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Vocative forms in G. Yakhina’s short story “A Moth”: Linguistic and cultural issues

https://doi.org/10.26907/2782-4756-2023-71-1-71-75

Abstract

   This article deals with the features of vocative forms used in a literary text. Guzel Yakhina’s short story “A Moth” was chosen as one of the most meaningful in terms of presenting culturally significant information (due to the combination of fictional and documentary narrative).

   The aim of the article is to identify and comment on linguistic universals and peculiar Russian (including Soviet) linguistic culture, which are realized in special forms of Russian anthroponymic appellatives in specific speech acts of address in the story.

   Methodologically, the article is of interdisciplinary character, because the author uses methodological tools based on the application of general scientific methods (modeling, interpretation) and specific methods (linguistic reconstruction of culture, language and culture commentary). Having analyzed the corpus of appellative words that forms a specific space of interpersonal communication in a literary text, the author highlights the features of the worldview and communicative stereotypes of the era, reconstructed in the literary text. We identify the reasons for the unproductive use of appellatives in the analyzed text by G. Yakhina, as well as the most frequently used anthroponymic units.

About the Author

A. Salakhova
Kazan Federal University
Russian Federation

Aygul Restamovna Salakhova, Ph.D. in Philology, Associate Professor

420008

18 Kremlyovskaya Str.

Kazan



References

1. Yakhina, G. (2014). Motylek [A Moth]. URL: https://magazines.gorky.media/neva/2014/2/motylek-2.html (accessed: 07. 02. 2023). (In Russian)

2. Stepanov, A. D. (2005). Problemy kommunikatsii u Chekhova [Communication Problems in Chekhov’s Work]. 400 p. Moscow, Yazyki slavianskoi kul'tury. (In Russian)

3. Mokienko, V. M. (1994). Russkaya brannaya leksika: tsenzurnoe i netsenzurnoe [Russian Swear Words: Censored and Foul Language]. No. 1/2, pp. 50–73. Rusistika. Berlin. (In Russian)

4. Severyanin, I. (1995). Gromokipyashchii kubok [A Thunder-Boiling Cup]. Sochineniya : v 5 tomakh. Vol. 1. 592 p. St. Petersburg, Logos. (In Russian)

5. Gol'din, V. E. (2009). Obrashchenie: teoreticheskie problemy [Vocatives: Theoretical Problems]. 136 p. Moscow, URSS. (In Russian)

6. Brykova, A. A. (2016). Semantika i pragmatika obrashchenii : na materiale zhurnalov dlya detei 20-40-kh gg. XX v. “Ezh” i “Chizh” : dis. … kand. filol. nauk [Semantics and Pragmatics of Vocatives: Based on Magazines for Children “Ezh” and “Chizh” of the 1920<sup>s</sup>–1940<sup>s</sup> : Ph.D. Thesis]. Saint Petersburg, University of St. Petersburg, 244 p. (In Russian)


Review

For citations:


Salakhova A. Vocative forms in G. Yakhina’s short story “A Moth”: Linguistic and cultural issues. Philology and Culture. 2023;(1):71-75. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.26907/2782-4756-2023-71-1-71-75

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ISSN 2782-4756 (Print)