Medical theme in Russian literature
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| Title: | Medical theme in Russian literature |
|---|---|
| Authors: | S. V. Igonina |
| Source: | Issues of National Literature. :5-13 |
| Publisher Information: | North-Eastern Federal University, 2025. |
| Publication Year: | 2025 |
| Description: | The medical theme in Russian literature is presented very widely and diversely, which determines the relevance and novelty of this work. The aim of the study is to examine the features of the presentation of medical topics in Russian literature throughout its development, starting with Old Russian literature and ending with the literature of the 20th–21st centuries. For this purpose, the comparative method and the method of analyzing artistic texts at the level of motive-figurative organization were used. As a result of the conducted research, the author came to the following conclusions. In Old Russian literature, the medical theme always has a religious character: illness is considered a punishment for sins or a test of the faith of the sick person. In the classic literature of the 18th century (A. Kantemir, D. Fonvizin), the image of a charlatan doctor who "treats" the same ignorant patients is presented. This is also connected with the peculiarities of the low genres in which this theme appears. In the 19th century in the literature of realism, the medical theme is widely spread due to its presentation from two points of view: the doctor and the patient. Attention is paid to both physical and mental illnesses. Some authors (N. Gogol) continue the tradition of humorous or satirical depictions of doctors and patients, while others (A. Herzen, L. Tolstoy, A. Chekhov) examine the change in the worldview of a doctor, who goes from an enthusiastic idealist to a greedy philistine. Most of the authors pay attention to the dramatic description of patients suffering from one or another illness, which also acts as a symbol of the illness of the whole society. In the 20th century, writers (M. Bulgakov, M. Zoshchenko, V. Shalamov) focus the reader's attention on the medical description of the disease, the hard work and emotional experiences of doctors, alternating it with the point of view of a patient suffering from one or another disease and changing his worldview because of this. |
| Document Type: | Article |
| ISSN: | 2782-6635 |
| DOI: | 10.25587/2782-6635-2025-3-5-13 |
| Rights: | URL: https://www.litteraesvfu.ru/jour/about/editorialPolicies#openAccessPolicy |
| Accession Number: | edsair.doi...........9ca5703afa2110f39b0f0cb15cea9ca5 |
| Database: | OpenAIRE |
| Abstract: | The medical theme in Russian literature is presented very widely and diversely, which determines the relevance and novelty of this work. The aim of the study is to examine the features of the presentation of medical topics in Russian literature throughout its development, starting with Old Russian literature and ending with the literature of the 20th–21st centuries. For this purpose, the comparative method and the method of analyzing artistic texts at the level of motive-figurative organization were used. As a result of the conducted research, the author came to the following conclusions. In Old Russian literature, the medical theme always has a religious character: illness is considered a punishment for sins or a test of the faith of the sick person. In the classic literature of the 18th century (A. Kantemir, D. Fonvizin), the image of a charlatan doctor who "treats" the same ignorant patients is presented. This is also connected with the peculiarities of the low genres in which this theme appears. In the 19th century in the literature of realism, the medical theme is widely spread due to its presentation from two points of view: the doctor and the patient. Attention is paid to both physical and mental illnesses. Some authors (N. Gogol) continue the tradition of humorous or satirical depictions of doctors and patients, while others (A. Herzen, L. Tolstoy, A. Chekhov) examine the change in the worldview of a doctor, who goes from an enthusiastic idealist to a greedy philistine. Most of the authors pay attention to the dramatic description of patients suffering from one or another illness, which also acts as a symbol of the illness of the whole society. In the 20th century, writers (M. Bulgakov, M. Zoshchenko, V. Shalamov) focus the reader's attention on the medical description of the disease, the hard work and emotional experiences of doctors, alternating it with the point of view of a patient suffering from one or another disease and changing his worldview because of this. |
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| ISSN: | 27826635 |
| DOI: | 10.25587/2782-6635-2025-3-5-13 |
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