Статті КІМ ДІІТ
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Browsing Статті КІМ ДІІТ by Author "Lypska, Iryna I."
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Item Some Aspects of the Moomins Books(Днепропетровский национальный университет им. Олеся Гончара, 2014) Muntian, Antonina O.; Lypska, Iryna I.EN: In the given article the author makes an attempt to trace various influences presented in the Moomin series by Finnish writer of the children’s fantasy books Tove Jansson. It is noted that intertextuality is no longer a new term in literary criticism, and is pointed out that there is a difference between intertextuality and influence concepts: intertextuality is a concept unconcerned with authors as individuals; it is interested in proving the existence of the connection between two or more texts and influence in its turn, tends to center on major authors and canonical works, identifying prior documents as sources or contexts for a given author. Along with that, it is stated in the article that the term genre of fantasy may sound as a brave statement, as far as fantasy should not be characterized as a genre, but rather as a characteristic of a text. While analyzing FSU scholars’ works it gets clear that the Moomins series was analyzed mostly as a text that follows Anderson’s literary tradition, however all the traces of the Golden Age tradition and modernism traits existing in the books were neglected.Item Some Aspects of the Moomins Books (preprint)(Днепропетровский национальный университет им. Олеся Гончара, Днепропетровск, 2014) Muntian, Antonina O.; Lypska, Iryna I.EN: In the given article the author makes an attempt to trace various influences presented in the Moomin series by Finnish writer of the children’s fantasy books Tove Jansson. It is noted that intertextuality is no longer a new term in literary criticism, and is pointed out that there is a difference between intertextuality and influence concepts: intertextuality is a concept unconcerned with authors as individuals; it is interested in proving the existence of the connection between two or more texts and influence in its turn, tends to center on major authors and canonical works, identifying prior documents as sources or contexts for a given author. Along with that, it is stated in the article that the term genre of fantasy may sound as a brave statement, as far as fantasy should not be characterized as a genre, but rather as a characteristic of a text. While analyzing FSU scholars’ works it gets clear that the Moomins series was analyzed mostly as a text that follows Anderson’s literary tradition, however all the traces of the Golden Age tradition and modernism traits existing in the books were neglected.