Morkina Y. —
Society and Poetry: Ephemerality and Eternity
// Philology: scientific researches. – 2018. – ¹ 1.
– P. 122 - 135.
DOI: 10.7256/2454-0749.2018.1.25343
URL: https://en.e-notabene.ru/fmag/article_25343.html
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Abstract: The subject of the research is the poetry from the piont of view of its dependence and independence from social factors. A poetical composition is a complex ideal system of meanings that exist in the minds of both a writer and reader. Yury Lotman already wrote about a poetical composition being a complex system. Morkina takes up the position that this is a complex ideal system of meanings that is formed in the mind of a writer writing poetry and that of a reader reading it. The way the system is perceived depends on two kinds of meanings: internal (aesthetical)and external social meanings predetermined by the society. In her article Morkina applies phenomenological methods of research. She uses the metaphor of stream of consciousness that was offered for the first time by William Jameson and Henri Bergson and later used by Edmund Husserl, the founder of the phenomenological branch of philosophy. Consciousness is viewed by the author as an authopoetical flow of meanings that create and transform intentional objects as complex ideal systems. For the first time in the academic literature the author analyzes poems of M. Tsvetaeva and A. Debabov from the phenomenological point of view. The author of the article demonstrates that at the moment of being written, poetical compositions assimilate a lot of meanings from the current political and social environment. Presenting 'models of the world', poems perform a cognitive function acting as models and giving a reader an insight into the social situation in the country and realities of one's internal life. As the social situation changes, the poem starts to bear a different meaning for the reader who is now able to understand 'eternal' messages of the poetic composition such as human existence at any time and in an society.
Morkina Y. —
Anthropocosm of a Poetical Composition (On the Definition of Cultural Evolution)
// Philology: scientific researches. – 2015. – ¹ 3.
– P. 264 - 274.
DOI: 10.7256/2454-0749.2015.3.16477
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Abstract: The subject of the research is poetry as part of human world, i.e. anthropocosm. Morkina understands anthropocosm as the subject of cultural evolution and the world immanent to human - the world of meaning-ful mental phenomena. Just like William James and Edmund Husserl, the researcher understands consciousness as a flow of meanings. Being an intentional object, any consciousness phenomenon is a complex system of meanings. This is true for the phenomenon of a poetical composition. Poetical part of human world is viewed by the author of the article based on a concrete example, i.e. analysis of a poem 'The Sun' written by a modern poet Denis Karasev. The researcher provides a detailed analysis of Denis Karasev's poem by using phenomenological methods. Morkina views both the entire anthropocosm (human inner world) and poetical part of anthropocosm from the phenomenological point of view. In her anaysis Morkina tries to view poetry from the point of view of a philosopher but not a literary critic. The researcher introduces the term 'anthropocosm' and defines it as heuristic for the phenomenological research of human world. The definition implies conceptualization of human world that is understood as the entire humanity. The author of the article demonstrates that phenomena (intentional mental objects) create united systems. The main feature of these sytems is their meaningfulness. Anthropocosm is the greatest phenomenon system that includes components of all human meaning systems: all initial meanings - sensations, all human-dimension phenomena, all particular worldviews of certain sciences. For the first time in the academic literature the author demonstrates that a poetical composition is a complex ideal meaning systems included in the cultural evolution.
Morkina Y. —
// Psychology and Psychotechnics. – 2014. – ¹ 11.
– P. 1162 - 1171.
DOI: 10.7256/2454-0722.2014.11.12920
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Morkina Y. —
// Psychology and Psychotechnics. – 2014. – ¹ 6.
– P. 587 - 596.
DOI: 10.7256/2454-0722.2014.6.12164
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Morkina Y. —
// Philosophy and Culture. – 2013. – ¹ 6.
– P. 10 - 10.
DOI: 10.7256/2454-0757.2013.6.7776
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Morkina Y. —
// Philosophy and Culture. – 2011. – ¹ 6.
DOI: 10.7256/2454-0757.2011.6.3715
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Morkina Y. —
// Philosophy and Culture. – 2011. – ¹ 5.
DOI: 10.7256/2454-0757.2011.5.5056
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