Exploring the Boundaries of Texts and Literary Cults

The essay focuses on the interrelated phenomena of literary cult and cultic text. Bearing on the conceptual ideas of Sergey Zenkin and Péter Dávidházi, we problematize the boundaries between text and cults on the example of two case studies. One has to do with a recent interpretation of Uncle Tom’s...

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Main Authors: Zsófia Kalavszky, Alexandra P. Urakova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Russian Academy of Sciences, A.M. Gorky Institute of World Literature 2020-12-01
Series:Studia Litterarum
Subjects:
Online Access:http://studlit.ru/images/2020-5-4/Kalavszky_Urakova.pdf
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author Zsófia Kalavszky
Alexandra P. Urakova
author_facet Zsófia Kalavszky
Alexandra P. Urakova
author_sort Zsófia Kalavszky
collection DOAJ
description The essay focuses on the interrelated phenomena of literary cult and cultic text. Bearing on the conceptual ideas of Sergey Zenkin and Péter Dávidházi, we problematize the boundaries between text and cults on the example of two case studies. One has to do with a recent interpretation of Uncle Tom’s Cabin, a nineteenth-century bestseller novel that had a great impact on literary and political life of the United States in the antebellum period. David S. Reynolds argues that Ulyanov-Lenin’s escape from the Finnish mainland by breaking his way on the broken ice of the river to an island might have been inspired by Uncle Tom’s Cabin where a fugitive slave Eliza does exactly the same thing. This essay suggests seeing this random encounter of the East and the West, the fictional and the “real” not as а curious anecdote or coincidence but as a mechanism of inventing a cultic text. What happens when one of the prominent figures of the European historical narrative, the crown prince assassinated in 1914, reads the works of the Russian poet before the fatal day in Sarajevo? Milorad Pavić building his short story Prince Ferdinand Reads Pushkin upon recognizable allusions to Pushkin’s texts, highlights similarities and differences, the fatal and the accidental in the stories of the poet shot in the duel and the Austrian crown prince being a victim of an assassination — two intersective storylines that may be described as “isomorphic plots.”
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spelling doaj-art-919e51ceda184dcaab79925f20ad21f62025-08-20T02:10:09ZengRussian Academy of Sciences, A.M. Gorky Institute of World LiteratureStudia Litterarum2500-42472541-85642020-12-0154668710.22455/2500-4247-2020-5-4-66-87Exploring the Boundaries of Texts and Literary CultsZsófia Kalavszky0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1276-3243Alexandra P. Urakova1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2432-2840Institute for Literary Studies (MTA Centre for Excellence), Research Centre for the Humanities, Ménesi út, 11–13, 1118 Budapest, Hungary.A.M. Gorky Institute of World Literature of the Russian Academy of SciencesThe essay focuses on the interrelated phenomena of literary cult and cultic text. Bearing on the conceptual ideas of Sergey Zenkin and Péter Dávidházi, we problematize the boundaries between text and cults on the example of two case studies. One has to do with a recent interpretation of Uncle Tom’s Cabin, a nineteenth-century bestseller novel that had a great impact on literary and political life of the United States in the antebellum period. David S. Reynolds argues that Ulyanov-Lenin’s escape from the Finnish mainland by breaking his way on the broken ice of the river to an island might have been inspired by Uncle Tom’s Cabin where a fugitive slave Eliza does exactly the same thing. This essay suggests seeing this random encounter of the East and the West, the fictional and the “real” not as а curious anecdote or coincidence but as a mechanism of inventing a cultic text. What happens when one of the prominent figures of the European historical narrative, the crown prince assassinated in 1914, reads the works of the Russian poet before the fatal day in Sarajevo? Milorad Pavić building his short story Prince Ferdinand Reads Pushkin upon recognizable allusions to Pushkin’s texts, highlights similarities and differences, the fatal and the accidental in the stories of the poet shot in the duel and the Austrian crown prince being a victim of an assassination — two intersective storylines that may be described as “isomorphic plots.”http://studlit.ru/images/2020-5-4/Kalavszky_Urakova.pdfliterary cultcultic textuncle tom’s cabinharriet beecher stowevladimir ulyanov-leninmilorad pavićalexander pushkinprince ferdinand.
spellingShingle Zsófia Kalavszky
Alexandra P. Urakova
Exploring the Boundaries of Texts and Literary Cults
Studia Litterarum
literary cult
cultic text
uncle tom’s cabin
harriet beecher stowe
vladimir ulyanov-lenin
milorad pavić
alexander pushkin
prince ferdinand.
title Exploring the Boundaries of Texts and Literary Cults
title_full Exploring the Boundaries of Texts and Literary Cults
title_fullStr Exploring the Boundaries of Texts and Literary Cults
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the Boundaries of Texts and Literary Cults
title_short Exploring the Boundaries of Texts and Literary Cults
title_sort exploring the boundaries of texts and literary cults
topic literary cult
cultic text
uncle tom’s cabin
harriet beecher stowe
vladimir ulyanov-lenin
milorad pavić
alexander pushkin
prince ferdinand.
url http://studlit.ru/images/2020-5-4/Kalavszky_Urakova.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT zsofiakalavszky exploringtheboundariesoftextsandliterarycults
AT alexandrapurakova exploringtheboundariesoftextsandliterarycults