Passing through Nizhny: Nizhny Novgorod Text (Essay-Reconstruction Approach)
https://doi.org/10.25205/1818-7935-2022-20-2-19-28
Abstract
The paper is dedicated to the reconstruction of the Nizhniy Novgorod text in the Russian culture based on the travelers’, writers’, publicists’, and politicians’ impressions found in their travel notes, stories, and essays. In the process of reconstruction the Nizhniy Novgorod text recreates some non-trivial senses, similar to all the documents concerned. In many predicate descriptions Nizhniy Novgorod is described as a beautiful Russian town, a third capital of Russia, a European or provincial town, an orthodox or trade center, as well as a market and money-grabbing place. To understand why such controversial properties are applied to the town we should try and get the essence of these judgments: topography, historical events and legends, urban structure, fair activities, the residents’ manners and customs, etc. These contradictions can be solved by defining conflicting judgments (i) in different time intervals: military in earlier times, trading now; hot in summer, cold in winter; (ii) in different loci: with regard to the Kremlin, the Otkos and the Alexander promenade it is beautiful, magnificent and picturesque; with regard to numerous churches and monasteries it is orthodox by God; with regard to the Tolkuchka and the Millionka on a market day it is greedy and money-grubbing; with regard to restaurants, pubs and crack houses near the Fair, it is sloppy drunk, dirty and dissolute; (iii) with regard to different attitudes or opinions: obnoxious, dirty and rude to some, well-managed, prosperous, charitable and delicate to others.
About the Author
A. E. BochkarevRussian Federation
Andrey Е. Bochkarev, Doctor of Sciences (Philology), Professor
SPIN 3213-6724
Nizhniy Novgorod
References
1. Arutyunova, N. D. Language and Human World. Moscow, Yazyki russkoy kultury, 1998, 896 p. (in Russ.)
2. Belonogova, V. Yu. Nizhny Novgorod text in foreign and Russian literature of the 19th century. In: Grekhnev readings: Collection of scientific papers. Nizhny Novgorod, Yu. A. Nikolaev Publ., 2007, pp. 107–133. (in Russ.)
3. Fortunatov, N. M. From the poetics of place to the structure of the text: Nizhny Novgorod context of Russian literature (P. I. Melnikov). In: Spiritual culture of the Nizhny Novgorod region. An experience of systemic description: Collective monograph. Nizhny Novgorod, Nizhny Novgo-rod State Uni. Press, 2018, pp. 18–31. (in Russ.)
4. Kalinin, I. A. Petersburg text as a product of theoretical mythologization. In: Petersburg collection. St. Petersburg, St. Petersburg State Uni. Press, 2005, pp. 24–34. (in Russ.)
5. Kalinin, I. A. “Petersburg Text” of Moscow Philology. Emergency Reserve. Debate about politics and culture, 2010, no. 2 (70), pp. 319–326. (in Russ.)
6. Knabe, G. S. (ed.). Moscow and the “Moscow text” of Russian culture. Moscow, RSUH Press, 1998, 224 p. (in Russ.)
7. Lotman, Yu. M. St. Petersburg Symbolism and Problems of City’s Semiotics. In: Lotman Yu. M. Typology and History of the Russian Culture. St. Petersburg, Iskusstvo-SPB Publ., 2002, pp. 208‒220. (in Russ.)
8. Mann, Yu. V. Petersburg and Moscow texts in Gogol’s works: the principle of complementarity. In: Petersburg collection. St. Petersburg, St. Petersburg State Uni. Press, 2005, pp. 193‒204. (in Russ.)
9. Mashkovtsev, V. (comp.), Vinogradova, T. V. (author of the text). A regally placed city. Nizhny Novgorod in an old postcard. Nizhny Novgorod, Posad Publ., 2000. (in Russ.)
10. Toporov, V. N. The Petersburg Text of the Russian Literature. In: Selected works. St. Petersburg, Iskusstvo-SPB Publ., 2003, 616 p. (in Russ.)
11. Tyupa, V. I. Root mythology of the Petersburg text. In: Petersburg collection. St. Petersburg, St. Petersburg State Uni. Press, 2005, p. 81–91. (in Russ.)
12. Yakovlev, A. A. Linguistic basis for the general theory of the linguistic consciousness. Vestnik NSU. Series: Linguistics and Intercultural Communication, 2018, vol. 16, no. 3, pp. 45–55. (in Russ.) DOI 10.25205/1818-7935-2018-16-3-45-55
Review
For citations:
Bochkarev A.E. Passing through Nizhny: Nizhny Novgorod Text (Essay-Reconstruction Approach). NSU Vestnik. Series: Linguistics and Intercultural Communication. 2022;20(2):19-28. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.25205/1818-7935-2022-20-2-19-28