Specifications of Free Verse Writing in Lesja Ukrajinka’s Heritage

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Specifications of Free Verse Writing in Lesja Ukrajinka’s Heritage

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Abstract

The article gives an analysis of several poems taken from Lesja Ukrajinka’s nature philosophical verses written in the free form. What became the initials for this research was the nature of free verse, which would allow determining the specifications of generic and stylistic diffusion in works of a certain poet and observe formation of an individual vision of the world, thereby reflected in re-interpreted initials of folklore verse. The objectives of this work are to establish the formal and substantial features of free verse writing in the poetic works by Lesja Ukrajinka upon studying three most famous free verses (“Fragments from the Letter,” “Ave Regina!”, and “Spring in Winter”). Concisely, there was concluded that the formal and substantial conceits of Lesja’s creativity, the choice of genre and versification order first, evidence her endeavor to return to initial artistic syncretism. Particularly, her free verse, upon combining the prosodic systems dominant in Modernist literary process in Ukraine, appears to be the successor of preliminary versification traditions (folk duma verse) and, at the same time, the founder of those new. It is the factor that defines the special imagery of free verse works, including various lexical massifs (exotic, colloquial, or dialect words), artistic and scientific terms, and composition of a verse as a narration with profound philosophical content.

References

11 Cites in Article
  1. J Knappert (1995). Indian Mythology: An Encyclopedia of Myth and Legend.
  2. T Ognieva (2006). Artistic and figurative statements in Ukrainian scenography of the XX century.
  3. Yevgenia Ignatenko (2001). "Wallachian” Greek-language megalynarion Axion Estin in Ukrainian musical manuscripts of 17th and 18th centuries: Kyivan exegesis.
  4. N Naumenko (2010). TERMINOLOGICAL CONCEPT SPHERE TO COMPREHEND THE NATURE AND DEVELOPMENT TRENDS OF UKRAINIAN FREE VERSE.
  5. H Sydorenko (1980). Vid klasycnych normatyviv do verlibru [From Classical Normatives to Free Verse.
  6. A Tkačenko (2003). Vstup do literaturoznavstva: pidručnyk dlia studentiv humanitarnych specialnych vyščych zakladiv.
  7. Ukrajinka Lesja (1975). Ave Regina!.
  8. Ukrajinka Lesja (1975). 1789 – 1790.
  9. Ukrajinka Lesja (1975). Vesna zymova.
  10. N Vyšnevs'ka (1976). Liryka Lesi Ukrajinky: tekstolohične doslidžennja [Lyrics by Lesja Ukrajinka: A Textological Research.
  11. Oleg Yanush (1976). Common features of spontaneity and stream of consciousness in prose, poetry and song lyrics.

Funding

No external funding was declared for this work.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Ethical Approval

No ethics committee approval was required for this article type.

Data Availability

Not applicable for this article.

How to Cite This Article

nataliia_naumenko. 2021. \u201cSpecifications of Free Verse Writing in Lesja Ukrajinka’s Heritage\u201d. Global Journal of Human-Social Science - G: Linguistics & Education GJHSS-G Volume 21 (GJHSS Volume 21 Issue G5): .

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Issue Cover
GJHSS Volume 21 Issue G5
Pg. 29- 33
Journal Specifications

Crossref Journal DOI 10.17406/GJHSS

Print ISSN 0975-587X

e-ISSN 2249-460X

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GJHSS-G Classification: FOR Code: 199999
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v1.2

Issue date

April 5, 2021

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en
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The article gives an analysis of several poems taken from Lesja Ukrajinka’s nature philosophical verses written in the free form. What became the initials for this research was the nature of free verse, which would allow determining the specifications of generic and stylistic diffusion in works of a certain poet and observe formation of an individual vision of the world, thereby reflected in re-interpreted initials of folklore verse. The objectives of this work are to establish the formal and substantial features of free verse writing in the poetic works by Lesja Ukrajinka upon studying three most famous free verses (“Fragments from the Letter,” “Ave Regina!”, and “Spring in Winter”). Concisely, there was concluded that the formal and substantial conceits of Lesja’s creativity, the choice of genre and versification order first, evidence her endeavor to return to initial artistic syncretism. Particularly, her free verse, upon combining the prosodic systems dominant in Modernist literary process in Ukraine, appears to be the successor of preliminary versification traditions (folk duma verse) and, at the same time, the founder of those new. It is the factor that defines the special imagery of free verse works, including various lexical massifs (exotic, colloquial, or dialect words), artistic and scientific terms, and composition of a verse as a narration with profound philosophical content.

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Specifications of Free Verse Writing in Lesja Ukrajinka’s Heritage

Nataliia Naumenko
Nataliia Naumenko

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