Retardation in Nineteenth-Century Plays about Bureaucracy

Bureaucracy was an extremely popular theme in Russian drama in the 1850s. It seems to be a promising direction for modern historical and literary studies, as well as narratology. The article describes the functions of retardation in nineteenth-century plays that featured bureaucracy. It focuses on t...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Anastasiia I. Lebedeva
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Kemerovo State University 2025-03-01
Series:СибСкрипт
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.sibscript.ru/jour/article/view/5776
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850235873392590848
author Anastasiia I. Lebedeva
author_facet Anastasiia I. Lebedeva
author_sort Anastasiia I. Lebedeva
collection DOAJ
description Bureaucracy was an extremely popular theme in Russian drama in the 1850s. It seems to be a promising direction for modern historical and literary studies, as well as narratology. The article describes the functions of retardation in nineteenth-century plays that featured bureaucracy. It focuses on the artistic device of retardation, its place in the composition, its effect on the reader, its role in the speech of minor characters, etc. The research compared Vladimir Sollogub’s The Official (1856), Aleksei Potekhin’s Tinsel (1858), and Nikolai Lvov’s The World Is Not Without Good People (1857) against Alexander Ostrovsky’s iconic A Profitable Position (1856). The plays were subjected to the structural-semantic method, which made it possible to identify and describe their composition and characters with their ideological-conceptual impact on the story. The typological analysis of the plays was compared with that of Ostrovsky’s epic drama. In the minor plays, retardation helped to increase the tension before the denouement; in Ostrovsky’s comedy, it relieved the tension. Ostrovsky used the continuous retardation in the narratives of secondary characters to slow down the plot development and emphasize the semantic multifacetedness. In the epic drama, retardation blurred the boundaries of the dramatic situation to showcase its uncertainty, making the denouement nothing but a formal ending.
format Article
id doaj-art-ac7dd0e17a164067b48f17b75b9c99aa
institution OA Journals
issn 2949-2122
2949-2092
language deu
publishDate 2025-03-01
publisher Kemerovo State University
record_format Article
series СибСкрипт
spelling doaj-art-ac7dd0e17a164067b48f17b75b9c99aa2025-08-20T02:02:06ZdeuKemerovo State UniversityСибСкрипт2949-21222949-20922025-03-0127113814810.21603/sibscript-2025-27-1-138-1484767Retardation in Nineteenth-Century Plays about BureaucracyAnastasiia I. Lebedeva0Lomonosov Moscow State UniversityBureaucracy was an extremely popular theme in Russian drama in the 1850s. It seems to be a promising direction for modern historical and literary studies, as well as narratology. The article describes the functions of retardation in nineteenth-century plays that featured bureaucracy. It focuses on the artistic device of retardation, its place in the composition, its effect on the reader, its role in the speech of minor characters, etc. The research compared Vladimir Sollogub’s The Official (1856), Aleksei Potekhin’s Tinsel (1858), and Nikolai Lvov’s The World Is Not Without Good People (1857) against Alexander Ostrovsky’s iconic A Profitable Position (1856). The plays were subjected to the structural-semantic method, which made it possible to identify and describe their composition and characters with their ideological-conceptual impact on the story. The typological analysis of the plays was compared with that of Ostrovsky’s epic drama. In the minor plays, retardation helped to increase the tension before the denouement; in Ostrovsky’s comedy, it relieved the tension. Ostrovsky used the continuous retardation in the narratives of secondary characters to slow down the plot development and emphasize the semantic multifacetedness. In the epic drama, retardation blurred the boundaries of the dramatic situation to showcase its uncertainty, making the denouement nothing but a formal ending.https://www.sibscript.ru/jour/article/view/5776dramaepicplotretardationnarrativeminor charactersdenouementalexander ostrovsky
spellingShingle Anastasiia I. Lebedeva
Retardation in Nineteenth-Century Plays about Bureaucracy
СибСкрипт
drama
epic
plot
retardation
narrative
minor characters
denouement
alexander ostrovsky
title Retardation in Nineteenth-Century Plays about Bureaucracy
title_full Retardation in Nineteenth-Century Plays about Bureaucracy
title_fullStr Retardation in Nineteenth-Century Plays about Bureaucracy
title_full_unstemmed Retardation in Nineteenth-Century Plays about Bureaucracy
title_short Retardation in Nineteenth-Century Plays about Bureaucracy
title_sort retardation in nineteenth century plays about bureaucracy
topic drama
epic
plot
retardation
narrative
minor characters
denouement
alexander ostrovsky
url https://www.sibscript.ru/jour/article/view/5776
work_keys_str_mv AT anastasiiailebedeva retardationinnineteenthcenturyplaysaboutbureaucracy