nobility and power of thought, a culture of feelings, a wealth of emotions.

Bearers of lyrical experiences:

2) The hero of role-playing lyrics - the hero acts differently in relation to the author (special speech style is different from lit. norms)

3) Poetic world. Hood. reality is a visually visible embodiment of experience.

The subject of the image in the lyrics is the inner world of a person. Content dominant: experiences (some kind of feeling, thought, mood). The form of verbal expression is a monologue. Functions of the word - expresses the state of the speaker. The emotional sphere of human emotions, the inner world, the way of influence - suggestiveness (suggestion). In the epic and drama, they try to identify common patterns, in the lyrics - individual states of human consciousness.

Irrational feelings and aspirations. Uniqueness, although there is an element of generalization to convey their thoughts to contemporaries. Consonance with the era, age, emotional experiences. As a kind of literature, lyrics are always important.

Feelings are at the core. Lyrical plot- this is the development and shades of the author's emotions. It is often said that the lyrics are plotless, but this is not so.

The poet defends the right to write in a light, small genre. Small genres were elevated to the absolute. Imitation of other genres, playing with rhythms. Sometimes cycles of poems appear due to life background.

Lyrical hero - this concept is introduced by Yu. Tynyanov and L.Ya. Ginzburg "About Lyrics". There are synonyms "lyrical consciousness", "lyrical subject" and "lyrical self". Most often, such a definition is the image of the poet in the lyrics, the artistic counterpart of the poet, which grows out of the text of lyrical compositions. This is the bearer of experience, expression in the lyrics. The term arose due to the fact that it is impossible to put an equal sign between the poet and the bearer of consciousness. This gap appears at the beginning of the 20th century in Batyushkov's lyrics.

There may be different media, so two kinds of lyrics : autopsychological and role-playing. Example: Block "I am Hamlet ..." and Pasternak "The rumble has subsided ...". The image is the same, but the lyrics are different. Blok plays in the performance, this is the experience of interpersonal relationships - autopsychological lyrics. Pasternak has a role-playing one, even included in the cycle of Yuri Zhivago. Most of it in verse

Lyric genres originated in ancient times. Here are some examples of genre lyrical works: hymn (praise), ode (glorification of a person or event), epitaph (tombstone inscription, sometimes comic), epithalama (poems for marriage), epigram (satire on a person), dithyramb (sympathy for one person ), message (appeal to a person in the form of a letter). This division persisted for a long time, but around the middle of the 19th century and later, lyrical genres of a large form began to appear, for example, a lyric poem (Whitman's "Leaves of Grass", Blok's "The Nightingale Garden"). They changed a short lyrical song - an elegy (Zhukovsky, Lermontov, Beranger). Such genres are related to the ballad genre (“Lyudmila” and “Svetlana” by V. Zhukovsky, “Knight for an Hour” by N. Nekrasov). Some lyrical genres are called romances because of their musical arrangement.

TYPES (GENRES) OF LYRICAL WORKS:

(ode, hymn, song, elegy, sonnet, epigram, message)

ODA (from the Greek “song”) is a choral, solemn song.

HYMN (from Greek “praise”) is a solemn song based on programmatic verses.

EPIGRAM (from Greek “inscription”) is a short satirical poem of a mocking nature that arose in the 3rd century BC. e.

ELEGY - a genre of lyrics dedicated to sad thoughts or a lyrical poem imbued with sadness.

MESSAGE - a poetic letter, an appeal to a specific person, a request, a wish, a confession.

SONNET (from the Provencal sonette - "song") - a poem of 14 lines, which has a certain rhyming system and strict stylistic laws.

Drama as a literary genre. genres of drama.

Drama - (another Greek action, action) is one of the literary movements. Drama as a kind of literature, in contrast to lyrics and like epic, drama reproduces primarily the external world for the author - actions, relationships between people, conflicts. Unlike the epic, it has not a narrative, but a dialogical form. In it, as a rule, there are no internal monologues, author's characteristics of characters and direct author's comments of the depicted. In Aristotle's Poetics, drama is spoken of as the imitation of action through action, not storytelling. This provision has not been outdated to this day. Dramatic works are characterized by acute conflict situations that encourage characters to verbal and physical actions. The author's speech can sometimes be in the drama, but it is of an auxiliary nature. Sometimes the author briefly comments on the replicas of his characters, makes indications of their gestures, intonation.

Drama is closely related to theatrical art and must meet the demands of the theatre.

Drama is regarded as the crowning achievement of literary creativity. Examples of drama are the play "Thunderstorm" by Ostrovsky, "At the Bottom" by Gorkov.

It is necessary to talk about dramatic genres, not forgetting that drama itself is a genre that arose at the junction of literature and theatre. It is impossible to analyze them separately from each other. We have already spoken about drama enough, however, the importance of drama as a theatrical act has not yet been given.

In order for any work to be called a drama, it must at least contain a conflict or a conflict situation. The conflict has the right to be both comical and tragic. Drama often contains a large amount of both. This is probably why it is often treated in specialized literature as an intermediate genre.

Drama can be psychological (both on the stage and in literature), social, philosophical, based on everyday or historical conflict, and a combination of the above types is also often found, this will be especially characteristic of literary drama. Drama can also be national, so you can highlight the Spanish drama - it is sometimes also called the "drama of honor" or "the comedy of the cloak and sword", here everything depends entirely on what kind of conflict is developed in the drama. Drama genres can only appear in literature. There really aren't too many of them:

play

Comedy

Sideshow

Tragedy

Burlesque

Chronicle (historical, psychological, retrospective)

Scenario

Dramatic prose differs from ordinary prose primarily in that it contains many constantly changing events, with a large number of characters, much more than, say, in a normal story, although the volume of the narrative may be the same. It is believed that the reader is able to remember no more than 5-7 acting characters, the drama often violates this law, the reader of a dramatic work always has the opportunity to look at the flyleaf and see who exactly is the hero that he completely forgot about.

Lyric works.

The lyrical-epic genre of literature is works of art in poetic form, which combine epic and lyrical images of life.

In the works of the lyrical-epic kind, life is reflected, on the one hand, in a poetic narrative about the actions and experiences of a person or people, about the events in which they take part; on the other hand, in the experiences of the poet-narrator, caused by the pictures of life, the behavior of the characters in his poetic story. These experiences of the poet-narrator are usually expressed in works of the lyrical-epic kind in the so-called lyrical digressions, sometimes not directly related to the course of events in the work; lyrical digressions are one of the types of author's speech.

Such, for example, are the well-known lyrical digressions in A. S. Pushkin's poetic novel "Eugene Onegin", in his poems; such are the chapters “From the Author”, “About Me” and lyrical digressions in other chapters of the poem in A. T. Tvardovsky’s poem “Vasily Terkin”.

LYROEPIC TYPES (GENRES): poem, ballad.

POEM (from the Greek poieio - “I do, I create”) - a large poetic work with a narrative or lyrical plot, usually on a historical or legendary topic.

BALLAD - a story song of dramatic content, a story in verse.

TYPES (GENRES) OF DRAMA WORKS:

tragedy, comedy, drama (in the narrow sense).

TRAGEDY (from the Greek tragos ode - “goat song”) is a dramatic work depicting a tense struggle of strong characters and passions, which usually ends with the death of the hero.

COMEDY (from the Greek komos ode - "fun song") - a dramatic work with a cheerful, funny plot, usually ridiculing social or domestic vices.

DRAMA (“action”) is a literary work in the form of a dialogue with a serious plot, depicting a person in her dramatic relationship with society. Drama may be tragicomedy or melodrama.

VAUDEVILLE - a genre variety of comedy, it is a light comedy with singing couplets and dancing.

Lyric genres help us to classify this special kind of literature, which, first of all, appeals to the personal feelings of the poet and the reader, their mood. Lyrics reflect sensitive experiences, emotions, often works of this kind of literature are characterized by sincerity and excitement.

Poem

The poem is the main genre of lyrics, which is familiar to everyone without exception. This is a work of relatively small size, written necessarily in verse.

In a broad sense, a poem is understood as works of different genres and even types, they often include elegies, sonnets and ballads, but in the 19th-20th centuries there was a clearer definition. During this period, a poem was understood exclusively as a work that allows reflecting the inner world of the author, the many-sided manifestations of his soul, it had to be associated with lyricism.

With the development of the classical poem, its purpose for the lyrical exploration of the world became clearer. Separately, it was emphasized that in the poem the author always strives to connect life in one moment, focusing on the state of the world around him. In this fundamental function of the lyric genre, the poem is opposed to short stories and stories written in verse, as well as lyric poems, which describe a large number of interconnected experiences.

One can find many examples of poems in Pushkin's work. The genre of lyrics, to which this section of our article is devoted, was one of the main ones in his work. As an illustration, we can cite the poem "Winter Road".

The moon makes its way through the wavy fogs, It pours sad light on the sad glades. Along the winter, boring road, the three greyhounds run, the monotonous bell tiringly rattles. Wilderness and snow... Towards me Only versts striped Come across alone... Boring, sad... Tomorrow, Nina, Tomorrow returning to my sweetheart, I'll forget by the fireplace, I'll look without looking. Midnight will not separate us. It's sad, Nina: my path is boring, My coachman fell silent, The bell is monotonous, The moon face is foggy.

Sonnet


Having studied the main genres of the epic, lyrics and drama, you can easily navigate the world and domestic literature. Another popular genre that you definitely need to talk about in this article is the sonnet.

Unlike most other genres of lyrics, the sonnet has a well-defined structure. It necessarily consists of 14 lines, which form two quatrains and two tercets. This is how a classic sonnet looks like, but the so-called Shakespearean sonnet is also popular in literature, which consists of three quatrains and one final final couplet. The sonnet in this form was especially popular thanks to the English poet and playwright William Shakespeare.

It is believed that in the sonnet there must be an emotional and plot turning point. Often their theme is devoted to love.

In Russia, sonnets also had a certain popularity. As a rule, they were written in iambic 5-foot with minor deviations. The most famous are the domestic sonnets of Genrikh Sapgir, Timur Kibirov, Sergey Kalugin.

An example is the sonnets of William Shakespeare, which are well known in Russian in the translations of Boris Pasternak.

Exhausted by everything, I want to die. Longing to watch how the poor man toils, And how the rich man lives jokingly, And trust and fall into a mess, And watch how impudence climbs into the world, And the maiden's honor rolls to the bottom, And to know that there is no progress for perfection And to see the power of weakness in captivity, And to remember that thoughts are closed in the mouth, And the mind takes down the stupidity of the blasphemy, And straightforwardness is reputed to be simple, And kindness serves evil.

Oh yeah

Among the genres of epic, lyrics, drama, there are similar ones that are aimed at the bottom of the realization of a particular goal. For example, odes are required to praise a specific person, event or state. There are similar analogies in other types of literature.

In Russia, the ode was at one time extremely popular. At the same time, the ode was born in Ancient Greece; in Roman literature, this genre of lyrics was spread thanks to Horace. It was used in Russia in the 18th century. The brightest representatives are Gavriil Derzhavin and Mikhail Lomonosov. Let's take Derzhavin's work as an example.

You are GOD, infinite in space, Living in the movement of matter, Eternal in the course of time, Without faces, in the three faces of the Divine, The Spirit is everywhere and one, Who has no place and reason, Whom no one could comprehend, Who fills everything with Himself, Embraces, builds, saves, Whom we call - God! Measure the deep ocean, Count the sands, the rays of the planets, Although the mind could be high, You have no number and measure! dares, It disappears in Your majesty, Like a past moment in eternity. Chaos being pre-temporal From the abyss You called for eternity; And eternity, born before the age, In Yourself You founded. Creating everything with a single word, Stretching into the new creation, You were, You are, You will be forever. You contain the chain of beings in Yourself, You contain it and live; will be born. As on a filthy, clear day in winter, dust particles and They sparkle, Rotate, sway, shine, So the stars in the abyss under You. Millions of lighted luminaries Flow in immeasurability; They create your laws, Life-giving rays pour; Or, together, all the worlds are shining, Before You - like the night before the day. Like a drop, lowered into the sea, All this firmament is before You; - In the air ocean of it, Worlds multiplying by a million A hundred times other worlds, and then, When I dare to compare with You, It will only be a single point; And I am nothing in front of You. Nothing! - but You shine in me with the Majesty of Your kindness; In me You depict Yourself, Like the sun in a small drop of water. Nothing! - but I feel life, Some kind of unsatisfied I fly, Always a guy in heights. - The rank of nature broadcasts, My heart says to me, My mind assures me; You are - and I'm no longer nothing! Heavenly spirits And a chain of beings has bound everyone with me. I am the link of the worlds that exist everywhere, I am the extreme degree of matter, I am the focus of the living, The initial line of the Deity. I decay in the dust with my body, I command the thunders with my mind; I am a god! - But being so wonderful, Where did I come from? - Unknown; But I could not be myself. I am your creation, the Creator, I am a creature of your wisdom, the Source of life, the Good Giver, the Soul of my soul and the King! Your truth needed it, So that My immortal being would pass over the mortal abyss; So that my spirit would clothe itself in mortality, And so that through death I would return, Father! into Your immortality. Inexplicable, incomprehensible! I know that my souls are powerless in Imagination And to draw Your shadow.

Romance

In the genre of lyrics, works written in the form of romances occupy a special place. After all, this is a special genre that is at the intersection of literature and music. As a rule, this is a short piece of poetry set to music.

Domestic romance was mainly formed at the beginning of the 19th century. Romanticism, popular at that time, had a great influence on him. The most famous representatives of this genre were Varlamov, Alyabyev, Gurilev. In many Russian romances, you can find gypsy motifs, so even several subgenres were formed. For example, cruel or salon romance.

At the beginning of the 20th century, the so-called golden age of Russian romance came, when Vertinsky, Vyaltsev, Plevitskaya set the tone, during the Soviet era this genre did not lose its popularity.

An example is the classic novel by Vertinsky.

I got angels, Wound up in broad daylight. Everything that I once laughed at, Everything now delights me! gave birth. I was against it. Diapers will begin ... Why complicate your life? But the girls climbed into my heart, Like kittens in someone else's bed! And now with a new meaning and purpose, I, like a bird, build my nest And sometimes over their cradle I sing to myself in surprise: - Daughters, daughters , My daughters! Where are you, my little nights, Where are you nightingales? .. A lot of Russian sun and light Will be in the life of my daughters, And what is most important is That they will have a homeland! There will be a house. There will be a lot of toys. We will hang a star on the Christmas tree. young, like them! And I will ask the good God, To prolong my sinful days. My daughters will grow up, my daughters ... They will have nightingales, there will be nightingales!

Poem


In the genre of lyrics, we will not be able to meet a novel, but a poem can be considered its full-fledged analogue. This is a rather large work, which is of a lyrical-epic nature, which allows it to stand out among other similar works.

As a rule, it belongs to a certain author, has not only a poetic, but also a narrative form. Literary critics distinguish romantic, heroic, satirical, critical poems.

Throughout the history of literature, this genre has undergone many changes. For example, if many centuries ago the poem was an exclusively epic work, as an example we can cite Homer's Iliad, then already in the 20th century there appeared samples of exclusively lyrical examples of this genre, which include Anna Akhmatova's Poem without a Hero.

It is interesting that prose works are sometimes called this way. For example, "Moscow - Petushki" by Venedikt Erofeev, "Dead Souls" by Nikolai Gogol, "Pedagogical Poem" by Anton Makarenko.

An example is an excerpt from "Poem without a Hero" by Anna Akhmatova.

I lit the cherished candles And together with the one who did not come to me I meet the forty-first year, But the Lord's power is with us, The flame drowned in the crystal And the wine burns like poison ... These are bursts of terrible conversation, When all the delirium is resurrected, And the clock still does not strike .. There is no measure of my anxiety, I, like a shadow, stand on the threshold Guarding the last comfort. And I hear a lingering bell, And I feel cold damp. Wrong: Doge's Venice It's nearby. But masks in the hallway And cloaks, and wands, and crowns You will have to leave today. I decided to glorify you today, New Year's tomboys. This Faust, that Don Juan ...

Elegy


Describing which genres in lyrics deserve the most attention, it is necessary to tell about the elegy. This is a kind of emotional result of deep philosophical reflection, which is enclosed in a poetic form. As a rule, in an elegy, the author tries to understand complex life problems.

The elegy originated in ancient Greek poetry. At that time, this was the name of a poem written in a stanza of a certain size, without putting any more meaning into this concept.

For Greek poets, the elegy could be accusatory, and philosophical, and sad, and political, and militant. Among the Romans, elegies were mainly devoted to love, while the works became more free-form.

Zhukovsky made the first successful attempts to write elegies in Russian literature. Before that, there were attempts at writing in this genre by Fonvizin, Ablesimov, Bogdanovich, Naryshkin.

A new era in Russian poetry was laid by Zhukovsky's translation of Gray's elegy called "Rural Cemetery". After that, the genre finally went beyond the rhetorical framework, denoting that the main thing is an appeal to intimacy, sincerity and depth. Such a change is clearly visible in the new methods of versification, which are used by Zhukovsky and the poets of the next generations.

By the 19th century, it became fashionable to call their works elegies, as Baratynsky, Batyushkov, Yazykov often do. Over time, this tradition came to naught, but the elegiac tone remained in the works of many poets not only of the 19th, but also of the 20th centuries.

As a classic example, it would be correct to consider just an excerpt from the "Rural Cemetery" translated by Zhukovsky.

The day is already turning pale, hiding behind the mountain; Noisy herds crowd over the river; A tired peasant with a slow foot Walks, thinking, to his calm hut, In a foggy twilight, the neighborhood disappears ... Silence is everywhere; everywhere a dead dream; Only occasionally, buzzing, the evening beetle flickers, Only a dull ringing of horns is heard in the distance. Only a wild owl, lurking under the ancient vault of That tower, laments, listening to the moon, At the peace that has disturbed the midnight arrival of Her silent dominion.

Ballad


The ballad is a well-known lyric genre that was often referred to by Romantic poets in the 18th and 19th centuries. He came to Russia in parallel with the popularity of romanticism in literature.

The first Russian ballad, which was also original both in content and in form, was the work of Gavriil Kamenev called "Thunderstorm". But the most famous representative of this genre is considered to be Vasily Zhukovsky, who even received the nickname "ballade player" from his contemporaries.

In 1808, Zhukovsky wrote "Lyudmila", which makes a strong impression on others, then translates the best ballads of European romantic poets, under whose influence the genre penetrates into Russia. This is, first of all, Goethe, Schiller, Scott. In 1813, Zhukovsky's famous ballad "Svetlana" was published, which many literary critics still consider his best work.

Pushkin also wrote ballads, in particular, many researchers attribute his "Song of the Prophetic Oleg" to this genre. To get a full picture of this original genre, let's take an excerpt from Zhukovsky's "Svetlana" as an example.

Once on Epiphany evening, the girls wondered: Out of the gate slipper, Taking it off their feet, throwing; Weed the snow; under the window Listened; they fed counting grains to the chicken; They drowned bright wax; They put a golden ring in a bowl of pure water, Emerald earrings; They spread a white dress And sang songs in tune over the bowl.

Novel in verse


A novel in verse is a genre that is frozen at the intersection of poetry and prose. It organically combines the composition, the system of characters, chronotopes, in the author's variations, analogies are possible between a poetic epic and a novel in verse itself.

The formation of this genre occurs when the genre of the poem has finally taken shape. A novel in verse, as a rule, is a more voluminous work that sets itself more global tasks. At the same time, the boundaries between these genres remain conditional to a certain extent.

In Russia, the most famous novel in verse is Pushkin's work "Eugene Onegin", an excerpt from it and we will give as an example. Many critics believe that it is precisely on the example of this "encyclopedia of Russian life" that one can clearly see how a novel in verse differs from a poem. In particular, in the first one one can observe the development of the characters' characters and the analytical setting, which is not found in most poems.

My uncle of the most honest rules, When he fell seriously ill, He forced himself to respect And could not invent better. , To fix his pillows, It is sad to bring medicine, Sigh and think to yourself: When the devil takes you!

Epigram

The epigram is a lyrical genre that was extremely popular at one time, although many no longer associate it with literature, but with journalism and journalism. After all, this is a very small work in which any social phenomenon or a specific person is ridiculed.

In Russian poetry, well-known epigrams began to be written by Antioch Cantemir. This genre was popular among the poets of the 18th century (Lomonosov, Trediakovsky). During the time of Pushkin and Zhukovsky, the genre itself was somewhat transformed, turning more into a satire of a salon character, similar to album poems.

An example of an epigram would be one of Zhukovsky's works.

NEWBOOK "Friend, why did you sit down?" - "The villain put a crown on me!" - "Well! I see no evil in this!" - "Oh, it's hard!" Vasily Zhukovsky

Limerick


Let's finish our review of the main lyrical genres with a somewhat frivolous limerick. It appeared in England, has a clear form and a certain content.

This is a satirical five-verse, which is absurd in nature. The main thing is that his composition is subject to strict rules. The first line names the character and also mentions where they come from. The second tells what he did, or some of his features. The remaining lines are devoted to the consequences of these actions or properties of the hero.

Once upon a time there was an old man from Hong Kong, Dancing to the music of the gong. But they told him: “Stop it - or Get out of Hong Kong completely!” Edward Lear

Over the millennia of cultural development, mankind has created countless literary works, among which there are some basic types that are 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 live 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, species) - 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 scholars 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: a 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. in 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 most ancient of the small epic genres, one of the main ones 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 time 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, the cunning intrigue, the 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 novel: 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.

February 9, 2015

Lyric genres originate in syncretic art forms. In the foreground are personal experiences and feelings of a person. Lyrics are the most subjective kind of literature. Its range is quite wide. Lyrical works are characterized by laconism of expression, the utmost concentration of thoughts, feelings and experiences. Through various genres of lyrics, the poet embodies what excites him, upsets or pleases.

Features of the lyrics

The term itself comes from the Greek word lyra (a kind of musical instrument). The poets of the period of antiquity performed their works to the accompaniment of the lyre. The lyrics are based on the experiences and thoughts of the protagonist. He is often identified with the author, which is not entirely true. The character of the hero is often revealed through deeds and actions. An important role is played by the direct author's characteristic. An important place is given to the description of appearance. The most commonly used monologue. Dialogue is rare.

Meditation is the main means of expression. In some works, the genres of epic, lyrics and drama are intertwined. In lyrical compositions there is no detailed plot. In some there is an internal conflict of the hero. There is also "role" lyrics. In such works, the author plays the roles of different persons.

The genres of lyrics in literature are closely intertwined with other types of art. Especially with painting and music.

Types of lyrics

As a literary genre, lyric poetry was formed in ancient Greece. The highest flowering occurred in ancient Rome. Popular ancient poets: Anacreon, Horace, Ovid, Pindar, Sappho. In the Renaissance, Shakespeare and Petrarch stand out. And in the 18-19 centuries the world was shocked by the poetry of Goethe, Byron, Pushkin and many others.

Varieties of lyrics as a kind: in terms of expressiveness - meditative or suggestive; by theme - landscape or urban, social or intimate, etc.; by tonality - minor or major, comic or heroic, idyllic or dramatic.

Types of lyrics: poetic (poetry), dramatized (role-playing), prose.

Thematic classification

Lyric genres in literature have several classifications. Most often, such essays are distributed by topic.

  • Civil. Socio-national issues and feelings come to the fore.
  • Intimate. It conveys the personal experiences experienced by the protagonist. It is divided into the following types: love, friendship lyrics, family, erotic.
  • Philosophical. It embodies the awareness of the meaning of life, being, the problem of good and evil.
  • Religious. Feelings and experiences about the higher and spiritual.
  • Landscape. It conveys the thoughts of the hero about natural phenomena.
  • satirical. Exposes human and social vices.

Variety by genre

Lyric genres are diverse. This is:

1. A hymn is a lyrical song that expresses a festively upbeat feeling formed from some good event or exceptional experience. For example, "Hymn to the Plague" by A. S. Pushkin.

2. Invective. Means a sudden denunciation or satirical ridicule of a real person. This genre is characterized by semantic and structural duality.

3. Madrigal. Initially, these were poems depicting rural life. A few centuries later, the madrigal is significantly transformed. In the 18th and 19th centuries, these are free-form lyric works that glorify the beauty of a woman and contain a compliment. The genre of intimate poetry is found in Pushkin, Lermontov, Karamzin, Sumarokov and others.

4. Ode - a song of praise. This is a poetic genre, finally formed in the era of classicism. In Russia, this term was introduced by V. Trediakovsky (1734). Now it is already remotely connected with the classical traditions. There is a struggle of conflicting stylistic tendencies in it. Lomonosov's solemn odes are known (developing a metaphorical style), Sumarokov's anacreontic odes, and Derzhavin's synthetic odes.

5. Song (song) is one of the forms of verbal and musical art. There are lyrical, epic, lyro-dramatic, lyro-epic. Lyrical songs are not characterized by narration, presentation. They are characterized by ideological and emotional expression.

6. Message (letter in verse). In Russian literature of the 18th century, this genre variety was extremely popular. The messages were written by Derzhavin, Kantemir, Kostrov, Lomonosov, Petrov, Sumarokov, Trediakovsky, Fonvizin and many others. In the first half of the 19th century they were also in use. They are written by Batyushkov, Zhukovsky, Pushkin, Lermontov.

7. Romance. This is the name of a poem that has the character of a love song.

8. Sonnet is a solid poetic form. It consists of fourteen lines, which, in turn, break up into two quatrains (quatrain) and two three-line (tercet).

9. Poem. It was in the 19th and 20th centuries that this structure became one of the lyrical forms.

10. Elegy is another popular genre of melancholic lyric poetry.

11. Epigram - a short poem of a lyrical warehouse. It is characterized by great freedom of content.

12. Epitaph (tombstone).

Lyric genres of Pushkin and Lermontov

A. S. Pushkin wrote in different lyrical genres. This is:

  • Oh yeah. For example, "Liberty" (1817).
  • Elegy - "The daylight went out" (1820).
  • Message - "To Chaadaev" (1818).
  • Epigram - "On Alexander!", "On Vorontsov" (1824).
  • Song - "About the prophetic Oleg" (1822).
  • Romance - "I am here, Inezilla" (1830).
  • Sonnet, satire.
  • Lyrical compositions that go beyond traditional genres - "To the Sea", "Village", "Anchar" and many others.

Pushkin's themes are also multifaceted: citizenship, the problem of freedom of creativity and many other topics are touched upon in his works.

The various genres of Lermontov's lyrics make up the main part of his literary heritage. He is a successor to the traditions of civil poetry of the Decembrists and Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin. Initially, the most favorite genre was a monologue-confession. Then - romance, elegy and many others. But satire and epigram are extremely rare in his work.

Conclusion

Thus, lyrical works can be written in various genres. For example, a sonnet, madrigal, epigram, romance, elegy, etc. Also, lyrics are often classified by subject. For example, civil, intimate, philosophical, religious, etc. It is worth paying attention to the fact that the lyrics are constantly updated and replenished with new genre formations. In poetic practice, there are genres of lyrics borrowed from related art forms. From music: waltz, prelude, march, nocturne, cantata, requiem, etc. From painting: portrait, still life, sketch, bas-relief, etc. In modern literature, there is a synthesis of genres, so lyrical works are divided into groups.

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