Comparative History of Slavic Literatures |
Contents
Preliminary Remarks
|
3 |
Introduction
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5 |
The Beginnings of Slavic Literature
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26 |
The Early Middle Ages
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31 |
The Late Middle Ages
|
41 |
The Russian Literature of the Muscovite Period Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
|
61 |
The Hussite Movement
|
67 |
Renaissance
|
73 |
Baroque
|
88 |
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Common terms and phrases
Andrej appeared authors ballad baroque baroque literature baroque poetry Belyj Blok Brjusov Bulgarian Byzantine Christian Chronicle classicism classicist Croatian Croats culture Cyril of Turov Czech literature Dostoevskij East Slavic East Slavs elements epic epigones especially euphonic example fairy fifteenth century genres German Glagolitic Greek heroes Hussite ideological imitation important influence intellectual Ivan Kiev later Latin literary language lives metaphors Methodius Middle Ages Młoda Polska modern modernistic Morsztyn Moscow motifs movement nature novel numerous Old Church Slavonic Old Czech original period philosophical poems poet poetic Poland Poles Polish literature political portrayals present Prince prose Puškin reader realistic religious Renaissance rhymes romantic romanticism Russian literature Russian symbolism saints satirical secular sermons Slavic languages Slavic literatures Slavic nations Slavophiles Slovak songs Stefan style stylistic symbolism themes tion Tjutčev Tolstoj tradition translations Tsar typical Ukrainian various verse vols West European Western White Russian words writers written wrote