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Copyright Firenze University Press 2015

Abstract

The paper offers a short analysis of the main subject in Taras Sevcenko's famous ballad Topolja from 1839; in the ballad, a young girl forced to marry an older man by her own mother asks nature for help and, eventually, finds herself turned into a slim poplar. In Ukrainian philology, Sevcenko's poetic masterpiece was initially compared to similar subjects in Ukrainian folk songs. Ivan Franko, however, already in 1890 also mentioned ancient Greek and Roman literature and Russian and Polish Romanticism as a broader European context for Topolja. Underlining this broader European approach as offered by Franko, the paper delivers further material from Greek, Russian, Slovene, and German literature from Homer and Aleksandr S. Puskin up to the German expressionist poet Georg Heym. The various works of all these writers clearly demonstrate that comparing a girl with a poplar was a poetic subject used at least up until the beginning of the 20th century. Next to this, the comparison as introduced into Ukrainian literature by Taras Sevcenko in 1839, is also typical of Pavlo Tycyna's early collections of poems, which are now appreciated as masterpieces of Ukrainian modernism.

Details

Title
La ballata Topolja di Taras Sevcenko. Una prospettiva comparatistica
Author
Simonek, Stefan
Pages
295-299,432
Section
Blocco tematico
Publication year
2015
Publication date
2015
Publisher
Firenze University Press Università degli Studi di Firenze
ISSN
1824761X
e-ISSN
18247601
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
Italian
ProQuest document ID
1770053729
Copyright
Copyright Firenze University Press 2015