Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

How Olya Died and Folklore Was Born

View through CrossRef
The subject of discussion in this article comprises the ways in which a literary piece becomes folklore. In order to elucidate this, the author discusses a poem by Aleksey Apuchtin “The Madman” written in 1890, and its folksong versions. The original story depicting a farther and his daughter perishing under suspicious circumstances turns into a story of a girl killed by her lover. In the first decades of the 20th century, this poem encountered immense popularity in Russia, including its frequent recitations under musical accompaniment and repeated screenings. Therefore, it is plausible to assume that similar folklore variants may have occurred independently, affected by typological folklore regularities, as well as by the well-known “proto-text” (songs from the movies).If folklorization of an individual work is a purposeful process, it can be defined and even guided in a sense by the necessity of folklore as a cliché: the literary piece turns into folklore only when a certain folkloric counterpart is found for every literary motive or image. There is no other way for such literary image or motive to become folklore. This process requires changes on all the textual levels, including lexical, semantic, and pragmatic ones. The folklore stereotypization narrows the field of semantic valence to the minimum collection of associations. This makes one of the essential differences between folklore and literature, ensuring comparatively stable transmission of the folklore texts in the course of time, and granting that the poem by Apuchtin finds its way into the folklore language only bearing the connotations approved by the “folklore censorship”. Lay opinion is prone to perceive such folklorized text of Vosilkos (‘The Cornflowers’) as an original poem by Apuchtin.
The Institute of Lithuanian Literature and Folklore
Title: How Olya Died and Folklore Was Born
Description:
The subject of discussion in this article comprises the ways in which a literary piece becomes folklore.
In order to elucidate this, the author discusses a poem by Aleksey Apuchtin “The Madman” written in 1890, and its folksong versions.
The original story depicting a farther and his daughter perishing under suspicious circumstances turns into a story of a girl killed by her lover.
In the first decades of the 20th century, this poem encountered immense popularity in Russia, including its frequent recitations under musical accompaniment and repeated screenings.
Therefore, it is plausible to assume that similar folklore variants may have occurred independently, affected by typological folklore regularities, as well as by the well-known “proto-text” (songs from the movies).
If folklorization of an individual work is a purposeful process, it can be defined and even guided in a sense by the necessity of folklore as a cliché: the literary piece turns into folklore only when a certain folkloric counterpart is found for every literary motive or image.
There is no other way for such literary image or motive to become folklore.
This process requires changes on all the textual levels, including lexical, semantic, and pragmatic ones.
The folklore stereotypization narrows the field of semantic valence to the minimum collection of associations.
This makes one of the essential differences between folklore and literature, ensuring comparatively stable transmission of the folklore texts in the course of time, and granting that the poem by Apuchtin finds its way into the folklore language only bearing the connotations approved by the “folklore censorship”.
Lay opinion is prone to perceive such folklorized text of Vosilkos (‘The Cornflowers’) as an original poem by Apuchtin.

Related Results

Intertextual Study in Comparative Literature: Folklore of Oedipus and Folklore of Sangkuriang
Intertextual Study in Comparative Literature: Folklore of Oedipus and Folklore of Sangkuriang
The purpose of this research is to identify intertextual study in comparative literature of Oedipus folklore and Sangkuriang folklore. The intertextual study of comparative literat...
Folkloristics without Illusions. Some Thoughts on the Contexts of Folklore Research by Donatas Sauka
Folkloristics without Illusions. Some Thoughts on the Contexts of Folklore Research by Donatas Sauka
The 90th anniversary of birth of the famous Lithuanian literary scholar and folklorist, professor of the Vilnius University Donatas Sauka (1929–2015) is celebrated in 2019. The art...
Revitalisasi Cerita Rakyat Masyarakat Timor Sebagai Penguatan Nilai Pendidikan Karakter Pada Era Tatanan Kehidupan Baru
Revitalisasi Cerita Rakyat Masyarakat Timor Sebagai Penguatan Nilai Pendidikan Karakter Pada Era Tatanan Kehidupan Baru
Abstrak   Artikel hasil penelitian ini bertujuan untuk merevitalisasi berbagai bentuk cerita rakyat masyarakat Timor yang penuh dengan nilai kearifan lokal dan muatan p...
Udmurt Folklore Material in the Folklore Archives of the Estonian Literary Museum and Its Collectors: A Brief Review
Udmurt Folklore Material in the Folklore Archives of the Estonian Literary Museum and Its Collectors: A Brief Review
The digitisation and preservation of language and folklore sound collections are highly relevant issues for many archival institutions in the Russian Federation. The folklore archi...
The folklore motives of Ivan Korsak's historical novels
The folklore motives of Ivan Korsak's historical novels
The article examines the folklore elements from creative work of the modern Ukrainian writer Ivan Korsak, namely the historical novels «The Conqueror of Europe», «The Cro...
Transdiscursivity of Chinese Folklore
Transdiscursivity of Chinese Folklore
This article examines the concept of transdiscursivity as a result of the interaction between the discourses of traditional folklore and mass culture. Folklore, viewed through tran...
Folklore Archives of Pskov State University: From field recordings to remote access
Folklore Archives of Pskov State University: From field recordings to remote access
Here is a brief analysis of the folk fund of Pskov State University. The purpose is study the process of obtaining the folklore collections in an electronic form, accessible to rem...
Multilingualism in Lithuanian Children’s Folklore
Multilingualism in Lithuanian Children’s Folklore
Abstract Multilingualism and multiculturalism have always been phenomena present in folklore. Since the last decades of the 20th century, due to changes in lifestyle...

Back to Top