Examples of eternal images in literature. Test work: eternal images in world literature. “Eternal” images of world literature


The history of literature knows many cases when the works of a writer were very popular during his lifetime, but as time passed, they were forgotten almost forever. There are other examples: the writer was not recognized by his contemporaries, but the real value of his works was discovered by subsequent generations.

But there are very few works in literature, the importance of which cannot be overestimated, because they create images that excite every generation of people, images that inspire the creative search of artists of different times. Such images are called “eternal” because they are carriers of traits that are always inherent in a person.

Miguel Cervantes de Saavedra lived out his life in poverty and loneliness, although during his lifetime he was known as the author of the talented, vivid novel “Don Quixote.” Neither the writer himself nor his contemporaries knew that several centuries would pass, and his heroes would not only not be forgotten, but would become “the most popular Spaniards,” and their compatriots would erect a monument to them. That they will emerge from the novel and live their own independent lives in the works of prose writers and playwrights, poets, artists, composers. Today it is even difficult to list how many works of art were created under the influence of the images of Don Quixote and Sancho Panza: Goya and Picasso, Massenet and Minkus turned to them.

The immortal book was born from the idea of ​​writing a parody and ridiculing the chivalric romances that were so popular in Europe in the 16th century, when Cervantes lived and worked. And the writer’s plan expanded, and on the pages of the book his contemporary Spain came to life, the hero himself changed: from a parody knight he grows into a funny and tragic figure. The conflict of the novel is both historically specific (it reflects the writer’s contemporary Spain) and universal (for it exists in any country at all times). The essence of the conflict: the clash of ideal norms and ideas about reality with reality itself - not ideal, “earthly”.

The image of Don Quixote has also become eternal due to its universality: always and everywhere there are noble idealists, defenders of goodness and justice, who defend their ideals, but are unable to really assess reality. Even the concept of “quixoticism” arose. It combines a humanistic striving for the ideal, enthusiasm, lack of selfishness, on the one hand, and naivety, eccentricity, adherence to dreams and illusions, on the other. Don Quixote's inner nobility is combined with the comedy of her external manifestations (he is able to fall in love with a simple peasant girl, but sees in her only a Beautiful noble lady).

The second important eternal image of the novel is the witty and earthy Sancho Panza. He is the complete opposite of Don Quixote, but the heroes are inextricably linked, they are similar to each other in their hopes and disappointments. Cervantes shows with his heroes that reality without ideals is impossible, but they must be based on reality.

A completely different eternal image appears before us in Shakespeare's tragedy Hamlet. This is a deeply tragic image. Hamlet understands reality well, soberly assesses everything that happens around him, and firmly stands on the side of good against evil. But his tragedy is that he cannot take decisive action and punish evil. His indecisiveness is not a sign of cowardice; he is a brave, outspoken person. His hesitation is a consequence of deep thoughts about the nature of evil. Circumstances require him to kill his father's killer. He hesitates because he perceives this revenge as a manifestation of evil: murder will always remain murder, even when a villain is killed. The image of Hamlet is the image of a person who understands his responsibility in resolving the conflict between good and evil, who stands on the side of good, but his internal moral laws do not allow him to take decisive action. It is no coincidence that this image acquired a special resonance in the 20th century - an era of social upheaval, when each person solved for himself the eternal “Hamlet question”.

Several more examples of “eternal” images can be given: Faust, Mephistopheles, Othello, Romeo and Juliet - they all reveal eternal human feelings and aspirations. And each reader learns from these images to understand not only the past, but also the modern.

"Eternal Images"- artistic images of works of world literature, in which the writer, based on the vital material of his time, managed to create a lasting generalization applicable in the life of subsequent generations. These images acquire a nominal meaning and retain artistic significance right up to our time.

Thus, Prometheus summarizes the features of a person who is ready to give his life for the good of the people; Antea embodies the inexhaustible power that an inextricable connection with his native land, with his people gives to a person; in Faust - man’s indomitable desire to understand the world. This determines the meaning of the images of Prometheus, Antaeus and Faust and the appeal to them by advanced representatives of social thought. The image of Prometheus, for example, was extremely highly valued by K. Marx.

The image of Don Quixote, created by the famous Spanish writer Miguel Cervantes (XVI - XVII centuries), personifies a noble, but devoid of vital soil, dreaming; Hamlet, the hero of Shakespeare's tragedy (XVI - early XVII centuries), is a common image of a divided person, torn by contradictions. Tartuffe, Khlestakov, Plyushkin, Don Juan and similar images live for many years in the consciousness of a number of human generations, since they summarize the typical shortcomings of a person of the past, stable traits of human character, brought up by feudal and capitalist society.

“Eternal images” are created in a certain historical setting and only in connection with it can they be fully understood. They are “eternal,” that is, applicable in other eras, to the extent that the human character traits generalized in these images are stable. In the works of the classics of Marxism-Leninism, there are often references to such images for their application in a new historical situation (for example, the images of Prometheus, Don Quixote, etc.).

It is customary to call eternal images of literary heroes who, as it were, step over the boundaries of the literary work or myth that gave birth to them, and receive an independent life, embodied in the works of other authors, centuries and cultures. These are many biblical and evangelical images (Cain and Abel, Judas), ancient (Prometheus, Phaedra), modern European (Don Quixote, Faust, Hamlet). The Russian writer and philosopher D.S. Merezhkovsky successfully defined the content of the concept of “eternal images”: “There are images whose life is connected with the life of all humanity; they rise and grow with him... Don Juan, Faust, Hamlet - these images have become part of the human spirit, with him they live and will die only with him.”

What properties provide literary images with the quality of eternal? This is, first of all, the irreducibility of the content of the image to the role that is assigned to it in a specific plot, and its openness to new interpretations. “Eternal images” must be to some extent “mysterious”, “bottomless”. They cannot be fully determined either by the social and everyday environment, or by their psychological characteristics.

Like a myth, the eternal image is rooted in more ancient, sometimes archaic layers of culture. Almost every image considered eternal has a mythological, folklore or literary predecessor.

"KARPMAN'S" TRIANGLE: EXECUTIONER, VICTIM AND RESCUE

There is a triangle of relationships - the so-called Karpman Triangle, consisting of three vertices:

Savior

Persecutor (Tyrant, Executioner, Aggressor)

Victim

This triangle is also called a magic triangle, because once you get into it, its roles begin to dictate the participants’ choices, reactions, feelings, perceptions, sequence of moves, and so on.

And most importantly, the participants freely “float” in this triangle according to their roles.

The Victim very quickly turns into a Persecutor (Aggressor) for the former Savior, and the Savior very quickly becomes the Victim of the former Victim.

For example, there is someone suffering from something or someone (this “something” or “someone” is the Aggressor). And a sufferer (sufferer) is, like, a Victim.

The Victim quickly finds a Savior (or saviors), who (for various reasons) tries (or rather, tries) to help the Victim.

Everything would be fine, but the Triangle is magical, and the Victim does not need deliverance from the Aggressor at all, and the Savior does not need the Victim to stop being a victim. Otherwise she won't need him. What is a Savior without sacrifice? The victim will be “cured”, “delivered”, who is to be saved?

It turns out that both the Savior and the Victim are interested (unconsciously, of course) in ensuring that virtually everything remains the same.

The victim must suffer, and the Savior must help.

Everyone is happy:

The Victim receives his share of attention and care, and the Savior is proud of the role he plays in the life of the Victim.

The Victim pays the Savior with recognition of his merits and role, and the Savior pays the Victim for this with attention, time, energy, feelings, etc.

So what? - you ask. Still happy!

No matter how it is!

The triangle doesn't stop there. What the victim receives is not enough. She begins to demand and draw more and more of the Savior’s attention and energy. The Savior tries (on a conscious level), but nothing works out for him. Of course, on an unconscious level, he is not interested in helping FINALLY, he is not a fool, to lose such a tasty process!

He doesn’t succeed, his condition and self-esteem (self-esteem) decrease, he becomes ill, and the Victim continues to wait and demand attention and help.

Gradually and imperceptibly, the Savior becomes a Victim, and the former Victim becomes a Persecutor (Aggressor) for her former Savior. And the more the Savior invested in the one he saved, the more, by and large, he owes her. Expectations are rising, and he MUST fulfill them.

The former victim is increasingly dissatisfied with the Savior who “did not live up to her expectations.” She is becoming more and more confused about who the real aggressor is. For her, the former Savior is already to blame for her troubles. Somehow a transition occurs imperceptibly, and she is almost consciously dissatisfied with her former benefactor, and already blames him almost more than the one whom she previously considered her Aggressor.

The former Savior becomes a deceiver and a new Aggressor for the former Victim, and the former Victim organizes a real hunt for the former Savior.

But that is not all.

The former idol is defeated and overthrown.

The victim is looking for new Saviors, because the number of Aggressors has increased - the former Savior did not live up to expectations, by and large, deceived her, and must be punished.

The former Savior, being already a Victim of his former Victim, exhausted in attempts (no, not to help, he now cares only about one thing - to be able to save himself from the “victim”) - begins (already like a true victim) to look for other saviors - both for himself and for his former Victim. By the way, these can be different Saviors - for the former savior and the former victim.

The circle is expanding. Why is the triangle called magic, because:

1. Each participant is in all its corners (plays all the roles in the triangle);

2. The triangle is designed in such a way that it involves more and more members of the orgy.

The former Savior, used, is thrown away, he is exhausted, and can no longer be useful to the Victim, and the Victim sets out in search and pursuit of new Saviors (its future victims)

From the Aggressor's point of view, there are also interesting things here.

The aggressor (the real aggressor, the one who considers himself an aggressor, a persecutor) as a rule, does not know that the Victim is not really a victim. That she is not really defenseless, she just needs this role.

The Victim very quickly finds Saviors, who “suddenly” appear on the path of the “Aggressor”, and he very quickly becomes their Victim, and the Saviors turn into Persecutors of the former Aggressor.

This was perfectly described by Eric Berne using the example of the fairy tale about Little Red Riding Hood.

The cap is the “Victim”, the wolf is the “Aggressor”, the hunters are the “Saviours”.

But the tale ends with the wolf's belly ripped open.

An alcoholic is a victim of Alcohol. His wife is the Savior.

On the other hand, the Alcoholic is an Aggressor for his wife, and she is looking for a savior - a narcologist or psychotherapist.

On the third hand, for an alcoholic his wife is the Aggressor, and his Savior from his wife is alcohol.

The doctor quickly turns from a Savior into a Victim, since he promised to Save both his wife and the alcoholic, and even took money for it, and the alcoholic’s wife becomes his Persecutor.

And the wife is looking for a new Savior.

And by the way, the wife finds a new offender (Aggressor) in the person of the doctor, because he offended and deceived her, and did not fulfill his promises by taking the money.

Therefore, the wife can begin the Persecution of the former Savior (doctor), and now the Aggressor, finding new Saviors in the form of:

1. Media, judiciary

2. Girlfriends with whom you can wash the bones of the doctor (“Oh, these doctors!”)

3. A new doctor who, together with his wife, condemns the “incompetence” of the previous doctor.

Below are signs by which you can recognize yourself when you find yourself in a triangle.

Feelings experienced by event participants:

Victim:

Feeling helpless

hopelessness,

coercion and infliction,

hopelessness,

powerlessness,

worthlessness,

no one needs

own wrongness

confusion,

ambiguities,

confusion,

frequent wrongness

own weakness and infirmity in the situation

self pity

Savior:

Feeling pity

desire to help

own superiority over the victim (over the one he wants to help)

greater competence, greater strength, intelligence, greater access to resources, “he knows more about how to act”

condescension to the one he wants to help

a feeling of pleasant omnipotence and omnipotence in relation to a specific situation

confidence that it can help

the conviction that he knows (or at least can find out) exactly how this can be done

inability to refuse (inconvenient to refuse help, or to leave a person without help)

compassion, a sharp, aching feeling of empathy (note, this is a very important point: the Savior is associated with the Victim! Which means he can never truly help her!)

responsibility FOR another.

Aggressor:

Feeling right

noble indignation and righteous anger

desire to punish the offender

desire to restore justice

offended pride

the conviction that only he knows how to do it right

irritation at the victim and even more so at the saviors, whom he perceives as an interfering factor (the saviors are mistaken, because only he knows what to do right now!)

the excitement of the hunt, the excitement of the chase.

The victim suffers.

Savior - saves and comes to the rescue and rescue.

The aggressor punishes, persecutes, teaches (teaches a lesson).

If you find yourself in this “magic” triangle, then know that you will have to visit all the “corners” of this triangle and try all its Roles.

Events in the triangle can take place as long as desired - regardless of the conscious desires of their participants.

The alcoholic's wife does not want to suffer, the alcoholic does not want to be an alcoholic, and the doctor does not want to deceive the alcoholic's family. But everything is determined by the result.

Until at least someone jumps out of this damned triangle, the game can continue as long as desired.

How to jump out.

Typically, manuals give the following advice: invert the roles. That is, replace the roles with others:

The aggressor must become a Teacher for you. The phrase I tell my students: “Our enemies, and those who “disturb” us,” are our best trainers and teachers)

Savior - Assistant or at most - Guide (you can - a trainer, like in a fitness club: you do it, and the trainer trains)

And the Victim is a Student.

These are very good tips.

If you find yourself playing the role of a Victim, start learning.

If you find yourself playing the role of the Savior, give up the stupid thoughts that the one “who needs help” is weak and weak. By accepting his thoughts like this, you are doing him a disservice. You do something FOR him. You are preventing him from learning something important to him on his own.

You cannot do anything for another person. Your desire to help is a temptation, the victim is your tempter, and you, in fact, are a tempter and provocateur for the one you are trying to help.

Let the person do it himself. Let him make mistakes, but these will be HIS mistakes. And he will not be able to blame you for this when he tries to move into the role of your Persecutor. A person must go his own way.

The great psychotherapist Alexander Efimovich Alekseychik says:

“You can only help someone who does something.”

And he continued, turning to the one who was helpless at that moment:

“What are you doing so that he (the one who helps) can help you?”

Great words!

In order to get help, you must do something. You can only help with what you do. If you don't do it, you can't be helped.

What you do is where you can get help.

If you are lying down, you can only be helped to lie down. If you are standing, you can only be helped to stand.

It is impossible to help a person who is lying down to stand up.

It is impossible to help a person get up who doesn’t even think about getting up.

It is impossible to help a person who is just thinking about getting up to stand up.

It is impossible to help a person who just wants to get up to stand up.

You can help the person who is getting up to stand up.

You can only help someone who is looking to find it.

You can only help someone who is walking to walk.

What is this girl DOING that you are trying to help her with?

Are you trying to help her with something she doesn't do?

Does she expect you to do something that she herself does not do?

So does she really need what she expects from you if she doesn’t do it herself?

You can only help the person who gets up to stand up.

“Getting up” means making an effort to get up.

These efforts and specific and unambiguous actions are observable; they have specific and indistinguishable signs. They are easy to recognize and identify precisely because of the signs that a person is trying to get up.

And one more thing, in my opinion, very important.

You can help a person stand up, but if he is not ready to stand (not ready for you to remove the support), he will fall again, and the fall will be many times more painful for him than if he continued to lie down.

What will a person do after being in an upright position?

What is the person going to do after this?

What is he going to do about it?

Why does he need to get up?

How to jump out.

The most important thing is to understand in what Role you entered the triangle.

Which corner of the triangle was your entrance to it.

This is very important and is not covered in the manuals.

Entry points.

Each of us has habitual or favorite Role-entrances to such magic triangles. And often in different contexts each has its own inputs. A person at work may have a favorite entrance to the triangle - the Role of the Aggressor (well, he loves to restore justice or punish fools!), and at home, for example, a typical and favorite entrance is the Role of the Savior.

And each of us should know the “points of weakness” of our personality, which simply force us to enter into these favorite roles.

It is necessary to study the external lures that lure us there.

For some, it’s someone’s trouble or “helplessness,” or a request for help, or an admiring look/voice:

"Oh, great one!"

"Only you can help me!"

"I'll be lost without you!"

You, of course, recognized the Savior in white robes.

For others, it is someone else's mistake, stupidity, injustice, incorrectness or dishonesty. And they bravely rush to restore justice and harmony, falling into a triangle in the role of Aggressor.

For others, it may be a signal from the surrounding reality that it does not need you, or it is dangerous, or it is aggressive, or it is heartless (indifferent to you, your desires or troubles), or it is poor in resources just for you, at this very moment . These are those who like to be Victims.

Each of us has our own decoy, the lure of which is very difficult for us to withstand. We become like zombies, showing heartlessness and stupidity, zeal and recklessness, falling into helplessness and feeling that we are right or worthless.

The beginning of the transition from the role of Savior to the role of Victim - a feeling of guilt, a feeling of helplessness, a feeling of being forced and obligated to help and the impossibility of one’s own refusal (“I am obliged to help!”, “I have no right not to help!”, “What will they think of me, how What will I look like if I refuse to help?").

The beginning of the transition from the role of Savior to the role of Persecutor is the desire to punish the “bad”, the desire to restore justice that is not directed at you, a feeling of absolute self-righteousness and noble righteous indignation.

The beginning of the transition from the role of Victim to the role of Aggressor (persecutor) is a feeling of resentment and injustice committed against you personally.

The beginning of the transition from the Role of the Victim to the role of the Savior - the desire to help, pity for the former Aggressor or Savior.

The beginning of the transition from the role of Aggressor to the role of Victim is a sudden (or growing) feeling of helplessness and confusion.

The beginning of the transition from the role of Aggressor to the role of Savior is a feeling of guilt, a feeling of responsibility FOR another person.

In fact:

It is VERY pleasant for the Savior to help and save; it is pleasant to stand out “in white robes” among other people, especially in front of the victim. Narcissism, narcissism.

It is very pleasant for the victim to suffer (“like in the movies”) and to be saved (to accept help), to feel sorry for himself, earning future non-specific “happiness” through suffering. Masochism.

It is very pleasant for an aggressor to be a warrior, to punish and restore justice, to be a bearer of standards and rules that he imposes on others, it is very pleasant to be in shining armor with a fiery sword, it is pleasant to feel one’s strength, invincibility and rightness. By and large, someone else’s mistake and wrongness for him is a legitimate (legal and “safe”) reason (permission, right) to commit violence and cause pain to another with impunity. Sadism.

The Savior knows how...

The aggressor knows that this cannot be done...

The victim wants, but cannot, but more often than not he doesn’t want anything, because he’s had enough of everything...

And another interesting diagnostic method. Diagnostics based on the feelings of observers/listeners

The observers' feelings may suggest what role the person telling you or sharing the problem is playing.

When you read (listen) to the Savior (or watch him), your heart is filled with pride for him. Or - with laughter, what a fool he has made of himself with his desire to help others.

When you read texts written by the Aggressor, you are overcome with noble indignation, either towards those about whom the Aggressor writes, or towards the Aggressor himself.

And when you read texts written by the Victim or listen to the Victim, you are overcome with acute mental pain FOR THE VICTIM, acute pity, desire to help, powerful compassion.

And don't forget

that there are no Saviors, no Victims, no Aggressors. There are living people who can play different roles. And each person falls into the trap of different roles, and happens to be at all the vertices of this enchanted triangle, but still, each person has some inclinations towards one or another vertex, a tendency to linger on one or another vertex.

And it is important to remember that the entry point into the triangle (that is, what drew a person into a pathological relationship) is most often the point at which a person lingers, and for the sake of which he “flew” into this triangle. But this is not always the case.

In addition, it is worth remembering that a person does not always occupy exactly the “top” that he complains about.

The “Victim” can be the Aggressor (Hunter).

The "Savior" may actually play, tragically and to the death, the role of Victim or Aggressor.

In these pathological relationships, as in Carroll’s famous “Alice...”, everything is so confused, upside down and deceitful that IN EACH CASE one requires quite careful observation of all participants in this “triangular round dance”, including oneself too - even if you are not part of this triangle.

The power of the magic of this triangle is such that any observer or listener begins to be drawn into this Bermuda triangle of pathological relationships and roles (c.)

Eternal images are literary characters who have received repeated embodiment in the literature of different countries and eras, which have become unique “signs” of culture: Prometheus, Phaedra, Don Juan, Hamlet, Don Quixote, Faust, etc. Traditionally, these include mythological and legendary characters, historical figures (Napoleon, Joan of Arc), as well as biblical figures, and the eternal images are based on their literary reflection. Thus, the image of Antigone is associated primarily with Sophocles, and the Eternal Jew traces its literary history back to the “Great Chronicle” (1250) by Matthew of Paris. Often the number of eternal images includes those characters whose names have become household names: Khlestakov, Plyushkin, Manilov, Cain. An eternal image can become a means of typification and then can appear impersonal (“Turgenev’s girl”). There are also national variants, as if generalizing the national type: in Carmen they often want to see primarily Spain, and in the good soldier Schweik - the Czech Republic. Eternal images can be enlarged to symbolically designate an entire cultural and historical era- both the one that gave birth to them, and the later one that rethought them anew. In the image of Hamlet, they sometimes see the quintessence of a man of the late Renaissance, who realized the limitlessness of the world and his capabilities and was confused before this limitlessness. At the same time, the image of Hamlet is a cross-cutting characteristic of romantic culture (starting with I.V. Goethe’s essay “Shakespeare and the End of It,” 1813-16), representing Hamlet as a kind of Faust, an artist, a “damned poet,” a redeemer of the “creative "The guilt of civilization. F. Freiligrath, who wrote the words: “Hamlet is Germany” (“Hamlet”, 1844), had in mind primarily the political inaction of the Germans, but involuntarily pointed out the possibility of such a literary identification of German, and in a broader sense, Western European people.

One of the main creators of the tragic myth about a Faustian European of the 19th century who found himself in a world that had gone “off track” was O. Spengler (“The Decline of Europe”, 1918-22). An early and very softened version of this worldview can be found in I.S. Turgenev’s articles “Two words about Granovsky” (1855) and “Hamlet and Don Quixote” (1860), where the Russian scientist is indirectly identified with Faust, and also describes “two fundamental, opposite features of human nature”, two psychological types symbolizing passive reflection and active action (“spirit of the northern” and “spirit of the southern man”). There is also an attempt to distinguish eras with the help of eternal images, linking the 19th century. with the image of Hamlet, and in the 20th century - “large wholesale deaths” - with the characters of “Macbeth”. In A. Akhmatova’s poem “Wild honey smells in the open air...” (1934), Pontius Pilate and Lady Macbeth turn out to be symbols of modernity. Enduring significance can serve as a source of humanistic optimism characteristic of the early D.S. Merezhkovsky, who considered eternal images to be “companions of humanity,” inseparable from the “human spirit,” enriching more and more generations (“Eternal Companions,” 1897). I.F.Annensky depicts the inevitability of a writer’s creative collision with eternal images in tragic tones. For him, these are no longer “eternal companions”, but “problems are poison”: “A theory arises, another, a third; the symbol is supplanted by the symbol, the answer laughs at the answer... At times we begin to doubt even the existence of a problem... Hamlet - the most poisonous of poetic problems - has already survived more than a century of development, has been through stages of despair, and not only from Goethe" (Annensky I. Books reflections. M., 1979). The use of literary eternal images involves recreating a traditional plot situation and endowing the character with features inherent in the original image. These parallels may be direct or hidden. Turgenev in “The Steppe King Lear” (1870) follows the outline of Shakespeare’s tragedy, while N.S. Leskov in “Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk” (1865) prefers less obvious analogies (the appearance of Boris Timofeich, poisoned by Katerina Lvovna, in the form of a cat, distantly parodicly reminiscent of Macbeth's visit to Banquo, who was killed on his orders). Although a considerable share of the author's and reader's efforts goes into constructing and unraveling such analogies, the main thing here is not the opportunity to see a familiar image in an unexpected context, but the new understanding and explanation offered by the author. The very reference to eternal images can also be indirect - they do not necessarily have to be named by the author: the connection between the images of Arbenin, Nina, Prince Zvezdich from “Masquerade” (1835-36) by M. Yu. Lermontov with Shakespeare's Othello, Desdemona, Cassio is obvious, but must be finally established by the reader himself.

When turning to the Bible, authors most often follow the canonical text, which is not possible to change even in detail, so the author’s will is manifested primarily in the interpretation and addition of a specific episode and verse, and not only in a new interpretation of the image associated with it (T. Mann "Joseph and his brothers", 1933-43). Greater freedom is possible when using a mythological plot, although here, due to its rootedness in cultural consciousness, the author tries not to deviate from the traditional scheme, commenting on it in his own way (the tragedies of M. Tsvetaeva “Ariadne”, 1924, “Phaedra”, 1927). The mention of eternal images can open up a distant perspective for the reader, which includes the entire history of their existence in literature - for example, all the “Antigones”, starting from Sophocles (442 BC), as well as the mythological, legendary and folklore past (from the Apocrypha, telling about Simon the Magus, to the folk book about Doctor Faustus). In “The Twelve” (1918) by A. Blok, the gospel plan is set by a title that sets up either a mystery or a parody, and further repetitions of this number, which do not allow one to forget about the twelve apostles, make the appearance of Christ in the final lines of the poem, if not expected, then naturally (in a similar way, M. Maeterlinck in “The Blind” (1891), bringing twelve characters onto the stage, forces the viewer to liken them to the disciples of Christ).

Literary perspective can also be perceived ironically when the indication of it does not live up to the reader's expectations. For example, M. Zoshchenko’s narration “starts” from the eternal images specified in the title, and thus plays up the discrepancy between the “low” subject and the declared “high”, “eternal” theme (“Apollo and Tamara”, 1923; “The Sorrows of Young Werther” ", 1933). Often the parody aspect turns out to be dominant: the author strives not to continue the tradition, but to “expose” it, to draw conclusions. By “devaluing” eternal images, he tries to get rid of the need to return to them again. This is the function of the “Tale of the Hussar-Schemnik” in “The Twelve Chairs” (1928) by I. Ilf and E. Petrov: in Tolstoy’s “Father Sergius” (1890-98), which they parodied, the theme of the holy hermit, which can be traced from hagiographic literature to Georgy, is focused. Flaubert and F.M. Dostoevsky and presented by Ilf and Petrov as a set of plot stereotypes, stylistic and narrative clichés. The high semantic content of eternal images sometimes leads to the fact that they appear to the author as self-sufficient, suitable for comparison with almost no additional authorial effort. However, taken out of context, they find themselves in a kind of airless space, and the result of their interaction remains unclear, if not parody. Postmodern aesthetics presupposes active pairing of eternal images, commenting, canceling and calling each other to life (H. Borges), but their multiplicity and lack of hierarchy deprives them of their inherent exclusivity, turns them into purely playful functions, so that they transform into a different quality.

“Eternal” images of world literature

"Eternal" images- artistic images of works of world literature, in which the writer, based on the vital material of his time, managed to create a lasting generalization applicable in the life of subsequent generations. These images acquire a nominal meaning and retain artistic significance right up to our time. They are ambiguous and multifaceted. In each of them lie great passions, which, under the influence of certain events, sharpen one or another character trait to the extreme.

Images

Works

Mother's image

Our Lady

Selfless motherly love

Nekrasov: poem “Mother”

Yesenin: poems “Letter to Mother”, etc.

Ballet, opera

Prometheus

Willingness to give his life for the good of the people

Ancient Greek "Myth of Prometheus"

Aeschylus: The Dramatic Prometheus Trilogy

Gorky: the legend of Danko in the story “Old Woman Izergil”

In cinema, sculpture, graphics, painting, ballet

Hamlet

The image of a split, torn by contradictions man

Shakespeare: the tragedy "Hamlet"

Turgenev: the story “Hamlet of the Shchigrovsky district”

Pasternak: poem "Hamlet"

Vysotsky: poem “My Hamlet”

In cinema, sculpture, graphics, painting

Romeo and Juliet

True love capable of self-sacrifice

Shakespeare: the tragedy "Romeo and Juliet"

Aliger: poem "Romeo and Juliet"

Prokofiev: ballet "Romeo and Juliet"

In cinema, opera, sculpture, graphics, painting

Don Quixote

Noble, but devoid of vital soil dreaming

Cervantes: the novel “Don Quixote”

Turgenev: article “Hamlet and Don Quixote”

Minkus: ballet “Don Quixote”

In cinema, sculpture, graphics, painting

Don Juan

(Don Giovanni,

Don Juan, Don Juan, Lovelace, Casanova)

Insatiability in love of the seeker of perfect female beauty

In the works of Moliere, Byron, Hoffmann, Pushkin and others.

Faust

Man's indomitable desire to understand the world

Goethe: the tragedy "Faust"

Mann: novel "Doctor Faustus"

In cinema, ballet, opera, sculpture, graphics, painting

Image of Evil

(Devil, Satan, Lucifer, Azazel, Beelzebub, Asmodeus, Antichrist,

Leviathan,

Mephistopheles,

Woland and others)

Confrontation with Good

Legends and myths of different nations

Goethe: the tragedy "Faust"

Bulgakov: the novel The Master and Margarita"

In cinema, ballet, opera, sculpture, graphics, painting

"Eternal" images should not be mixed with common noun images, which do not have such a generalizing, universal meaning ( Mitrofanushka, Khlestakov, Oblomov, Manilov and etc.)

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