“You pick up what comes to mind”. Connected motifs in the lullabies of the Russian North
https://doi.org/10.28995/2686-7249-2023-6-51-63
Abstract
About the Author
M. G. BelodedovaRussian Federation
Margarita G. Belodedova, student
6, Miusskaya Sq., Moscow, 125047
References
1. Golovin, V.V. (2000), Russkaya kolybel’naya pesnya v folklore i literature [Russian lullaby in folklore and literature], Turku, Finland.
2. Martynova, A.N. (1974), “An attempt of classification of Russian lullabies”, Sovetskaya etnografiya, no. 4, pp. 101–115.
3. Meletinskii, E.M. (1983), “Semantic organization of mythologic narrative and a problem of creating a semiotic motif and theme index”, Tekst i kul’tura: Trudy po znakovym sistemam [Text and culture: Works on sign systems], vol. 16, Tartu University, Tartu, USSR, pp. 115–125.
4. Neklyudov, S.Yu. (1984), “About some aspects of folklore motifs study”, in Putilov, B.N. (ed.), Fol’klor i etnografiya: u etnograficheskikh istokov fol’klornykh syuzhetov i obrazov [Folklore and ethnography: besides the ethnography origins of folklore themes and images], Nauka, Leningrad, USSR, pp. 221–229.
Review
For citations:
Belodedova M.G. “You pick up what comes to mind”. Connected motifs in the lullabies of the Russian North. RSUH/RGGU Bulletin: “Literary Teory. Linguistics. Cultural Studies”, Series. 2023;(6):51-63. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.28995/2686-7249-2023-6-51-63