The novel “Eugene Onegin. The history of the creation of A.S. Pushkin's novel "Eugene Onegin" Roman Eugene Onegin


  • #1

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  • #2

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    Dear Inessa Nikolaevna! Over the years, you have become a very close and dear person to me! I'm not afraid of such words! You help me conduct my lessons at a very high level. Your findings and presentations delight students, and most importantly, teach them to be thoughtful. Thank you! I say words of gratitude to you every day. I wish you happiness and health! God bless you!

  • #4

    Tatyana Ivanovna (Sunday, 12 January 2014 14:40)

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  • #5

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  • #6

    Dear Inessa Nikolaevna! Thank you very much for the material on studying the work “Eugene Onegin”. May life reward you for your selfless help to your colleagues!

  • #7

    Inessa Nikolaevna conducted an open lesson on “Eugene Onegin”, using materials generously provided by you. Thank you I think that I owe my success entirely to you.

  • #8

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  • #10

    Dear colleagues, please forgive me if I offend anyone. Since literature was forced into the framework of tests, I have not taught it. And then I looked at the tests on “Eugene Onegin”. It pains me that our literature is being driven into the primitive framework of tests.

  • #11

    Dear Irina Alekseevna!
    Nobody pushed our literature anywhere. We teach as we taught: with immersion in the text, with writing essays, with text analysis. Look, we are using manuals from 1968. And this is not conservatism, but a selection from the methodology of what teaches, helps to think, and answer problematic questions.
    There are practically no tests left in the Unified State Examination and State Examination. There are essays and several questions from literary theory. Watch the presentations. This is not everything I teach in class, but it is a detailed analysis of all the chapters. And thinking teachers will teach as they were once taught. And those who are just starting the path of a teacher, I hope, will determine what is really important and necessary, and what is nonsense.
    You saw one test on the page, it’s a pity that you didn’t read the other materials. I am proud of them without false modesty, although I would have changed a lot, and not in the direction of the tests.
    Our children grow up thinking. Well, at our school, at least. Maybe we were lucky with the children... But even after leaving school, they return to the classics, read, think.

  • #12

    Inessa Nikolaevna! Thank you so much for the lessons on “Eugene Onegin”, just a treasure trove of everything!!! Everything that can be found on your site is useful and modern. I never tire of admiring your talent and hard work!!! Good luck to you in all your endeavors and “continuations”)))
    Best regards, Guy O.L.

  • #13

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  • #14

    Inessa Nikolaevna! Thank you very much for this site. This is a gem! There is so much useful and interesting information, I really want to express my gratitude to you for this painstaking work! How lucky your students are! Health and further creative success!

  • #15

    Hello! I’m not a wordsmith, but your site is truly a miracle, I found a lot of interesting things for my lessons. I admire your creativity and hard work! History teacher Love

  • #16

    Elena (Wednesday, 02 November 2016 05:49)

    Inessa Nikolaevna! I came across your site by chance....I'm delighted! Thank you so much for your generosity and understanding! This is an invaluable help for writers in preparing for lessons! Thank you! I wish you health, goodness and happiness!

  • #17

    I "tested" the lesson today. I’m very pleased, everything went smoothly in time. Warm, sincere thanks!

  • #18

    Girls, you give it to me. You're making me blush!
    Everything is fine: we do it, we share, we learn from each other. This is fine!

  • #19

    Dear Inessa Nikolaevna!

    In 2007, I gave a report at the Onegin Readings at Mikhailovsky about my approach to the plot chronology of the novel Eugene Onegin. In the same year, I made reports on this topic at the Pushkin House (Moscow), at a meeting of the Pushkin Commission and published a brochure “We honor everyone with zeros, and ourselves with ones, or how I had to open the plot chronology of the novel “Eugene Onegin”,” which can be found find at https://yadi.sk/i/AL_2Gm88zu8ET and download. In 2011, the Honored Teacher of Ukraine Nadezhda Filippovna Zhukovskaya (teacher of Russian language and literature) read this brochure, organized a discussion of my work among teachers of Russian language and literature in her city, Umansk, and sent me a very positive review from them.
    This review prompted me to make a film for students about the plot chronology of the novel “Eugene Onegin”, which would help students to more deeply perceive this work within no more than one lesson (the film lasts 32 minutes). The film is located at https://yadi.sk/i/rtkxzRoCmk7tv and is available for download or on YouTube using the phrase “plot chronology of the novel Eugene Onegin.”

    I would be pleased if you could read my brochure, as well as watch the film, evaluate the usefulness of showing it to students and posting these things on your website.
    I would be grateful if you tell me your opinion about my work and the film, indicating errors, shortcomings and wishes.
    Sincerely
    Doctor of Technical Sciences Belyakov-Bodin Vladimir Igorevich

  • #20

    Thank you very much, Vladimir Igorevich!
    It will be very interesting to get acquainted with your work, especially since my students and I are creating a website project dedicated to “Eugene Onegin”.
    It is interesting that recently many studies about Pushkin have been written by people with technical education. This is a different way of looking at literature.

  • #21

    Thanks a lot! For a beginning teacher, your lessons on Eugene Onegin are a treasure!

  • #22

    Thanks a lot! I have been “feeding” from your site for several years now, and I recommend that my colleagues get acquainted with your wonderful works. Thanks again for your help, ideas, talent!

  • #23

    Inessa Nikolaevna! Please accept my sincere gratitude for such bright, thoughtful presentations. They greatly enlivened our lessons with the children, and in addition helped me save preparation time for my household. Now I will wait for the results of our work in the essays. Once again thank you very much for your help!

  • #24

    Inessa Nikolaevna! Thanks for the materials! Thoughtful approach, clear language, clear thoughts!

  • #25

    Inessa Nikolaevna! Your works are unique, clear and easy to understand. It’s not often that we meet people like you, who so simply and unselfishly allow us to use their materials. I am amazed at how you find the time to create presentations, videos, projects, write articles, reports and much more! You are smart and hard working!!! Thank you very much!

  • #26

    Dear Inessa Nikolaevna. I admire your site and the work you do and give to your colleagues. Thank you for your talented help. Good health to you and further creative discoveries. Sincerely.

  • #27

    Inessa Nikolaevna, thank you very much for the interesting information and creativity. Good luck, inexhaustible energy, health.

  • #28

    Inessa Nikolaevna, low bow, gratitude for the example of work with a work of Russian literature. There is a lot to learn! Health to you, your loved ones, success in all your endeavors.

  • #29

    super. thank you teacher, low bow. for such a great job. God bless you!!!

  • #30

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    Inessa Nikolaevna! Thank you endlessly for such rich material!!! I wish you health and creative strength!)

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    Thank you for being you and your wonderful site. Health. success, happiness to you and your family.

  • #33

    Innesa Nikolaevna! Thank you very much for the very intelligent and significant teaching materials on both the Russian language and literature. Only a master teacher can systematically, simply and methodically correctly systematize lesson material. Low bow to you and creative success!

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  • #35

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  • #36

    Where is all the material? I tried to download, some replicas were downloaded, but the presentation itself was not there

  • #37

    Elena Leonidovna, everything is downloading, I checked it. The problems are on your side. See links on the page. They are active and lead to Yandex disk. Download from there.

  • #38
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    Inessa Nikolaevna, thank you very much, thank you for your work! I found a lot of useful things on your website and use them in my lessons. Thanks for sharing!

  • #40

    Inessa Nikolaevna! I admire your titanic work and your creativity! You are a brilliant teacher! Thank you very much for generously sharing your experience! May God grant you and your loved ones health and creative success!

  • #41

    Inessa Nikolaevna, thank you very much! Reading "Eugene Onegin" is going with a bang!

“Eugene Onegin” The history of the creation of the novel.

The presentation was prepared by literature teacher MAOU PSOSH No. 2 Kolesnik E.I.


"Eugene Onegin"(pre-ref. "Eugene Onegin") - novel in verse Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin, written in 1823-1831, is one of the most significant works of Russian literature.

History of creation

Pushkin worked on this novel for over seven years. The novel was, according to the poet, “the fruit of a mind of cold observations and a heart of sorrowful observations.” Pushkin called working on it a feat - of all his creative heritage, only “ Boris Godunov“he characterized it with the same word. The work, against a broad background of pictures of Russian life, shows the dramatic fate of the best people of the noble intelligentsia.

Pushkin began work on Onegin in May 1823 V Chisinau, during his exile. The author refused romanticism as the leading creative method and began to write a realistic novel in verse, although in the first chapters the influence of romanticism is still noticeable. Initially, it was assumed that the novel in verse would consist of 9 chapters, but Pushkin subsequently reworked its structure, leaving only 8 chapters. He excluded the chapter “Onegin’s Travels” from the main text of the work, leaving it as an appendix. One chapter also had to be completely removed from the novel: it describes how Onegin sees military settlements near Odessa pier, and then there are comments and judgments, in some places in an overly harsh tone. It was too dangerous to leave this chapter - Pushkin could have been arrested for revolutionary views, so he destroyed it [


It covers events from 1819 By 1825: from the foreign campaigns of the Russian army after the defeat Napoleon before Decembrist uprising. These were the years of development of Russian society, the time of the reign Alexandra I. The plot of the novel is simple and well known, with a love story at its center. In general, the novel “Eugene Onegin” reflected the events of the first quarter 19th century, that is, the time of creation and the time of action of the novel approximately coincide.


Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin created a novel in verse similar to Lord Byron's poem "Don Juan". Having defined the novel as “a collection of motley chapters,” Pushkin highlights one of the features of this work: the novel is, as it were, “open” in time (each chapter could be the last, but could also have a continuation), thereby drawing the readers’ attention to the independence and integrity of each chapters. The novel has truly become an encyclopedia of Russian life in the 1820s, since the breadth of topics covered in it, the detail of everyday life, the multiplot of the composition, the depth of description of the characters’ characters still reliably demonstrate to readers the features of life of that era.

This is what gave V. G. Belinsky the basis to conclude in his article “Eugene Onegin”:

“Onegin can be called an encyclopedia of Russian life and a highly folk work.”


Strophic

The novel was written by a special " Oneginskaya stanza" Each stanza consists of 14 lines iambic tetrameter .

First four lines rhyme cross, lines five through eight are paired, lines nine through twelfth are connected by a ring rhyme. The remaining 2 lines of the stanza rhyme with each other.


From the novel, as from the encyclopedia, you can learn everything about the era: how they dressed, what was in fashion, what people valued most, what they talked about, what interests they lived. “Eugene Onegin” reflects the whole of Russian life. Briefly, but quite clearly, the author showed a fortress village, a lordly Moscow, secular Saint Petersburg. Pushkin truthfully depicted the environment in which the main characters of his novel, Tatyana Larina and Evgeny Onegin, live. The author reproduced the atmosphere of the city noble salons in which Onegin spent his youth


  • Onegin and Tatiana. Episodes:
  • Meeting Tatyana, Tatyana's conversation with the nanny, Tatyana's letter to Onegin, Explanation in the garden, Tatyana's dream. Name day, Visit to Onegin's house, Departure for Moscow, Meeting at a ball in St. Petersburg after 3 years, Onegin's letter to Tatiana (explanation), Evening at Tatiana's.
  • Meet Tatyana
  • Tatyana's conversation with the nanny,
  • Tatiana's letter to Onegin,
  • Explanation in the garden
  • Tatiana's dream. Name day,
  • Visit to Onegin's house,
  • Departure for Moscow,
  • Meeting at a ball in St. Petersburg after 3 years,
  • Onegin's letter to Tatyana (explanation),
  • Evening at Tatiana's.
  • Onegin and Lensky. Episodes: Acquaintance in the village, Conversation after the evening at the Larins', Lensky's visit to Onegin, Tatyana's name day, Duel (Lensky dies).
  • Dating in the village
  • Conversation after the evening at the Larins',
  • Lensky's visit to Onegin,
  • Tatiana's name day,
  • Duel (Lensky dies).

The novel begins with the lamentations of the young nobleman Eugene Onegin about the illness of his uncle, which forced Eugene to leave St. Petersburg and go to the sick bed to say goodbye to him. Having thus outlined the plot, the author devotes the first chapter to a story about the origin, family, and life of his hero before receiving news of a relative’s illness. The narration is told on behalf of the nameless author, who introduced himself as a good friend of Onegin.

Evgeny was born “on the banks of the Neva,” that is, in St. Petersburg, into a not very successful noble family:

“Having served excellently and nobly, his father lived in debt, gave three balls annually, and finally squandered himself.”

Onegin received an appropriate upbringing - first, with a governess Madame (not to be confused with a nanny), then with a French tutor, who did not bother his pupil with an abundance of activities. Pushkin emphasizes that Evgeniy’s education and upbringing were typical for a person in his environment (a nobleman who was taught by foreign teachers from childhood).

Eugene Onegin. One of its possible prototypes is Chaadaev, named by Pushkin himself in the first chapter. The story of Onegin is reminiscent of the life of Chaadaev. Lord Byron and his “Byronian Heroes” had an important influence on the image of Onegin. Don Juan and Child Harold, who are also mentioned more than once by Pushkin himself. “In the image of Onegin one can find dozens of connections with various contemporaries of the poet - from empty social acquaintances to such significant persons for Pushkin as Chaadaev or Alexander Raevsky. The same should be said about Tatyana.” (Yu. M. Lotman. Comments on “Eugene Onegin”) At the beginning of the novel he is 18 years old [ source? ], at the end - 26 years.

Tatyana Larina

Olga Larina, her sister is a generalized image of a typical heroine of popular novels; beautiful in appearance, but lacking deep content. One year younger than Tatiana.

Vladimir Lensky- “energetic rapprochement between Lensky and Kuchelbecker, produced by Yu. N. Tynyanov (Pushkin and his contemporaries. pp. 233-294), best convinces that attempts to give the romantic poet in the EO some single and unambiguous prototype do not lead to convincing results.” (Yu. M. Lotman. Comments on “Eugene Onegin”).

Tatiana's nanny- probable prototype - Arina Rodionovna, Pushkin's nanny


About Onegin

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The creative history of the novel in verse by A.S. Pushkin “Eugene Onegin.” The artistic originality of the work. The first Russian realistic novel. Genre originality: a novel in verse. "Onegin stanza". Critics about the image of Onegin. May 9, 1823 - work on the creation began. September 25, 1830 - the novel is finished, but the work has not stopped. 1831 - Chapter 8 was redone, Tatyana’s letter to Onegin was created. Until 1833 (publication) the plan changes. 1837 - the last author's version was printed. Changes in plan. The outline included 9 chapters. "Excerpts from Onegin's Journey." Chapter 10 and Onegin's Journey were not completed. - Onegin.ppt

Roman Onegin

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Lesson objectives: The history of the Russian realistic novel begins with “Eugene Onegin”. Realism (from Late Latin realis - material). Artistic method in art and literature. A literary movement that established itself in Russian literature at the beginning of the 19th century. “Not a novel, but a novel in verse.” Work on the novel took 7 years, 4 months, 17 days. What periods of Pushkin’s creative development does work on the novel cover? Publication: Literary controversy around the novel. "Eugene Onegin - an encyclopedia of Russian life." V.G. Belinsky. Onegin is a “suffering egoist” who is stifled by “the inactivity and vulgarity of life.” - Roman Onegin.ppt

Lessons on Pushkin Evgeny Onegin

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A.S. Pushkin. Novel "Eugene Onegin". Lesson-prologue to the study of A.S. Pushkin’s novel “Eugene Onegin.” Anna Akhmatova. Lesson plan. Teacher's opening speech. The heroic world of the novel. Composition of the novel. Summing up the lesson. - Onegin Pushkin.pps

About Evgeny Onegin

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A.S. Pushkin’s novel Eugene Onegin” – “encyclopedia of Russian life” (V.G. Belinsky). It took more than 7 years to create: from May 1823 to September 1830. Pushkin worked on the novel until the last days of his life. The author's last version of the novel was published in 1837. The history of the Russian realistic novel begins with Eugene Onegin. A.S. Pushkin - Evgeniy Onegin (First edition). Realism is a literary movement that strives to reflect real life. Genre: novel in verse. Onegin - Tatiana. Lensky - Olga. Storylines: Onegin and Tatyana. Lensky is in love with Olga Larina, the daughter of a landowner. - Evgeniy Onegin.ppt

Lesson on Eugene Onegin

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Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin. Lesson topic: “The system of images of the novel “Eugene Onegin.” Eugene Onegin. I thought: freedom and peace are a substitute for happiness. My God! How wrong I was! How punished! -. Tatiana. Everything is bright, everything is white all around. Vladimir Lensky. Working with the reference diagram. Creative work My attitude towards the characters in the novel. Assignment: Evaluate your favorite character from the novel “Eugene Onegin.” - Lesson Evgeny Onegin.ppt

Evgeniy Onegin novel

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Evgeny Onegin is the image of an “extra” person in Pushkin’s novel “Eugene Onegin”. Is it really Evgeniy? Purpose of the work: Why is Evgeny Onegin considered an “extra” person? Hypothesis: Evgeny Onegin is not “extra” at all, but just a person. Research plan: Progress of the study: Progress of the study. For analysis, we chose chapters 1 and 8 of the novel, which reveal the evolution of the hero’s image. Results of work Table. Having analyzed the chapters of the novel, we saw that Eugene Onegin is a changing hero. The main principle in depicting a changing hero is the principle of “contradiction.” In Chapter 1, we analyzed the scene in the theater and saw that Onegin is a spiritual invalid. - Evgeny Onegin novel.ppt

Roman Evgeniy Onegin

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“I’m not writing a novel, but a novel in verse - a devilish difference! " A.S. Pushkin’s novel Eugene Onegin” – “encyclopedia of Russian life” V.G. Belinsky. History of creation. Changes in plan. The outline included 9 chapters: Excerpts from Onegin’s journey.” Only the sketches remain, and the poet reads excerpts to his closest friends. Think about what historical events Pushkin wrote about in Chapter 10 and Onegin’s Travels? Decembrist uprising - on Senate Square on December 14, 1825. The novel has two storylines: Onegin - Tatyana and Onegin - Lensky. Plot. Onegin and Tatiana. Lensky and Olga. Storylines. - Roman Evgeniy Onegin.pptx

Pushkin Evgeny Onegin

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A.S. Pushkin “Eugene Onegin” Novel in verse. Pushkin published the novel in chapters as he wrote it. And the distance of a free romance I still vaguely discerned through the magic crystal. O you, honorable spouses! Not that... not that, God forbid! Plot. In which work by A.S. Have we already met Pushkin’s symmetrical plot structure? Onegin, Tatiana and the Author are the central works in the figurative system. A. S. Pushkin. Essays. - Pushkin Evgeniy Onegin.ppt

Roman Pushkin Evgeny Onegin

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“Collection of motley chapters...” To the study of Pushkin’s novel “Eugene Onegin.” About the genre. "Eugene Onegin" is a novel in verse. The author seems to live in the novel, becoming related to one or another hero. thus, the Onegin stanza. The poetic form of the novel required Pushkin to work hard on the verse. Pushkin took as a basis the form of a Shakespearean sonnet (a quatrain and a couplet). The Onegin stanza consists of 14 lines (verses) written in iambic tetrameter. Iambic is necessary to give poetic speech a conversational character. Rhyme. Pushkin's drawings in the margins. “Eugene Onegin” in silhouettes by V. Helmersen. - Roman Pushkin Evgeniy Onegin.ppt

The history of the creation of Evgeny Onegin

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The history of the creation of A.S. Pushkin’s novel “Eugene Onegin.” The history of the creation of the novel. Writing the novel took Pushkin more than seven years (1823 - 1830). The tenth chapter is not included in the canonical text of the novel. Completed work on "Eugene Onegin" on September 26, 1830. Genre of the novel. Image of the Author. The principle of contradictions. Composition. "The Poetry of Reality". Compositionally, the novel does not have a traditional beginning and a traditional ending. Onegin at the ball. Artistic method. Compositional techniques. Novel form. Tatyana Larina. - The history of the creation of Evgeny Onegin.ppt

Tatyana Larina

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We all learned a little, Something and somehow, So through upbringing, thank God, It’s no wonder to shine with us... What kind of upbringing and education did Tatyana Larina and other heroines of Pushkin receive? We learned that the education of noble girls was carried out first by a nanny, and then by governesses, often taken from a foreign environment. The girls were taught good manners, foreign languages, the art of dancing, playing music, and handicrafts. This is how she accomplished her upbringing,” we read about another heroine, Masha Troekurova from the story “Dubrovsky.” At first glance, one gets the impression that the education of the county young ladies was superficial and shallow. - Tatyana Larina.ppt

Eugene Onegin image of the author

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Author's image. The role of lyrical digressions in the novel by A.S. Pushkin "Eugene Onegin". Remember what a plot is? Plot is the sequence of events depicted in a work of art. What is the plot of A.S. Pushkin’s novel “Eugene Onegin”? The life story of Onegin. Which of the characters is directly involved in the plot of the novel? Onegin, Lensky, the Larin family, minor characters of the novel. Characteristics of the author's image. A lyrical digression is a deviation from the immediate plot in a literary work. Theme and role of lyrical digressions in the novel. How did you understand what a lyrical digression is? - Evgeny Onegin image of the author.ppt

Evgeniy Onegin letter

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From a letter to L.S. Pushkin (January 1824, Odessa). Pale is Tatyana’s constant epithet: “pale color”, “pale beauty”. Chapter 2. Tatiana's letter to Onegin. And we... we don’t shine with anything, Even though you are welcome in a simple-hearted way. Why did you visit us? You just walked in, I instantly recognized it, I was completely stunned, on fire... A.S. Pushkin. N.M. Karamzin. From now on I entrust my destiny to you. I shed tears before you, I beg your protection. Revive the hopes of the heart Or interrupt a heavy dream Alas, with a well-deserved reproach! 4. The image of Evgeny Onegin. With the hero of my novel Without preamble, this very hour Let me introduce you (chapter 5. Onegin’s letter to Tatyana. - Eugene Onegin letter.ppt

Evgeniy Onegin game

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Lesson-game based on the novel by A. S. Pushkin “Eugene Onegin”. ...This is my best work. From a letter to L.S. Pushkin (January 1824, Odessa). Rules of the game. The class is divided into three teams. Questions are scored from 5 to 20, depending on difficulty. Players choose a topic, then a question. If the answer is correct, then the player receives points according to the value of the question. If the answer is incorrect, then the right to move goes to the other team. Biography of A. Pushkin. The history of the creation of "E. Heroes "E. Knowledge of the text. Understanding the meaning. Where and when was A. S. Pushkin born? June 6, 1799 in Moscow. Scoreboard. Tsarskoye Selo Lyceum. -

Eugene Onegin

Slide 2

A novel in verse written by one of the great Russian writers, Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin, is Eugene Onegin. This work belongs to classical Russian literature.

Slide 3

A.S. Pushkin wrote “Eugene Onegin” over the course of eight years (from 1823 to 1831). The writer himself called his work a feat. At the heart of the novel, in poetic form, the entire life of the then intelligentsia of the nobility is poignantly revealed.

Slide 4

How the novel was created

In 1823, the first lines of the novel “Eugene Onegin” appeared in Chisinau. At that time, Pushkin was in exile. This is why the novel is so realistic. According to the author's plan, “Eugene Onegin” was supposed to consist of 9 chapters. After some modifications, there were only 8 of them in the novel.

Slide 5

the novel “Eugene Onegin” reflects events in Russia in 1.p. XIX century. That is, the time of writing completely coincides with the setting and actions in the novel. The novel is based on a love story.

Slide 6

The main characters of the novel Eugene Onegin

Eugene Onegin

Tatyana Larina

Olga Larina

Plot of the novel

The plot is based on a love story. Evgeny Onegin, the main character of the novel, comes from St. Petersburg to a remote village, where he inherits the house of his deceased uncle. Onegin is quite bored after the bustle of the capital, balls and female attention. A young and hot guy Lensky settles next door. He loves Olga Larina. Unlike the cheerful and friendly girl, her older sister, Tatyana, unrequitedly falls in love with Eugene Onegin. She writes him a grateful love letter, but Onegin rejects her.

Slide 8

Once at a ball, Onegin, out of boredom, began to show signs of attention to Olga Larina. The hot-tempered Lensky challenged the offender to a duel. As a result of the fight, Lensky dies from a bullet and Onegin is forced to leave the village. Only three years later he returns from St. Petersburg and meets Tatyana. Only now the main character falls in love with a woman and tries to woo her. However, Tatyana is already a married woman and therefore rejects Onegin.

Slide 9

Editions of Eugene Onegin

Pushkin's novel was published as it was written. Each chapter, except for a separate edition, was published in almanacs and literary magazines. The first chapter was published in 1825. The last single chapter was published in 1824. Already in 1825, the Russian people could read the complete edition of the complete novel “Eugene Onegin”

Slide 10

“Eugene Onegin” gained great popularity not only in Russia, but also abroad. The novel has been translated into many foreign languages: English, German, French, Czech, Georgian, and many others.

Slide 11

The influence of the novel on other works. The name "Eugene Onegin" is actively used in music, painting and other fields.

Slide 1

A. S. Pushkin “Eugene Onegin”
A. S. Pushkin
1
The history of the novel
2
Composition of the plot
3
Plot
4
Storylines
5
System of images of the novel
6
Exit
Completed by: 9th grade student “A” of MBOU “Secondary School No. 6” in Gaya, Orenburg region. Vasilenko Ekaterina

Slide 2

Biography of A. S. Pushkin
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Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin (May 26 (June 6) 1799, Moscow - January 29 (February 10) 1837, St. Petersburg) - Russian poet, playwright and prose writer. Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin has a reputation as a great or greatest Russian poet. In philology, Pushkin is considered as the creator of the modern Russian literary language.

Slide 3

The history of the novel
It took more than 7 years to create: from May 1823 to September 1830. Pushkin worked on the novel until the last days of his life. The author's last version of the novel was published in 1837. The history of the Russian realistic novel begins with Eugene Onegin.
A.S. Pushkin “Eugene Onegin” (first edition).
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Novel (French roman), a literary genre, an epic work of large form, in which the narrative is focused on the fate of an individual in his relation to the world around him, on the formation and development of his character and self-awareness.

The genre is a novel in verse, that is, a lyric-epic work, where the author freely moves from narration to lyrical digressions. There are two storylines in the novel: Onegin - Tatyana and Onegin - Lensky
Realism is a literary movement that strives to broadly, comprehensively, and truthfully reflect real life. Depiction of typical characters in typical circumstances.
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Slide 5

Composition of the plot
Chapter 1 - extensive exposition Chapter 2 - the beginning of the second storyline (Onegin's acquaintance with Lensky) Chapter 3 - the beginning of the first storyline (Onegin's acquaintance with Tatyana) Chapter 6 - the duel (the climax and denouement of the second line) Chapter 8 - the denouement of the first line
Further

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Slide 7

"Onegin" stanza
A My uncle had the most honest rules, B When he was seriously ill, A He made him respect himself, B And he couldn’t have come up with a better idea... __________________________ C His example to others is science; B But, my God, what boredom D Sitting with a sick person day and night, D Without leaving a single step! __________________________ D What low deceit E to amuse a half-dead person, E to straighten his pillows, E It’s sad to offer medicine... G Sigh and think to yourself: F “When will the devil take you!”
Cross rhyme (theme) Adjacent rhyme (theme development) Encircling rhyme (theme development) Final couplet (final comprehension)
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Slide 8

Onegin's life in St. Petersburg was full of love affairs and social amusements, but now he faces boredom in the village. Upon arrival, it turns out that his uncle died, and Eugene became his heir. Onegin settles in the village, and soon the blues really take hold of him. Onegin’s neighbor turns out to be eighteen-year-old Vladimir Lensky, a romantic poet, who came from Germany. Lensky and Onegin converge. Lensky is in love with Olga Larina, the daughter of a landowner. Her thoughtful sister Tatyana is not like the always cheerful Olga. Having met Onegin, Tatyana falls in love with him and writes him a letter. However, Onegin rejects her: he is not looking for a quiet family life. Lensky and Onegin are invited to the Larins. Onegin is not happy about this invitation, but Lensky persuades him to go. At dinner with the Larins, Onegin, in order to make Lensky jealous, unexpectedly begins to court Olga. Lensky challenges him to a duel. The duel ends with Lensky's death, and Onegin leaves the village. Two years later, he appears in St. Petersburg and meets Tatyana. She is an important lady, the wife of a prince. Onegin was inflamed with love for her, but this time he was rejected, despite the fact that Tatyana also loves him, but wants to remain faithful to her husband.
Plot
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Slide 9

Plot lines of the novel
Onegin and Lensky: Acquaintance in the village, Conversation after the evening at the Larins', Lensky's visit to Onegin, Tatyana's name day, Duel (Lensky dies).
Onegin and Tatyana: Meeting Tatyana, Conversation with the nanny, Tatyana's letter to Onegin, Explanation in the garden, Tatyana's dream. Name day, Visit to Onegin's house, Departure for Moscow, Meeting at a ball in St. Petersburg after 2 years, Letter to Tatiana (explanation), Evening at Tatiana's,
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Slide 10

System of images of the novel
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Slide 11

Evgeny Onegin is the prototype of Pyotr Chaadaev, a friend of Pushkin, named by Pushkin himself in the first chapter. The story of Onegin is reminiscent of the life of Chaadaev. An important influence on the image of Onegin was exerted by Lord Byron and his “Byronian Heroes”, Don Juan and Childe Harold, who are also mentioned more than once by Pushkin himself.
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Slide 12

Tatyana Larina is the prototype of Avdotya (Dunya) Norova, Chaadaev’s friend. Dunya herself is mentioned in the second chapter, and at the end of the last chapter, Pushkin expresses his grief over her untimely death. Due to the death of Dunya at the end of the novel, the prototype of the princess, matured and transformed Tatiana, is Anna Kern, Pushkin’s beloved.
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Slide 13

Olga Larina, her sister, is a generalized image of a typical heroine of a popular novel; beautiful in appearance, but lacking deep content.
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Slide 14

Vladimir Lensky is Pushkin himself, or rather his idealized image. This image was also influenced by the German student Karl Sand, to whom Pushkin dedicated the poem “Dagger.”
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Slide 15

Tatiana's nanny - a probable prototype - Yakovleva Arina Rodionovna, Pushkin's nanny.
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Slide 16

The author of the work is Pushkin himself. He constantly interferes in the course of the narrative, reminds of himself (“But the north is harmful to me”), makes friends with Onegin (“Having cast off the burden of the conditions of the world, how he fell behind the bustle, I became friends with him at that time, I liked his features.” ), in his lyrical digressions, shares with readers his thoughts on a variety of life issues, expresses his ideological position. The author in some places disrupts the flow of the narrative and introduces metatextual elements into the text (“The reader is already waiting for the “rose” rhyme - here, take it quickly”). Pushkin even depicted himself next to Onegin on the banks of the Neva (see image) and wanted to place this and a number of other drawings as an illustration for the novel in verse, but he failed to find a common language with the publishers of the Nevsky Almanac magazine. Pushkin himself responded to this with several ironic epigrams.

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