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The Language of Russian Peasants in the Twentieth Century

Autor Alexander D. Nakhimovsky
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 4 mar 2022
This book analyzes the social dialect of Russian peasants in the twentieth century through their letters and stories. It constitutes an oral history of peasants' tragic Soviet past, and argues that for all their variability, local peasant dialects maintained an underlying unity throughout the century.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781498575058
ISBN-10: 1498575056
Pagini: 226
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.37 kg
Editura: Lexington Books

Cuprins

Chapter 1. The language of Russian peasants as a social dialect

1.1 Introduction: The language of peasants

1.2 Peasant language before 1917

1.3 Examples from Bogoraz, Tenishev

1.4 An initial generalization: the peasant language profile

1.5 A longer story from 1925

Conclusions

Chapter 2. Peasants and Bolsheviks, 1917-1928

2.1 Introduction: The impact of the revolution

2.2 Letters to power: long history pre-1905

2.3 The revolution of 1905 and new kinds of letters

2.4 Linguistic background: Phraseology, Formulaic language

2.5 Revolution and civil war, 1917-21

2.6 Bolshevik innovations and peasant attitudes

2.7 Available peasant materials, 1917-1921-1928

2.8 Directions of change

2.9 Categories and examples

Conclusions

Chapter 3. Personal letters 1939-1940

3.1 Introduction: the source and the background

3.2 Letters to the army and peasant moods

3.3 Personal letters as a genre: tradition, structure and formal elements

3.4 The source and the historical background

3.5 Examples of letters 1: three generations

3.6. Examples of letters 2: Old people

3.7 Examples of letters 3: Recent peasants and some success stories

3.8 The defining features of peasant letters

3.9 On literacy and letters from schoolchildren

3.10 Discourse and pragmatic features

3.11 Overlap and interpenetration with other social groups

3.12 Vocabulary, syntax, phraseology

Conclusions

Chapter 4. Scholars and narratives from the 1950s to today

4.1 A longer timeframe, the endangered language

4.2 Biographic narratives as historical testimony

4.3 Examples, grouped by history

4.4 The linguistics of peasant narratives

Conclusions: the unity of peasant language