Form of presentation | Articles in international journals and collections |
Year of publication | 2017 |
Язык | английский |
|
Khabutdinov Aydar Yurevich, author
Khabutdinova Mileusha Mukhametzyanovna, author
|
Bibliographic description in the original language |
Nasyrova A.M, Khabutdinov A.J, Khabutdinova M.M, The role of prayer discourse for karaganda concentration camp image creation in the works of Tatar writer Ayaz Gilyazov and the Kazakh poet Halim Zhaylybay//Astra Salvensis. - 2017. - Vol.5, Is.10. - P.201-207. |
Annotation |
The article provides the comparative analysis of the novel-reminiscence by Tatar
writer Ajaz Giljazov «Let's pray!« with the poem «The Black Headscarf« by Galim Zhajlybaev. The role
of prayer discourse is determined to reveal the theme of Gulag. The analysis is conditioned by the whole
complex of content elements from the texts of various genres - their themes, problems, conflict and an
ideological sense. In the course of the comparison, not only similar features were found in the development of
KARLAG (Karaganda labor camp) topic, but also the differences, which are conditioned by the specifics of
the author's consciousness and the architectonics of the semantic and value horizons corresponding to two
national literatures. Proceeding from the religious nature of the prayer genre, writers orient their artistic
texts to a sacred word. Genre self-consciousness determines the speech characteristics of a literary prayer. A.
Giljazov focuses on the canon of the Muslim Doga (a prayer) canon |
Keywords |
Tatar literature, Kazakh literature, Stalin camp, Ajaz Giljazov, Galim
Zhajlybaev, KARLAG. |
The name of the journal |
Astra Salvensis
|
URL |
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85040463482&partnerID=40&md5=4b2573541f7bbfcca7f6718930131b56 |
Please use this ID to quote from or refer to the card |
https://repository.kpfu.ru/eng/?p_id=175350&p_lang=2 |
Full metadata record |
Field DC |
Value |
Language |
dc.contributor.author |
Khabutdinov Aydar Yurevich |
ru_RU |
dc.contributor.author |
Khabutdinova Mileusha Mukhametzyanovna |
ru_RU |
dc.date.accessioned |
2017-01-01T00:00:00Z |
ru_RU |
dc.date.available |
2017-01-01T00:00:00Z |
ru_RU |
dc.date.issued |
2017 |
ru_RU |
dc.identifier.citation |
Nasyrova A.M, Khabutdinov A.J, Khabutdinova M.M, The role of prayer discourse for karaganda concentration camp image creation in the works of Tatar writer Ayaz Gilyazov and the Kazakh poet Halim Zhaylybay//Astra Salvensis. - 2017. - Vol.5, Is.10. - P.201-207. |
ru_RU |
dc.identifier.uri |
https://repository.kpfu.ru/eng/?p_id=175350&p_lang=2 |
ru_RU |
dc.description.abstract |
Astra Salvensis |
ru_RU |
dc.description.abstract |
The article provides the comparative analysis of the novel-reminiscence by Tatar
writer Ajaz Giljazov «Let's pray!« with the poem «The Black Headscarf« by Galim Zhajlybaev. The role
of prayer discourse is determined to reveal the theme of Gulag. The analysis is conditioned by the whole
complex of content elements from the texts of various genres - their themes, problems, conflict and an
ideological sense. In the course of the comparison, not only similar features were found in the development of
KARLAG (Karaganda labor camp) topic, but also the differences, which are conditioned by the specifics of
the author's consciousness and the architectonics of the semantic and value horizons corresponding to two
national literatures. Proceeding from the religious nature of the prayer genre, writers orient their artistic
texts to a sacred word. Genre self-consciousness determines the speech characteristics of a literary prayer. A.
Giljazov focuses on the canon of the Muslim Doga (a prayer) canon |
ru_RU |
dc.language.iso |
ru |
ru_RU |
dc.subject |
Tatar literature |
ru_RU |
dc.subject |
Kazakh literature |
ru_RU |
dc.subject |
Stalin camp |
ru_RU |
dc.subject |
Ajaz Giljazov |
ru_RU |
dc.subject |
Galim
Zhajlybaev |
ru_RU |
dc.subject |
KARLAG. |
ru_RU |
dc.title |
The role of prayer discourse for karaganda concentration camp image creation in the works of Tatar writer Ayaz Gilyazov and the Kazakh poet Halim Zhaylybay |
ru_RU |
dc.type |
Articles in international journals and collections |
ru_RU |
|