Annotation |
The article attempts to compare the three female characters in the novel Doctor Zhivago to identify their role
in the formation of the psychological image of the main character, as well as their main functions as characters in
the plot structure of the novel. Distinguishing the terms “character” and “hero” as theoretical concepts, we seek
to establish the complementarity of two methods: character analysis as a way of structuring the text, on the one
hand, and phenomenological, which allows us to capture the uniqueness of a single hero, as well as its influence
on the fate of other participants in the action. Taking into account the long-term work on Doctor Zhivago, the author
of the article proceeds from the idea that along with autobiographical material in the characterization of three
women – Tonya, Larisa, and Marina, B. Pasternak widely uses plot analogies with masterpieces of Russian and
world literature, as well as certain allusions to biblical images. Important here is the principle of inseparability and
non-confusion in the depiction of the fates of the three women in their relationship with the main character, associated
with the Christian tradition. For the first time, the article introduces the essentiality– existentiality opposition
to compare the main female figures. At the same time, it is important that the author, creating female images,
uses a different measure of fabulousness associated with the vicissitudes in the life of the main character – the maximum in the relationship of Yuri and Lara and the minimum in relation to the hero with Marina. There is also a
different degree of detail of the three images, the use of symbols in their characterization, and the symbolization
as the main method of Marina’s characterization is noted. The author concludes that the outstanding Russian
poet and novelist B. Pasternak shows a high degree of skill, penetrating the depths of female psychology. At the
same time, while maintaining the principles of construction characteristic of the classical narrative, the writer,
thanks to the special arrangement of the material, gives the novel features that bring it closer to the best examples
of world literature of the twentieth century. |
References |
1. Pasternak, B. L. Passing to Faust and Shakespeare for a possible future preface, explanations, etc. Boris
Pasternak. PSS: in 11 v. V.5. M: 2004: 394. (In Rus.)
2. Smirnov, I. P. The Roman mysteries Doctor Zhivago. M: New literary review, 1996. (In Rus.)
3. Rowland, M. F., Rowland, P. Pasternak’s Doctor Zhivago. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press,
1967. (In Engl.)
4. Cialdini, R. B., Goldstein N. J. SOCIAL INFLUENCE: Compliance and Conformity. Annual Review of
Psychology, no. 55, pp. 591–621, 2004. (In Engl.)
5. Mackail, J. W. Penelope In the Odyssey. Cambridge: University press, 1916. (In Engl.)
6. Shipley, J. T. Encyclopedia of Literature. New York: Philosophical Library, 1946. (In Engl.)
7. Pickrel, P. Flat and Round Characters Reconsidered. The Journal of Narrative Technique, no. 18, pp. 81–
198, 1988. (In Engl.)
8. Solmaz, A. Relationship between Stream of Consciousness and Disintegration in 20th Century Literature.
2018. (In Engl.)
9. Friedman, M. J. Stream of Consciousness: A Study in Literary Method. New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1955. (In Engl.)
10. Karakter, F., Kurgusal, M. V., İnsan, A., Karakterler, D., Murdoch’tan, I., Franz, M. M., & Samsa,
K. G. Forsterian Model of Characterization and Non-Human Characters in Narrative Fiction: Iris Murdoch’s Mister
Mars and Franz Kafka’s Gregor Samsa. SEFAD, no. 37, pp. 67–78, 2017. (In Engl.)
11. Likhachev, D. S. Reflections on the novel Doctor Zhivago by B. L. Pasternak. New world, no. 1, pp. 5–10,
1988. (In Rus.)
12. Morozov, S. V. Lara: sources, prototypes and prototypes of the main female image of the novel Doctor
Zhivago. Litera, no. 5, pp. 35–44, 2019. (In Rus.)
13. Bykov, D. Boris Pasternak. Moscow: Young guard, 2016. (In Rus.)
14. Poetics of Doctor Zhivago in a narratological reading. The collective monograph / under the editorship
of V. I. Tupy. Moscow: Intrada, 2014: 512. (In Rus.)
15. Akimova, A. S. “We are in the Book of Rock on one line”: Shakespeare’s text in the novel Doctor Zhivago
by B. L. Pasternak. Knowledge. Understanding. Skill, no. 1, pp. 137–141, 2011. (In Rus.)
16. Burov, S. G. Hoffman’s trail in the novel Doctor Zhivago. S. G. Burov. Questions of Literature, no. 1,
pp. 189–211, 2015. (In Rus.) |