Humanism of Russian classical literature. The ideas of humanism in English and Russian literature What is the humanism of Russian literature

Literature and library science

Questions of humanism - respect for man - have interested people for a long time, since they directly concerned every living person on earth. These questions were especially acute in extreme situations for humanity, and above all during the civil war, when a grandiose clash of two ideologies brought human life to the brink of death, not to mention such “little things” as the soul, which was generally in some kind of a step away from complete destruction.

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Siberian State Transport University

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"The Problem of Humanism in Literature"

on the example of the works of A. Pisemsky, V. Bykov, S. Zweig.

abstract

In the discipline "Culturology"

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d cent student gr.D-112

Bystrova A.N ___________ Khodchenko S.D.

(signature) (signature)

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(date of inspection) (date of submission for inspection)

2011

Introduction…………………………………………………………

The concept of humanism………………………………………………

Pisemsky's humanism (on the example of the novel "The Rich Groom"

The problem of humanism in the works of V. Bykov (on the example of the story "Obelisk"……………………………………………….

The problem of humanism in S. Zweig's novel "Impatience of the Heart"……………………………………………………………..

Conclusion……………………………………………………..

Bibliography…………………………………………….

Introduction

Questions of humanism respect for man interested people for a long time, since they directly concerned every living person on earth. These questions were especially acute in extreme situations for humanity, and above all during the civil war, when a grandiose clash of two ideologies brought human life to the brink of death, not to mention such “little things” as the soul, which was generally in some kind of a step away from complete destruction. In the literature of time, the problem of identifying priorities, choosing between one's own life and the life of others is solved ambiguously by different authors, and in the abstract the author will try to consider what conclusions some of them come to.

Abstract topic "The problem of humanism in literature".

The theme of humanism is eternal in literature. Artists of the word of all times and peoples turned to her. They did not just show sketches of life, but tried to understand the circumstances that prompted a person to a particular act. The questions raised by the author are varied and complex. They cannot be answered simply, in monosyllables. They require constant reflection and search for an answer.

As a hypothesisthe position was adopted that the solution to the problem of humanism in literature is determined by the historical era (the time of creation of the work) and the worldview of the author.

Objective: identifying the features of the problem of humanism in domestic and foreign literature.

In accordance with the goal, the author decided the following tasks:

1) consider the definition of the concept of "humanism" in the reference literature;

2) to identify the features of solving the problem of humanism in literature on the example of the works of A. Pisemsky, V. Bykov, S. Zweig.

1. The concept of humanism

A person engaged in science comes across terms that are generally understood and commonly used for all areas of knowledge and for all languages. The concept of "humanism" is also among them. According to the exact remark of A.F. Losev, “this term turned out to have a very deplorable fate, which, however, all other too popular terms had, namely the fate of great uncertainty, ambiguity and often even banal superficiality.” The etymological nature of the term "humanism" is dual, that is, it goes back to two Latin words: humus - soil, earth; humanitas - humanity. In other words, even the origin of the term is ambiguous and carries the charge of two elements: the earthly, material elements and the elements of human relationships.

To move further in the study of the problem of humanism, let us turn to dictionaries. Here is how the explanatory “Dictionary of the Russian Language” by S.I. Ozhegov interprets the meaning of this word: “1. Humanity, humanity in social activities in relation to people. 2. The progressive movement of the Renaissance, aimed at the liberation of man from the ideological stagnation of feudalism and Catholicism. 2 And here is how the Great Dictionary of Foreign Words defines the meaning of the word “humanism”: “Humanism is a worldview imbued with love for people, respect for human dignity, concern for the welfare of people; Humanism of the Renaissance (Renaissance, 14th-16th centuries) is a social and literary movement that reflected the worldview of the bourgeoisie in its struggle against feudalism and its ideology (Catholicism, scholasticism), against the feudal enslavement of the individual and sought to revive the ancient ideal of beauty and humanity. 3

The “Soviet Encyclopedic Dictionary”, edited by A. M. Prokhorov, gives the following interpretation of the term humanism: “recognition of the value of a person as a person, his right to free development and manifestation of his abilities, affirmation of the good of a person as a criterion for assessing social relations.” 4 In other words, the compilers of this dictionary recognize the following essential qualities of humanism: the value of a person, the assertion of his rights to freedom, to the possession of material goods.

The “Philosophical Encyclopedic Dictionary” of E.F. Gubsky, G.V. Korableva, V.A. Lutchenko calls humanism “reflected anthropocentrism, which comes from human consciousness and has as its object the value of a person, except that it alienates a person from himself , subordinating it to superhuman powers and truths, or using it for purposes unworthy of a person. 5

Turning to dictionaries, one cannot fail to notice that each of them gives a new definition of humanism, expanding its ambiguity.

2. Pisemsky's humanism (on the example of the novel "The Rich Groom")

The novel "The Rich Groom" was a huge success. This is a work from the life of the noble and bureaucratic province. The protagonist of the work Shamilov, who claims to have a higher philosophical education, who is always fiddling with books that he is not able to overcome, with articles that he is just starting, with vain hopes of ever passing a candidate's exam, ruins the girl with his crappy spinelessness, then, no matter how whoever married a rich widow for money and ends up in the miserable role of a husband living on the payroll and under the shoe of an evil and capricious woman. People of this type are absolutely not to blame for the fact that they do not act in life, they are not to blame for the fact that they are useless people; but they are harmful in that they captivate with their phrases those inexperienced creatures who are seduced by their outward showiness; having carried them away, they do not satisfy their requirements; by increasing their sensitivity, their ability to suffer, they do nothing to alleviate their suffering; in a word, they are swamp lights that lead them into the slums and go out when the unfortunate traveler needs light to see his predicament.In words, these people are capable of exploits, sacrifices, heroism; so at least every ordinary mortal will think, listening to their rantings about a person, about a citizen, and other such abstract and lofty subjects. In fact, these flabby creatures, constantly evaporating into phrases, are not capable of either taking a decisive step or diligent work.

Young Dobrolyubov writes in his diary in 1853: reading “The Rich Groom” “awakened and determined for me the thought that had long been dormant in me and vaguely understood by me about the need for work, and showed all the ugliness, emptiness and unhappiness of the Shamilovs. I thanked Pisemsky from the bottom of my heart.” 6

Let us consider in more detail the image of Shamilov. He spent three years at the university, hanging out, listening to lectures on various subjects as incoherently and aimlessly as a child listens to the tales of an old nurse, left the university, went home to the provinces, and told there that “I intend to take an exam for a degree and came to the province in order to more conveniently study the sciences. Instead of reading seriously and consistently, he supplemented himself with journal articles, and immediately after reading an article, he embarked on independent work; sometimes he decides to write an article about Hamlet, sometimes he draws up a plan for a drama from Greek life; write ten lines and quit; but he talks about his work to anyone who only agrees to listen to him. His stories are of interest to a young girl who, in her development, stands above the county society; Finding a diligent listener in this girl, Shamilov draws close to her and, having nothing to do, imagines himself madly in love; as for the girl, she, like a pure soul, falls in love with him in the most conscientious way and, acting boldly, out of love for him, overcomes the resistance of her relatives; an engagement takes place with the condition that Shamilov before the wedding receives a candidate's degree and decides to serve. There is, therefore, the need to work, but the hero does not master a single book and begins to say: “I don’t want to study, I want to get married” 6 . Unfortunately, he does not say this phrase so easily. He begins to accuse his loving bride of coldness, calls her a northern woman, complains about his fate; pretends to be passionate and fiery, comes to the bride in a state of intoxication and, from drunken eyes, completely inopportunely and very ungracefully embraces her. All these things are done partly out of boredom, partly because Shamilov is terribly unwilling to study for the exam; in order to circumvent this condition, he is ready to go to the uncle of his bride for bread and even to beg through the bride for a secured piece of bread from an old nobleman, a former friend of her late father. All these nasty things are covered with a mantle of passionate love, which supposedly darkens Shamilov's mind; the implementation of these nasty things is hindered by circumstances and the firm will of an honest girl. Shamilov also arranges scenes, demands that the bride give herself to him before marriage, but she is so smart that she sees his childishness and keeps him at a respectful distance. Seeing a serious rebuff, the hero complains about his bride to a young widow and, probably to console himself, begins to declare his love to her. Meanwhile, relations with the bride are maintained; Shamilov is sent to Moscow to take an exam for a candidate;

6 A.F. Pisemsky "The Rich Groom", text according to ed. Fiction, Moscow 1955, p. 95

Shamilov does not take the exam; he does not write to his fiancee and, finally, manages to assure himself without much difficulty that his fiancee does not understand him, does not love him, and is not worth it. The bride dies from various shocks in consumption, and Shamilov chooses the good part, that is, marries the young widow who consoled him; this turns out to be quite convenient, because this widow has a wealthy fortune. The young Shamilovs arrive in the city in which the whole action of the story took place; Shamilov is given a letter written to him by his late bride the day before his death, and in connection with this letter the following scene takes place between our hero and his wife, which worthily completes his cursory characterization:

Show me the letter your friend gave you, she began.

What letter? Shamilov asked with feigned surprise, sitting down by the window.

Do not lock yourself up: I heard everything ... Do you understand what you are doing?

What am I doing?

Nothing: you only accept letters from your former friends from that person who himself was previously interested in me, and then tell him that you are now punished by whom? let me ask you. By me, probably? How noble and how clever! Still you are considered smart person; but where is your mind? what does it consist of, tell me, please?.. Show me the letter!

It is written to me, not to you; I am not interested in your correspondence.

I didn’t have and don’t have any correspondence with anyone ... I won’t allow you to play yourself, Pyotr Alexandrovich ... We made a mistake, we didn’t understand each other.

Shamilov was silent.

Give me the letter, or go wherever you want right now, repeated Katerina Petrovna.

Take. Do you really think that I attach any special interest to him? Shamilov said with a sneer. And, throwing the letter on the table, he left. Katerina Petrovna began to read it with comments. “I am writing this letter to you for the last time in my life…”

Sad start!

“I am not angry with you; you forgot your vows, you forgot the relationship that I, insane, considered inseparable.

Tell me, what an inexperienced innocence! "In front of me now..."

Boring! .. Annushka! ..

The maid appeared.

Go, give the master this letter and tell him that I advise him to make a medallion for him and keep it on his chest.

The maid left and, returning, reported to the mistress:

Pyotr Aleksandrovich was ordered to say that they would take care of him without your advice.

In the evening Shamilov went to Karelin's, stayed with him until midnight and, returning home, read Vera's letter several times, sighed and tore it up. The next day he asked his wife for forgiveness all morning 7 .

As we can see, the problem of humanism is considered here from the position of relations between people, the responsibility of each for his actions. And the hero is a man of his time, of his era. And he is what society has made him. And this point of view echoes the position of S. Zweig in the novel "Impatience of the Heart".

7 A.F. Pisemsky "The Rich Groom", text according to ed. Fiction, Moscow 1955, p. 203

3. The problem of humanism in S. Zweig's novel "Impatience of the Heart"

The well-known Austrian novelist Franz Werfel very correctly pointed out the organic connection between Zweig's worldview and the ideology of bourgeois liberalism in the article "The Death of Stefan Zweig", accurately describing the social environment from which Zweig emerged - a man and an artist. "This was the world of liberal optimism, which believed with superstitious naivety in the self-sufficient value of man, and in essence - in the self-sufficient value of a tiny educated layer of the bourgeoisie, in his sacred rights, the eternity of his existence, in his straightforward progress. The established order of things seemed to him protected and protected by a system of a thousand precautions. This humanistic optimism was the religion of Stefan Zweig, and he inherited the illusions of security from his ancestors. He was a man devoted with childish self-forgetfulness to the religion of humanity, in the shadow of which he grew up. He was also aware of the abysses of life, he approached them as artist and psychologist.But above him shone the cloudless sky of his youth, which he worshiped - the sky of literature, art, the only sky that liberal optimism valued and knew. Obviously, the darkening of this spiritual sky was for Zweig a blow that he could not bear. .."

Zweig's humanism is already at the beginning creative way the artist acquired the features of contemplation, and the criticism of bourgeois reality took on a conditional, abstracted form, since Zweig spoke not against specific and quite visible ulcers and diseases of capitalist society, but against "eternal" Evil in the name of "eternal" Justice.

The thirties for Zweig were years of severe spiritual crisis, inner turmoil and growing loneliness. However, the pressure of life pushed the writer to search for a solution to the ideological crisis and forced him to reconsider the ideas that underlay his humanistic principles.

Written in 1939, his first and only novel, Impatience of the Heart, also did not resolve the doubts that tormented the writer, although it contained an attempt by Zweig to rethink the issue of human life duty.

The action of the novel is played out in a small provincial town of the former Austria-Hungary on the eve of the First World War. His hero, a young lieutenant Hofmiller, meets the daughter of a local rich man, Kekesfalva, who falls in love with him. Edith Kekesfalva is sick: her legs are paralyzed. Hofmiller is an honest man, he treats her with friendly participation and only out of compassion pretends to share her feelings. Not finding the courage to directly tell Edith that he does not love her, Hofmiller gradually becomes confused, agrees to marry her, but after a decisive explanation, he flees from the city. Abandoned by him, Edith commits suicide, and Hoffmiller, not wanting it at all, essentially becomes her killer. This is the plot of the novel. Its philosophical meaning is revealed in Zweig's discussion of two types of compassion. One - cowardly, based on simple pity for the misfortunes of one's neighbor, Zweig calls "impatience of the heart." It hides the instinctive desire of a person to protect his peace and well-being and to brush aside real help to the suffering and suffering. The other is courageous, open compassion, not afraid of the truth of life, whatever it may be, and setting as its goal the provision of real help to a person. Zweig, denying with his novel the futility of the sentimental "impatience of the heart", tries to overcome the contemplativeness of his humanism and give it an effective character. But the trouble of the writer was that he did not reconsider the fundamental foundations of his worldview and turned to an individual person, not wanting or not being able to understand that true humanism requires not only the moral re-education of a person, but a radical change in the conditions of his existence, which will be the result of a collective action. and creativity of the masses.

Although main plot novel "Impatience of the Heart" is built on a personal, private drama, as if taken out of the sphere of generally significant and important social conflicts, she was chosen by the writer in order to determine what should be the social behavior of a person 7 8.

The meaning of the tragedy was interpreted by Dr. Condor, who explained to Hoffmiller the nature of his behavior towards Edith: “There are two kinds of compassion. One faint-hearted and sentimental, it is, in essence, nothing but the impatience of the heart, in a hurry to get rid of the painful feeling at the sight of someone else's misfortune; it is not compassion, but only an instinctive desire to protect one's peace from the suffering of one's neighbor. But there is another compassion true, which requires action, not sentiment, it knows what it wants, and is determined, suffering and compassionate, to do everything in human strength and even more than them" 8 9. And the hero himself reassures himself: “What was the significance of one murder, one personal guilt in comparison with thousands of murders, with a world war, with massive destruction and annihilation of human lives, the most monstrous of all that history has known?” 9 10

After reading the novel, we can conclude that the norm of personal and social behavior of a person should be effective compassion, requiring practical actions from a person. The conclusion is very important, bringing Zweig closer to Gorky's understanding of humanism. True humanism requires not only the moral activity of a person, but also a radical change in the conditions of his existence, which is possible as a result of the social activity of people, their participation in historical creativity.

4. The problem of humanism in the works of V. Bykov (on the example of the story "Obelisk")

The stories of Vasily Bykov can be defined as heroic and psychological. In all his works, he portrays the war as a terrible national tragedy. But the war in Bykov's stories is not only a tragedy, but also a test of the spiritual qualities of a person, because in the most intense periods of the war all the deep recesses of the human soul were revealed. The heroes of V. Bykov are full of consciousness of moral responsibility to the people for their actions. And often the problem of heroism is solved in Bykov's stories as a moral and ethical one. Heroism and humanism are seen as a whole. Consider this on the example of the story "Obelisk".

The story "Obelisk" was first published in 1972 and immediately caused a flood of letters, which led to a discussion that unfolded in the press. It was about the moral side of the act of the hero of the story Ales Morozov; one of the participants in the discussion regarded it as a feat, others as a rash decision. The discussion made it possible to penetrate into the very essence of heroism as an ideological and moral concept, made it possible to comprehend the variety of manifestations of the heroic not only during the war years, but also in peacetime.

The story is permeated with the atmosphere of reflection characteristic of Bykov. The author is strict with himself and his generation, because the feat of the war period for him is the main measure of civic value and modern man.

At first glance, the teacher Ales Ivanovich Moroz did not accomplish the feat. During the war, he did not kill a single fascist. He worked under the invaders, taught, as before the war, children at school. But this is only at first glance. The teacher appeared to the Nazis when they arrested five of his students and demanded his arrival. Therein lies the achievement. True, in the story itself the author does not give an unambiguous answer to this question. He just enters two political positions: Ksendzova and Tkachuk. Ksendzov is just convinced that there was no feat, that the teacher Moroz is not a hero, and, therefore, in vain his student Pavel Miklashevich, who miraculously escaped in those days of arrests and executions, spent almost the rest of his life ensuring that the name of Moroz was imprinted on an obelisk over the names of the five dead disciples.

The dispute between Ksendzov and the former partisan commissar Tkachuk flared up on the day of the funeral of Miklashevich, who, like Moroz, taught at rural school and by this alone he proved his loyalty to the memory of Ales Ivanovich.

People like Ksendzov have enough reasonable arguments against Moroz: after all, he himself, it turns out, went to the German commandant's office and managed to open a school. But Commissar Tkachuk knows more: he has delved into the moral side of Frost's act. "We will not teach they will fool" 10 11 - this is the principle that is clear to the teacher, which is clear to Tkachuk, who was sent from the partisan detachment to listen to Moroz's explanations. Both of them learned the truth: the struggle for the souls of teenagers continues during the occupation.

Frost fought this teacher until his very last hour. He understood that the promise of the Nazis to release the guys who had sabotaged the road if their teacher appeared was a lie. But he had no doubts about something else: if he did not appear, the enemies would use this fact against him, discredit everything he taught the children.

And he went to certain death. He knew that everyone would be executed both him and the guys. And such was the moral strength of his feat that Pavlik Miklashevich, the only survivor of these guys, carried the ideas of his teacher through all life's trials. Having become a teacher, he passed Morozov's "sourdough" to his students. Tkachuk, having learned that one of them was Vitka, had recently helped to catch a bandit, remarked with satisfaction: “I knew it. Miklashevich knew how to teach. Another sourdough, you can see right away ” 11 12.

The story outlines the paths of three generations: Moroz, Miklashevich, Vitka. Each of them worthily accomplishes his heroic path, not always clearly visible, not always recognized by everyone.

The writer makes one think about the meaning of heroism and a feat that is not like an ordinary one, helps to understand the moral origins of a heroic deed. Before Moroz, when he went from the partisan detachment to the fascist commandant's office, before Miklashevich, when he sought the rehabilitation of his teacher, before Vitka, when he rushed to defend the girl, there was a choice. The possibility of a formal justification did not suit them. Each of them acted according to the judgment of his own conscience. A man like Ksendzov would most likely prefer to retire.

The dispute that takes place in the story "Obelisk" helps to understand the continuity of heroism, selflessness, true kindness. Describing the general patterns of characters created by V. Bykov, L. Ivanova writes that the hero of his stories "... even in desperate circumstances ... remains a person for whom the most sacred is not to go against his conscience, which dictates the moral maximalism of the actions that he commits" 12 13.

Conclusion

By the act of his Moroz V. Bykov that the law of conscience is always in force. This law has its own strict claims and its own range of duties. And if a person faced with a choice voluntarily seeks to fulfill what he considers his internal duty, he does not care about generally accepted ideas. And the last words of S. Zweig's novel sound like a sentence: "... no guilt can be forgotten as long as conscience remembers it." 13 14 It is this position, in my opinion, that unites the works of A. Pisemsky, V. Bykov and S. Zweig, written in different social conditions, about completely different socially and morally people.

The dispute that takes place in the story "Obelisk" helps to understand the essence of heroism, selflessness, true kindness, and therefore true humanism. The problems of the clash of good and evil, indifference and humanism are always relevant, and it seems to me that the more complex the moral situation, the stronger the interest in it. Of course, these problems cannot be solved by one work, or even by the entire literature as a whole. Each time is a personal matter. But maybe it will be easier for people to make a choice when they have a moral guide.

Bibliography

  1. Big Dictionary of Foreign Words: - M.: -UNVES, 1999.
  2. Bykov, V. V. Obelisk. Sotnikov; Novels / Foreword by I. Dedkov. M.: Det. lit., 1988.
  3. Zatonsky, D. Artistic landmarks XX century. M.: Soviet writer, 1988
  4. Ivanova, L. V. Modern Soviet prose about the Great Patriotic War. M., 1979.
  5. Lazarev, L. I. Vasil Bykov: Essay on creativity. M.: Khudozh. lit., 1979
  6. Ozhegov, S. I. Dictionary of the Russian language: Ok. 53,000 words/s. I. Ozhegov; Under total Ed. Prof. M. I. Skvortsova. 24th ed., Rev. M.: LLC Publishing House ONYX 21st Century: LLC Publishing House World and Education, 2003.
  7. Plekhanov, S. N. Pisemsky. M.: Mol. Guards, 1987. (Life of remarkable people. Ser. biogr.; Issue 4 (666)).
  8. Soviet Encyclopedic Dictionary / Ch. ed. A. M. Prokhorov. 4th ed. M.: Soviet Encyclopedia, 1989.
  9. Philosophical encyclopedic dictionary. / Ed. E.F. Gubsky, G.V. Korableva, V.A. Lutchenko. M.: INFRA-M, 2000.
  10. Zweig, Stefan. Impatience of the Heart: Novels; Novels. Per. with him. Kemerovo kN. publishing house, 1992
  11. Zweig, Stefan. Collected works in 7 volumes. Volume 1, Foreword by B. Suchkov, - M .: Ed. Pravda, 1963.
  12. Shagalov, A. A. Vasil Bykov. War stories. M.: Khudozh. lit., 1989.
  13. Literature A.F. Pisemsky "The Rich Bridegroom" / the text is printed according to the publication of fiction, Moscow, 1955.

2 Ozhegov S.I. Dictionary of the Russian language: Ok. 53,000 words/s. I. Ozhegov; Under total Ed. Prof. M. I. Skvortsova. 24th ed., Rev. M.: LLC Publishing House ONYX 21st Century: LLC Publishing House Mir and Education, 2003. p. 146

3 Big Dictionary of Foreign Words: - M.: -UNVES, 1999. p. 186

4 Soviet Encyclopedic Dictionary / Ch. ed. A. M. Prokhorov. 4th ed. M.: Soviet Encyclopedia, 1989. p. 353

5 Philosophical encyclopedic dictionary. / Ed. E.F. Gubsky, G.V. Korableva, V.A. Lutchenko. M.: INFRA-M, 2000. p. 119

6 Plekhanov, S. N. Pisemsky. M.: Mol. Guard, 1987. (Life of remarkable people. Ser. biogr.; Issue 4. 0p. 117

7 8 Stefan Zweig. Collected works in 7 volumes. Volume 1, Foreword by B. Suchkov, - M .: Ed. Pravda, 1963. p. 49

8 9 Stefan Zweig. Impatience of the Heart: Novels; Novels. Per. with him. Kemerovo kN. publishing house, 1992. p.3165

9 10 Ibid., p.314

10 11 Bykov V.V. Obelisk. Sotnikov; Novels / Foreword by I. Dedkov. M.: Det. Lit., 1988. p.48.

11 12 Ibid., p.53

12 13 Ivanova L. V. Modern Soviet prose about the Great Patriotic War. M., 1979, p.33.

13 14 Stefan Zweig. Impatience of the Heart: Novels; Novels. Per. with him. Kemerovo kN. publishing house, 1992. - from 316


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Let us recall the novel by F. M. Dostoevsky "Crime and Punishment", where the most important, significant thing happens on the threshold. Raskolnikov in his closet - a closet that occupied half the room - a closet, could, without getting up, remove the hook from the door, which means that he lived almost on the threshold. On the threshold there was a famous silent scene between Raskolnikov and Razumikhin, when something elusive ran between them, and Razumikhin was shocked by a terrible thought - a guess about his friend's involvement in the murder of an old usurer.

The very situation of a drunken conversation between Potanin's heroes in a crowded cafe resembles the scene of a drunken confession - Marmeladov's repentance before Raskolnikov in a pub. The atmosphere of a small cafe - "hustle all around, swearing" - is similar to the wild laughter and mocking remarks that accompanied Marmeladov's confession. Yes, and the phrase of Potanin's story: "A person gets used to everything," refers us to Raskolnikov's thoughts that the Marmeladov family got used to Sonya's terrible sacrifice: "A scoundrel-man gets used to everything!" But then Rodion Romanovich exclaims: "Well, if I lied ... if the person is really not a scoundrel ..."

So, is a person a scoundrel or not a scoundrel, or is he worthy of compassion and mercy? Is it necessary to feel sorry for a person? Let's see how the modern writer Viktor Potanin answers these eternal questions.

Before us are two former classmates who met after a ten-year separation. Both are in their fifties. In everything they seem to be antipodes: in appearance, in character, in behavior, in relation to life.

One of them is Mikhail Ivanovich Podaruev, a village doctor, a big-headed, overweight man with heavy pood fists. As a child, he received a very apt nickname "Toptygin" for his bearish sluggishness, clumsiness, for the good nature of a fairy-tale character. The portrait of Toptygin emphasizes the contrast: he seems to be a "man - a mountain", at the very top of which naive children's eyes turn blue: "such a loose body - and this blue, like in a meadow."

The second - Nikolai Semyonovich Sidorenko - "a fidgety thin little man with a round face and an upturned nose, which made impudence appear in his face. As a child, he received the nickname "Gopher".

The inner state of the characters changes throughout the story. Toptygin at first "fell into melancholy": "... it's bad in my soul. I treat others, but I don't know how to treat myself." He feels dissatisfied with himself: "... my mother is an Old Believer. But I am not worthy of her, as well as the life that she lived. Not a single bright day." there is no salvation ... " The meaning of this phrase, reduced by the author's ironic attitude towards his hero, nevertheless goes back to the philosophical thought of F. Dostoevsky about suffering, purifying for the human soul.

Sidorenko's speeches are reminiscent of Khlestakov's lies. According to Nikolai Semyonovich, he is an important official, works in public utilities: "The whole town is my estate ... And they call me master", "Three coats" of the wife, "daughter has no less", two cars in different garages. a lot of money. like snow outside the window - all this is akin to Khlestakov's hot soup in a saucepan, sent on a steamer from Paris, and a watermelon worth seven hundred rubles on the table.

But if Khlestakov lies selflessly, even with inspiration, like a poet, and he himself believes his lies, and words fly out of him involuntarily, then Gopher, inventing a luxurious life for himself, is suspicious: "You don't believe me, Toptygin."

In the end, it turns out that Gopher is a "drunk and a dreamer" and he has nowhere to go. He "stole" someone else's life, presenting himself as a significant person. But above all, he stole life from himself. He has nothing to tell about himself, except that he remembers nothing and drinks: "I drink, dear, I drink big, therefore I'm thin." And Gopher's fears are also invented: he is afraid of the Communists coming to power, his "dispossession" and the fact that the "troikas" will reappear and sentence him without trial to the wall. All we know from Sidorenko's childhood is that when Toptygin dragged his hot school breakfast, cutlets and buns, to a dog named Marsik. Gopher - "his portion immediately in the mouth."

At first glance, Nikolai Semyonovich Sidorenko, with his banal phrase "we'll all be there" and primitive morality "grab what lies nearby", with his conscience "in armor", does not leave us hope for the manifestation of humanity in him, does not inspire faith in good.

Toptygin does not envy " untold wealth"his former classmate, but he does not condemn him for drunken bragging, but only sympathizes with his comrade. He does not know how, unlike his friend, to forget. He remembers his childhood: "like the nobles - on rotten potatoes and on some water." Mother worked at school , and his father came from the front and died. Valyusha's wife, with whom they lived, died. "like Siamese twins. One blood, one soul, one heart." Mikhail Ivanovich cannot come to terms with this loss. One of the most precious childhood memories is the dog Marsik, "a gentle, sensitive dog", ears "huge, warm, like frying pans". Here it turns out that Toptygin also "stole" - he invented his own life. He told Gopher something mystical: Marsik returned to him after forty years "from there", the same Marsik who was once killed by the shepherd Lyonka Krivoy.

The lies of Gopher and Toptygin are different. The legend of the "return" of Marsik from the other world is necessary for Podaruev in order to "not drown in his abyss", "stand on his feet", "swim up", because "you can't always cure the soul with the truth," as the wanderer Luka noted in the play by M. Gorky " At the bottom".

Toptygin is unusually cute and kind person capable of mercy and compassion, of disinterested help to one's neighbor. He understands that fellow villagers go to his hospital for hope and the doctor for them is "the local Christ". He takes pity on everyone: he invites the thin, emaciated Gopher to his village, sympathizes with the old lonely teacher, who has "a salary the size of a mouse tail" at school, and the beggar of the village old women treats for free.

(According to the text of B. Vasiliev)

essay-reasoning

I think B. Vasiliev, saying that

meant that Anna Fedotovna, struck by the cruel, inhuman act of the children, as a result of which she lost her only material connection with her dead son, died spiritually.
As proof of this idea, we give examples from the text. So, the author writes about how the old woman did not like the girl’s tone, “provocative, full of incomprehensible claims for her”, and also that the girl’s voice was so “officially inhuman”. The insult inflicted on Anna Fedotovna by the children was very rude, cruel and insulting, so the old woman's soul could not bear it.
And in the continuation of the text, B. Vasiliev says:

Summing up, it can be argued that when B. Vasiliev wrote how the soul of the main character went blind and deaf, he wanted to say that this happened not only because of the loss of precious letters, but, first of all, because of the behavior of the guys, whose unacceptable act so wounded the soul of Anna Fedotovna.

Humanity is a set of traits that defines a person as a person and distinguishes him from the beast, combining such concepts as kindness, sympathy, sincerity, empathy. Humanity, or humanity, is the most important component of human essence. Lack of humanity entails selfishness and cruelty. The very definition of "humanity" carries a fairly clear meaning: a quality that is inherent in a person, in other words, a human quality. That is why it is brought up in children: from a very early age, we learn not to offend kittens, to empathize with a friend, we learn to be kind and sincere towards people.
As proof of the above, we can cite an excerpt from the text of B. Vasiliev, where we see an example of inhumanity:

The children, having shown such heartlessness, hurt the old woman very much. For the grandmother, these letters were too expensive, but the guys did not understand her grief and stole them, depriving her of the only opportunity to survive the death of her dear son who died in the war. Her soul became blind and deaf, as the author says. The pain that a loving mother experienced a second time is difficult to describe in words, and even more difficult to experience.
Another example, but already an example of true humanity, is the hero of the story L.N. Tolstoy "After the Ball". Ivan Vasilyevich, after seeing violence against a guilty soldier, refuses a successful public service in order not to take part in the physical and spiritual humiliation of other people, even if by accident. It is deeply human and a brave deed- to give up a successful career, money, beloved for the sake of their principles, in order to live in good conscience.
Summing up all that has been said, it can be argued that humanity is a gift that not everyone possesses. Kindness and sincerity are instilled from childhood, without these qualities the world would have collapsed long ago. The intellect is given not for destruction, but for creation, and the understanding of this is achieved thanks to the humanity in each of us.

Humanity is one of the most important and at the same time complex concepts. It is impossible to give an unambiguous definition to it, because it manifests itself in a variety of human qualities. This is the desire for justice, and honesty, and respect. Someone who can be called human is able to take care of others, help and patronize. He can see the good in people, emphasize their main virtues. All this can be confidently attributed to the main manifestations of this quality.

What is humanity?

There are many examples of humanity in life. These are the heroic deeds of people in wartime, and quite insignificant, it would seem, actions in ordinary life. Humanity and kindness are manifestations of compassion for one's neighbor. Motherhood is also synonymous with this quality. After all, every mother actually sacrifices to her baby the most precious thing that she has - her own life. The quality opposite to humanity can be called the brutal cruelties of the Nazis. A person has the right to be called a person only if he is capable of doing good.

dog rescue

An example of humanity from life is the act of a man who saved a dog in the subway. Once, a homeless dog found itself in the lobby of the Kurskaya station of the Moscow Metro. She ran along the platform. Maybe she was looking for someone, or maybe she was just chasing a departing train. But it so happened that the animal fell on the rails.

There were a lot of passengers at the station then. People were frightened - after all, less than a minute remained before the arrival of the next train. The situation was saved by a brave police officer. He jumped onto the tracks, picked up the unlucky dog ​​under his paws and carried him to the station. This story is a good example of humanity from life.

Action of a teenager from New York

This quality is not complete without compassion and goodwill. Currently in real life a lot of evil, and people should show compassion to each other. An illustrative example from life on the topic of humanity is the act of a 13-year-old New Yorker named Nach Elpstein. For a bar mitzvah (or coming of age in Judaism), he received a gift of 300,000 shekels. The boy decided to donate all this money to Israeli children. It is not every day that one hears of such an act, which is a true example of humanity from life. The amount went to the construction of a new generation bus for the work of young scientists in the periphery of Israel. This vehicle is a mobile classroom that will help young students become real scientists in the future.

An example of humanity from life: donation

There is no nobler act than to donate your blood to another. This is real charity, and everyone who takes this step can be called a real citizen and a person with a capital letter. Donors are strong-willed people who have a kind heart. An example of the manifestation of humanity in life can serve as a resident of Australia, James Harrison. Almost every week he donates blood plasma. For a very long time, he was awarded a peculiar nickname - "The Man with the Golden Hand." After all, blood was taken from Harrison's right hand more than a thousand times. And in all the years that he has been donating, Harrison has managed to save more than 2 million people.

AT early years the donor-hero underwent a complex operation, as a result of which he had to remove a lung. He managed to save his life only thanks to donors who donated 6.5 liters of blood. Harrison never recognized the saviors, but he decided that he would donate blood for the rest of his life. After speaking with doctors, James learned that his blood type was unusual and could be used to save the lives of newborns. Very rare antibodies were present in his blood, which can solve the problem of incompatibility between the Rh factor of the blood of the mother and the embryo. Because Harrison donated blood every week, doctors were able to constantly make new doses of the vaccine for such cases.

An example of humanity from life, from literature: Professor Preobrazhensky

One of the brightest literary examples possessing this quality is Professor Preobrazhensky from Bulgakov’s work “ dog's heart". He dared to defy the forces of nature and turn street dog into a person. His attempts failed. However, Preobrazhensky feels responsible for his actions, and is trying with all his might to turn Sharikov into a worthy member of society. This shows the highest qualities of the professor, his humanity.

1. The concept of humanism.
2. Pushkin as a herald of humanity.
3. Examples of humanistic works.
4. The writer's works teach to be human.

...Reading his creations, one can educate a person in an excellent way...
V. G. Belinsky

In the dictionary of literary terms, you can find the following definition of the term "humanism": "humanism, humanity - love for a person, humanity, compassion for a person in trouble, in oppression, the desire to help him."

Humanism arose as a certain trend of advanced social thought that raised the struggle for the rights of the human person, against church ideology, the oppression of scholasticism, during the Renaissance in the struggle of the bourgeoisie against feudalism and became one of the main features of advanced bourgeois literature and art.

The work of such Russian writers who reflected the liberation struggle of the people as A. S. Pushkin, M. Yu. Lermontov, I. S. Turgenev, N. V. Gogol, L. N. Tolstoy, A. P. Chekhov is imbued with humanism.

A. S. Pushkin is a humanist writer, but what does this mean in practice? This means that for Pushkin the principle of humanity is of great importance, that is, in his works the writer preaches truly Christian virtues: mercy, understanding, compassion. You can find traits of humanism in every main character, whether it be Onegin, Grinev or a nameless Caucasian prisoner. However, for each hero, the concept of humanism changes. The content of this term also changes depending on the periods of creativity of the great Russian writer.

At the very beginning of the writer's career, the word "humanism" often meant the inner freedom of choice of a person. It is no coincidence that at the time when the poet himself was in southern exile, his work was enriched with a new type of hero, romantic, strong, but not free. Two Caucasian poems - "Prisoner of the Caucasus" and "Gypsies" - are a vivid confirmation of this. The nameless hero, captivated and held in captivity, however, turns out to be freer than Aleko, choosing life with a nomadic people. The idea of ​​individual freedom occupies the author's thoughts during this period and receives an original, non-standard interpretation. So the defining trait of Aleko's character - egoism - becomes a force that completely steals the inner freedom of a person, while the hero of the "Prisoner of the Caucasus", although limited in movement, is internally free. This is what helps him make a fateful, but conscious choice. Aleko, on the other hand, wants freedom only for herself. Therefore, the love story of him and the gypsy Zemfira, who is completely free spiritually, turns out to be sad - main character kills the beloved who fell out of love with him. The poem "Gypsies" shows the tragedy of modern individualism, and in the main character - the character of an outstanding personality, which was first described in " Caucasian prisoner" and finally recreated in "Eugene Onegin".

The next period of creativity gives a new interpretation of humanism and new heroes. "Boris Godunov" and "Eugene Onegin", written in the period from 1823 to 1831, give us new food for thought: what is philanthropy for a poet? This period of creativity is represented by more complex, but at the same time integral characters of the main characters. Both Boris and Eugene - each of them faces certain moral choices, the acceptance or rejection of which depends entirely on their character. Both personalities are tragic, each of them deserves pity and understanding.

The pinnacle of humanism in Pushkin's works was the closing period of his work and such works as Belkin's Tales, Little Tragedies, Captain's daughter". Now humanism and humanity become really complex concepts and include many different characteristics. This is the freedom of will and personality of the hero, honor and conscience, the ability to sympathize and empathy, and, above all, the ability to love. Not only a person, but also the world around him, nature and art, a hero must love in order to become really interesting for Pushkin the humanist. These works are also characterized by the punishment of inhumanity, in which one can clearly see author's position. If earlier the tragedy of the hero depended on external circumstances, now it is determined by the internal capacity for humanity. Everyone who meaningfully leaves the bright path of philanthropy is doomed to severe punishment. The antihero is the bearer of one of the types of passions. Baron from " of the miserly knight"Not just a miser, he is the bearer of the passion for enrichment and power. Salieri craves fame, he is also oppressed by envy of his friend, who is happier in talent. Don Juan, the hero of the "Stone Guest", is the bearer of sensual passions, and the inhabitants of the city, which is being destroyed by the plague, find themselves in the grip of the passion of ecstasy. Each of them gets what he deserves, each) is punished.

In this regard, the most significant works for revealing the concept of humanism are Belkin's Tales and The Captain's Daughter. "Tales of Belkin" is a special phenomenon in the writer's work, consisting of five prose works, united by a single concept: "The Stationmaster", "The Shot", "The Young Lady-Peasant Woman", "Snowstorm", "The Undertaker". Each of the short stories is dedicated to the hardships and suffering that befell one of the main classes - a small landowner, peasant, official or artisan. Each of the stories teaches us compassion, understanding of universal human values ​​and their acceptance. Indeed, despite the difference in the perception of happiness by each class, we understand the terrible dream of the undertaker, and the experiences of the daughter of a small landowner in love, and the recklessness of army officials.

The crowning achievement of Pushkin's humanist works is The Captain's Daughter. Here we see the already matured, formed thought of the author concerning universal human passions and problems. Through compassion for the main character, the reader, along with him, goes through the path of becoming a strong, strong-willed personality, who knows firsthand what honor is. Time after time, the reader, together with the main character, makes a moral choice on which life, honor and freedom depend. Thanks to this, the reader grows with the hero and learns to be a man.

V. G. Belinsky said about Pushkin: "... Reading his works, you can educate a person in yourself in an excellent way ...". Indeed, Pushkin's works are so full of humanism, philanthropy and attention to enduring universal human values: mercy, compassion and love, that according to them, like a textbook, one can learn to make important decisions, cherish honor, love and hate - learn to be human.

  1. (49 words) In Turgenev's story "Asya", Gagin showed humanity when he took his illegitimate sister into care. He also called a friend to a frank conversation about Asya's feelings. He understood that the hero would not marry her, and did not insist. The caring brother only tried to get out of the situation so that the girl would not be hurt.
  2. (47 words) In Kuprin's story "The Wonderful Doctor", the hero saves an entire family from starvation. Doctor Pirogov accidentally meets Mertsalov and learns that his wife and children are slowly dying in a damp basement. Then the doctor gave them medicine and money. This act shows the highest manifestation of humanity - mercy.
  3. (50 words) In Tvardovsky's poem "Vasily Terkin" (chapter "Two Soldiers"), the hero consoles two old men and helps them with the housework. Although life is harder for him, because Vasily is fighting at the front, he does not complain and miss, but helps the elderly in word and deed. In war, he still remains a respectful and well-mannered person.
  4. (48 words) In Sholokhov's story "The Fate of a Man", the hero is not likened to a cruel enemy, but remains the same kind and sympathetic Andrei Sokolov. After the ordeal of captivity and the loss of his family, he adopts an orphan and begins new life. In this willingness to revive a peaceful sky above my head and in my soul, I see a manifestation of humanity.
  5. (44 words) In Pushkin's novel The Captain's Daughter, Pugachev saves the life of his opponent for reasons of humanity. He sees that Peter is worthy of this mercy, because he is kind, brave and devoted to the fatherland. Ataman judges with justice, paying tribute even to the enemy. This skill is the peculiarity of a decent person.
  6. (42 words) In Gorky's story "Chelkash", the thief is more humane than the peasant. Gavrila was ready to kill an accomplice for the sake of money, but Chelkash did not stoop to this meanness, although he traded in theft. He throws his prey and leaves, since the main thing in a person is dignity.
  7. (42 words) In Griboyedov's play Woe from Wit, Chatsky expresses his humanity when he stands up for the rights of serfs. He understands that owning people is immoral and cruel. In his monologue, he denounces serfdom. It is because of such conscientious nobles that the position of the common people will subsequently improve significantly.
  8. (43 words) In Bulgakov's story "Heart of a Dog", the professor makes a fateful decision for mankind: he stops his experiment, recognizing that we have no right to interfere so radically in the affairs of nature. He repented of his mistake and corrected it. His humanity is the suppression of pride for the common good.
  9. (53 words) In Platonov's work "Yushka", the main character set aside all the money to help the orphan get an education. His entourage did not know this, but regularly mocked the dumb victim. After his death, people found out why Yushka looked so bad, where he put the pennies he earned. But it's' too late. But the memory of his humanity is alive in the heart of a blessed girl.
  10. (57 words) In Pushkin's story "The Stationmaster" Samson Vyrin treated everyone passing by humanly, even though they took out all their anger on him. Once he sheltered a sick officer and treated him as best he could. But he answered with black ingratitude and took away his daughter, deceiving the old man. Thus, he deprived his sons of a grandfather. So humanity should be valued, not betrayed.
  11. Examples from life, cinema, media

    1. (48 words) I recently read a whole article in the newspaper about how young men rescue girls in distress. They rush to help a stranger, not expecting a reward. This is humanity in action. Criminals are put behind bars, and women remain alive, and all thanks to selfless intercessors.
    2. (57 words) I can think of examples of humanity from my personal life. The teacher helped my friend to his feet. His mother drank, and his father was not at all. The boy himself could go along the crooked path, but his class teacher found his grandmother and ensured that the student lived with her. Years have passed, but he still remembers and visits her.
    3. (39 words) Humanity is a rule in my family. My parents feed the birds in the winter, donate money for operations to sick children, help an old neighbor with heavy bags and utility bills. When I grow up, I too will continue these glorious traditions.
    4. (52 words) My grandmother taught me humanity from childhood. When asked for help, she always did everything in her power. For example, she gave a job to a man without a fixed place of residence, thereby bringing him back to life. He was given service housing, and soon he was visiting his grandmother with gifts and goodies.
    5. (57 words) I read in a magazine how a girl with a popular social media account posted a stranger's ad there, where she was looking for a job. The woman was over 50, she was already desperate to find a place, when suddenly a wonderful offer was received. Thanks to this example, many people were inspired and began to do good deeds. This is true humanity, when a person changes society for the better.
    6. (56 words) My older friend is studying at the institute, where he enrolled in a circle of volunteers. He went to the orphanage and organized a matinee there in honor of the new year. As a result, abandoned children received gifts and a performance, and my friend received indescribable emotions. I believe that in any university this is how people should be taught humanity, giving them a chance to prove themselves.
    7. (44 words) In Steven Spielberg's film "Schindler's List" the hero, despite the policy of Nazi Germany, employs Jews, thereby saving them from martyrdom. His actions are guided by humanity, because he believes that all people are equal, everyone is worthy of life, and no one can dispute this.
    8. (47 words) In Tom Hooper's Les Misérables, the criminal and villain actually turns out to be a humane and merciful man who takes custody of an unfamiliar orphan girl. He manages to raise a child and run from the police at the same time. For her sake, he takes a mortal risk. Such unselfish love is only possible for a person.
    9. (43 words) In Henry Hathaway's Call Northside 777, an innocent hero goes to jail. His mother tries in vain to find the real criminals. And the journalist completely disinterestedly decided to help her by getting involved in the investigation. In this case, he demonstrated his humanity, because he did not pass by someone else's misfortune.
    10. (44 words) My favorite actor Konstantin Khabensky spends most of his fees on charity. With these actions, he inspires viewers to act according to their conscience and help each other in trouble not only in word, but also in deed. I respect him immensely for this and believe that he is driven by humanity.
    11. Interesting? Save it on your wall!

The main source of the artistic power of Russian classical literature is its close connection with the people; Russian literature saw the main meaning of its existence in serving the people. “Burn the hearts of people with the verb” called on the poets A.S. Pushkin. M.Yu. Lermontov wrote that the mighty words of poetry should sound

... like a bell on a veche tower

In the days of celebrations and troubles of the people.

N.A. gave his lyre to the struggle for the happiness of the people, for their liberation from slavery and poverty. Nekrasov. The work of brilliant writers - Gogol and Saltykov-Shchedrin, Turgenev and Tolstoy, Dostoevsky and Chekhov - with all the differences in the artistic form and ideological content of their works, is united by a deep connection with the life of the people, true image reality, a sincere desire to serve the happiness of the motherland. The great Russian writers did not recognize "art for art's sake", they were the heralds of socially active art, art for the people. Revealing the moral greatness and spiritual wealth of the working people, they aroused sympathy in the reader ordinary people, faith in the strength of the people, its future.

Beginning in the 18th century, Russian literature waged a passionate struggle for the liberation of the people from the oppression of serfdom and autocracy.

This is also Radishchev, who described the autocratic system of the era as "a monster oblo, mischievously, huge, stifled and barking."

This is Fonvizin, who put to shame the rude feudal lords of the Prostakovs and Skotinins type.

This is Pushkin, who considered the most important merit that in "his cruel age he glorified freedom."

This is Lermontov, who was exiled by the government to the Caucasus and found his untimely death there.

There is no need to enumerate all the names of Russian writers in order to prove the fidelity of our classical literature to the ideals of freedom.

Along with the acuteness of the social problems that characterize Russian literature, it is necessary to point out the depth and breadth of its formulation of moral problems.

Russian literature has always tried to arouse “good feelings” in the reader, protested against any injustice. Pushkin and Gogol for the first time raised their voices in defense of the "little man", the humble worker; after them, Grigorovich, Turgenev, Dostoevsky took under the protection of the "humiliated and insulted". Nekrasov. Tolstoy, Korolenko.

At the same time, consciousness was growing in Russian literature that the "little man" should not be a passive object of pity, but a conscious fighter for human dignity. This idea was especially pronounced in satirical works Saltykov-Shchedrin and Chekhov, who condemned any manifestation of humility and obsequiousness.

A large place in Russian classical literature is given to moral issues. With all the variety of interpretations of the moral ideal by various writers, it is easy to see that for all goodies Russian literature is characterized by dissatisfaction with the existing situation, a tireless search for truth, an aversion to vulgarity, a desire to actively participate in public life readiness for self-sacrifice. In these features, the heroes of Russian literature differ significantly from the heroes of Western literature, whose actions are mostly guided by the pursuit of personal happiness, career, and enrichment. The heroes of Russian literature, as a rule, cannot imagine personal happiness without the happiness of their homeland and people.

Russian writers asserted their bright ideals primarily with artistic images of people with warm hearts, an inquisitive mind, a rich soul (Chatsky, Tatyana Larina, Rudin, Katerina Kabanova, Andrei Bolkonsky, etc.)

Truthfully covering Russian reality, Russian writers did not lose faith in the bright future of their homeland. They believed that the Russian people "will pave a wide, clear breasted road for themselves ..."

High Renaissance. Ideas of humanism in literature and music

Lesson topic

1. "I put you in the center of the world" 1. "I put you in the center of the world" 2. Humanist from Rotterdam. 3. The first utopias. 4. "What a miracle of nature is man!" W. Shakespeare 5. M. Cervantes and his "Knight of the Sorrowful Image" 6. On the way to immortality. Music of the Renaissance

Lesson plan:

Revival is the appearance again, renewal, rise after a period of decline, destruction (dictionary of S.I. Ozhegov). Chronological framework of the Renaissance - 14-16 centuries. Revival in French Renaissance

"Early Renaissance"

"High Renaissance"

"Late Renaissance"

Renaissance (mid-XIV - mid-XVII centuries)

Proto-Renaissance (pre-revival)

(XIII - beginning of the XV century)

Late Renaissance

(second half of the 16th century)

"I put you at the center of the world.."

  • The secularization of consciousness, i.e. gradual liberation from the religious view of the world.
  • The spread of the ideas of humanism, i.e. attention to the human personality, faith in the strength of the person himself.
  • Dissemination of scientific knowledge.
  • Reliance on the achievements of the culture of Antiquity.

"I put you at the center of the world"

"Erasmus of Rotterdam" Humanistic ideas were reflected in the views of the humanist, theologian and philologist Erasmus of Rotterdam (1469-1536) "I put you in the center of the world" Being an outstanding connoisseur of Latin, he commented on the works of ancient writers, compiled a collection of Greek and Latin sayings, giving the opportunity the reader to penetrate the world of genuine ancient culture. "Conversations easily" Even in his youth, earning a living by private lessons, he compiled something like a manual for his students. Later, the collection was published under the title "Conversations Easily". "Praise of Stupidity" The most famous creation of Erasmus of Rotterdam was a book written by him in just a few days and dedicated to the humanist Thomas More - "Praise of Stupidity". The main character, Mrs. Stupidity, dressed in the robe of a scientist, delivers a eulogy to herself “The first utopias” In England, the ideas of the humanists had a strong influence on Thomas More (1478-1535) This is a wise politician and future minister of the king, studied at Oxford, knew several languages, was fond of history, philosophy, literature. "The First Utopias" At the beginning of the 16th century More wrote and published “A golden book, as useful as it is pleasant, about the best structure of the state and about the new island of utopia that captivated the imagination of readers. The author described the ideal state and placed this earthly paradise on the island, calling it Utopia, which means "non-existent place" - an unrealizable society of the future. Francois Rabelais Francois Rabelais (1494-1553) was a French writer. Most famous work- The novel "Gargantua and Pantagruel".

Francois Rabelais

"Gargantua and Pantagruel"

Meal Gargantua.

Illustration by Gustave Doré.

Young Gargantua studies the globe.

Illustration by Gustave Doré.

William Shakespeare (1564-1616) English playwright and poet, one of the most famous playwrights in the world, author of at least 17 comedies, 10 chronicles, 11 tragedies, 5 poems and a cycle of 154 sonnets. Works: Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, King Lear "Romeo and Juliet" Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra (1547 - 1616)

"Don Quixote"

Miguel Cervantes "Don Quixote" Music of the Renaissance

The art of composing and singing madrigals, lyrical vocal works, was valued;

forerunners of opera;

The music of the Renaissance came out of the narrow framework of church rules.

The rules of good manners prescribed to be able to play musical instruments;

Flemish composer of the 15th century. Guillaume Dufay.

In the Renaissance, professional music is experiencing a strong

influence of folk music. Appear various genres musical

arts:

  • Ballad
  • solo song
  • opera

One of the most famous composers

Renaissance was Guillaume Dufay

(circa 1397 - 1474)

His music was played everywhere.

Musical art

Music of the Renaissance

  • Secular (non-ecclesiastical) works are widely developed and disseminated.
  • secular musical culture promote humanistic musical circles.
  • The art of composing and singing madrigals, lyrical vocal works, was highly valued.

Cultural area

cultural figure

Works, ideas

Philosophy

Erasmus of Rotterdam (1469-1536)

"Conversations are easy"

"Praise of Stupidity"

Ideas: humanism, ridiculing the vices and delusions of the Middle Ages

Thomas More

"A golden book, as useful as it is pleasant, about the best arrangement of the state and about the new island of Utopia."

Ideas: the glorification of the physical beauty and spiritual perfection of man.

Literature

François Rabelais (1494-1553)

"Gargantua and Pantagruel"

Heroes are wise giant kings.

The novel revived the old traditions of folk performances.

William Shakespeare

Tragedies, comedies, sonnets

Tragedy "Romeo and Juliet"

Heroes love and suffer. They make mistakes. Disappointed, fighting for their happiness.

The young heroes of the tragedy do not renounce the lofty and bright feeling that made them free. A love story with a tragic ending

Cultural area

cultural figure

Works, ideas

Literature

Miguel Cervantes

The novel "Don Quixote of La Mancha"

The image of the hero as a "knight of the sad image"

The hero, like a true knight, protects the offended, helps the destitute. Good Knight. Justice, nobility in a world of injustice, helps people become kinder and better.

Guillaume Dufay

(circa 1397 - 1474)

He writes sacred music, secular songs. hymns, short drinking songs. Wrote three-part musical compositions

Madrigals are lyrical vocal works written on the verses of famous poets of their time. Performed for a wide audience and were the forerunners of opera

"Homework"
  • Paragraph 7-8,
  • read Walks in the Eternal City on your own, pp. 66-68

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Introduction

2.1 Humanism in the works of Thomas More "Utopia" and Evgeny Zamyatin "We"

Conclusion

Applications

Introduction

The whole world is going through difficult times today. The new political and economic situation could not but affect the culture. Her relationship with the authorities has changed radically. The common core of cultural life has disappeared - centralized system management and a unified cultural policy. Determining the paths for further cultural development became the business of the society itself and the subject of controversy. The absence of a unifying socio-cultural idea and the retreat of society from the ideas of humanism led to a deep crisis in which the culture of all mankind found itself by the beginning of the 21st century.

Humanism (from lat. humanitas - humanity, lat. humanus - humane, lat. homo - man) - a worldview, in the center of which is the idea of ​​man as the highest value; emerged as a philosophical movement during the Renaissance.

Humanism is traditionally defined as a system of views that recognize the value of a person as a person, his right to freedom, happiness and development, and declaring the principles of equality and humanity as the norm of relations between people. Among the values ​​of traditional culture, the most important place was occupied by the values ​​of humanism (goodness, justice, non-covetousness, the search for truth), which was reflected in the classical literature of any country, including England.

Over the past 15 years, these values ​​have experienced a certain crisis. Ideas of possessiveness and self-sufficiency (the cult of money) were opposed to humanism. As an ideal, people were offered a "self-made man" - a person who made himself and did not need any external support. The ideas of justice and equality - the basis of humanism - have lost their former attractiveness and are now not even included in the program documents of most parties and governments in various countries of the world. Our society gradually began to turn into a nuclear society, when individual members of it began to withdraw within the framework of their homes and their own families.

The relevance of the topic I have chosen is due to the problem that has bothered humanity for thousands of years and worries now - the problem of philanthropy, tolerance, respect for one's neighbor, the urgent need to discuss this topic.

Through my research, I would like to show that the problem of humanism, which originated in the Renaissance, reflected both in the work of English and Russian writers, remains relevant to this day.

And to begin with, I would like to return to the origins of humanism, considering its appearance in England.

1.1 The emergence of humanism in England. The history of the development of humanism in English literature

The birth of a new historical thought dates back to the late Middle Ages, when the process of disintegration of feudal relations was actively going on in the most advanced countries of Western Europe and a new capitalist mode of production was emerging. It was a transitional period, when centralized states took shape everywhere in the form of absolute monarchies on the scale of entire countries or individual territories, the prerequisites for the formation of bourgeois nations arose, and the social struggle became extremely intensified. The bourgeoisie, which was emerging among the urban elite, was then a new, progressive stratum and acted in its ideological struggle against the ruling class of feudal lords as a representative of all the lower strata of society.

New ideas find their most striking expression in the humanistic worldview, which had a very significant impact on all areas of culture and scientific knowledge of this transition period. The new worldview was basically secular, hostile to the purely theological interpretation of the world that prevailed in the Middle Ages. He was characterized by the desire to explain all phenomena in nature and society from the point of view of reason (rationalism), to reject the blind authority of faith, which had so much hampered the development of human thought earlier. Humanists bowed before the human person, admired her as the highest creation of nature, the bearer of reason, high feelings and virtues; humanists, as it were, opposed the human creator to the blind power of divine providence. The humanistic worldview was characterized by individualism, which at the first stage of its history, in essence, acted as an instrument of ideological protest against the estate-corporate system of feudal society, which suppressed the human personality, against church ascetic morality, which served as one of the means of this suppression. At that time, the individualism of the humanistic worldview was still moderated by the active public interests of most of its leaders, and was far from the egoism inherent in the later developed forms of the bourgeois worldview.

Finally, the humanistic worldview was characterized by an avid interest in ancient culture in all its manifestations. Humanists sought to "revive", that is, to make a role model, the work of ancient writers, scientists, philosophers, artists, classical Latin, partly forgotten in the Middle Ages. And although already from the XII century. in medieval culture interest in the ancient heritage began to awaken, only during the period of the emergence of a humanistic worldview, in the so-called Renaissance (Renaissance), this trend became dominant.

The rationalism of the humanists was based on idealism, which largely determined their idea of ​​the world. As representatives of the then intelligentsia, the humanists were far from the people, and often openly hostile to them. But for all that, the humanistic worldview at the time of its heyday had a pronounced progressive character, was the banner of the struggle against feudal ideology, was imbued with humane attitude to people. On the basis of this new ideological trend in Western Europe, the free development of scientific knowledge, previously hampered by the dominance of theological thinking, became possible.

The revival is associated with the process of formation of secular culture, humanistic consciousness. The philosophy of the Renaissance defines:

Aspiration to the person;

Belief in his great spiritual and physical potential;

Life-affirming and optimistic character.

In the second half of the XIV century. a tendency to give the study of humanistic literature the most great importance and to regard classical Latin and Greek antiquity as the only example and model for everything that concerns spiritual and cultural activity. The essence of humanism lies not in the fact that it turned to the past, but in the way in which it is known, in the relation in which it is to this past: it is the attitude to the culture of the past and to the past that clearly defines the essence of humanism. The humanists discover the classics because they separate, without mixing, their own from the Latin. It was humanism that really discovered antiquity, the same Virgil or Aristotle, although they were known in the Middle Ages, because it returned Virgil to its time and its world, and sought to explain Aristotle within the framework of the problems and within the framework of the knowledge of Athens of the 4th century BC. Humanism does not distinguish between the discovery of the ancient world and the discovery of man, because they are all the same; to discover the ancient world as such is to measure oneself with it, and to separate and establish a relationship with it. Determine the time and memory, and the direction of human creation, and earthly affairs, and responsibility. It is no coincidence that the great humanists were for the most part statesmen, active people, whose free creativity in public life was in demand by their time.

The literature of the English Renaissance developed in close connection with the literature of pan-European humanism. England later than other countries took the path of development of humanistic culture. The English humanists learned from the continental humanists. Particularly significant was the influence of Italian humanism, dating back in its rudiments to the 14th and 15th centuries. Italian literature, from Petrarch to Tasso, was, in essence, a school for English humanists, an inexhaustible source of advanced political, philosophical and scientific ideas, a rich treasury artistic images, plots and forms, from which all English humanists drew their ideas, from Thomas More to Bacon and Shakespeare. Acquaintance with Italy, its culture, art and literature was one of the first and basic principles of any education in general in Renaissance England. Many British traveled to Italy to personally come into contact with the life of this advanced country of what was then Europe.

Oxford University was the first center of humanistic culture in England. From here began to spread the light of a new science and a new worldview, which fertilized the entire English culture and gave impetus to the development of humanistic literature. Here, at the university, a group of scientists appeared who fought against the ideology of the Middle Ages. These were people who had studied in Italy and had adopted there the foundations of a new philosophy and science. They were passionate admirers of antiquity. Having gone through the school of humanism in Italy, Oxford scholars did not confine themselves to popularizing the achievements of their Italian brethren. They grew up to be independent scientists.

The English humanists adopted from their Italian teachers admiration for the philosophy and poetry of the ancient world.

The activities of the first English humanists were predominantly scientific and theoretical. They developed general questions of religion, philosophy, social life and education. Early English humanism of the early 16th century found its fullest expression in the work of Thomas More.

1.2 The emergence of humanism in Russia. The history of the development of humanism in Russian literature

Already among the first significant Russian poets of the 18th century - Lomonosov and Derzhavin - one can find nationalism combined with humanism. It is no longer Holy Rus', but Great Rus' that inspires them; national epic, intoxication with the greatness of Russia relate entirely to the empirical existence of Russia without any historical and philosophical justification.

Derzhavin, the true "singer of Russian glory", defends the freedom and dignity of man. In poems written for the birth of the grandson of Catherine II (the future Emperor Alexander I), he exclaims:

"Be the master of your passions,

Be on the throne man

This motif of pure humanism is increasingly becoming the crystallization core of the new ideology.

In the spiritual mobilization of the creative forces of Russia, Russian Freemasonry of the 18th and early 19th centuries played an enormous role. On the one hand, it attracted people who were looking for a counterbalance to the atheistic currents of the 18th century, and in this sense it was an expression of the religious demands of the Russian people of that time. On the other hand, Freemasonry, captivating with its idealism and noble humanistic dreams of serving humanity, was itself a phenomenon of non-church religiosity, free from any church authority. Capturing significant sections of Russian society, Freemasonry undoubtedly raised creative movements in the soul, was a school of humanism, and at the same time awakened intellectual interests.

At the heart of this humanism was a reaction against the one-sided intellectualism of the era. The favorite formula here was the idea that "enlightenment without a moral ideal carries poison in itself." In Russian humanism associated with Freemasonry, moral motives played an essential role.

All the main features of the future "advanced" intelligentsia were also taking shape - and in the first place here was the consciousness of the duty to serve society, in general, practical idealism. It was the path of ideological life and active service to the ideal.

2.1. Humanism in the works "Utopia" by Thomas More and "We" by Evgeny Zamyatin

Thomas More in his work "Utopia" speaks of universal equality. But is there a place for humanism in this equality?

What is a utopia?

“Utopia - (from the Greek u - no and topos - a place - that is, a place that does not exist; according to another version, from eu - good and topos - a place, that is, a blessed country), an image of an ideal social system, devoid of scientific justification; genre science fiction; the designation of all works containing unrealistic plans for social transformations. (“Explanatory Dictionary of the Living Great Russian Language” by V. Dahl)

A similar term arose thanks to Thomas More himself.

Simply put, a utopia is a fictional picture of an ideal life arrangement.

Thomas More lived at the beginning of a new time (1478-1535), when a wave of humanism and the Renaissance swept over all of Europe. Most of More's literary and political works are already of historical interest to us. Only "Utopia" (published in 1516) has retained its significance for our time - not only as a talented novel, but also as a work of socialist thought brilliant in its design.

The book was written in the then popular genre of "traveler's story". Allegedly, a certain navigator Raphael Gitlodey visited the unknown island of Utopia, whose social structure impressed him so much that he tells others about it.

Knowing well the social and moral life of his homeland, the English humanist, Thomas More, was imbued with sympathy for the misfortunes of her masses. These moods of his were reflected in the famous work with a long title in the spirit of that time - "A very useful, as well as entertaining, truly golden book about the best structure of the state and about the new island of Utopia ...". This work instantly gained great popularity in humanistic circles, which did not prevent Soviet researchers from calling More almost the first communist.

The humanistic outlook of the author of "Utopia" led him to conclusions of great social acuteness and significance, especially in the first part of this work. The author's insight was by no means limited to ascertaining a terrible picture of social disasters, emphasizing at the very end of his work that, with careful observation of the life of not only England, but also "all states", they represent "nothing but a conspiracy of the rich, under the pretext and under in the name of the state thinking about their own benefits.

Already these deep statements prompted More the main direction of projects and dreams in the second part of "Utopia". Numerous researchers of this work stated not only direct, but also indirect references to the texts and ideas of the Bible (primarily gospel ones), especially ancient and early Christian authors. Of all the works that had the greatest impact on More, Plato's "State" stands out. Many humanists saw in "Utopia" a long-awaited rival of this greatest creation of political thought, a work that had existed by that time for almost two millennia.

In line with humanistic quests that creatively synthesized the ideological legacy of antiquity and the Middle Ages and boldly rationalistically compared political and ethnic theories with the social development of that era, More's Utopia arises, reflecting and originally comprehending the full depth of the socio-political conflicts of the era of the decomposition of feudalism and the initial accumulation of capital.

After reading More's book, you are very surprised at how much the idea of ​​\u200b\u200bwhat is good for a person and what is bad has changed since More's time. To the ordinary citizen of the 21st century, More's book, which laid the foundation for a whole "genre of utopias", does not at all seem to be a model of an ideal state. Rather, the opposite is true. I really would not want to live in the society described by More. Euthanasia for the sick and decrepit, forced labor service, according to which you must work as a farmer for at least 2 years, and after that you can be sent to the fields during the harvest. "All men and women have one common occupation - agriculture, from which no one is spared." But on the other hand, Utopians work strictly 6 hours a day, and slaves do all the dirty, hard and dangerous work. The mention of slavery makes you wonder if it's utopian this work? Are the inhabitants so equal in it?

Ideas about universal equality are slightly exaggerated. However, the slaves in “Utopia” do not work for the good of the master, but for the whole society as a whole (by the way, the same thing happened under Stalin, when millions of prisoners worked for free for the good of the Motherland). To become a slave, one must commit a serious crime (including treason or debauchery). Slaves are engaged in hard physical work until the end of their days, but in the case of diligent work they can even be pardoned.

Mora's utopia is not even a state in the usual sense of the word, but a human anthill. You will live in standard houses, and after ten years, you will change housing with other families by lot. This is not even a house, but rather a hostel in which many families live - small primary cells of local government, headed by elected leaders, siphogrants or philarchs. Naturally, a common household is conducted, they eat together, all matters are decided jointly. There are severe restrictions on freedom of movement, in the event of repeated unauthorized absences you will be punished - by making you a slave.

The idea of ​​the Iron Curtain is also implemented in Utopia: it lives in complete isolation from the outside world.

The attitude towards parasites here is very strict - every citizen either works on the land or must master a certain craft (moreover, a useful craft). Only the chosen ones who have shown special abilities are exempted from physical labor and can become scientists or philosophers. Everyone wears the same, the simplest, clothes made of coarse cloth, and, while doing business, a person takes off his clothes so as not to wear them out, and puts on rough skins or skins. There are no frills, everything is just the essentials. Everyone shares the food equally, and all the surplus is given to others, and the best products are transferred to hospitals. There is no money, and the wealth accumulated by the state is kept in the form of debt obligations in other countries. The same reserves of gold and silver that are in Utopia itself are used to make chamber pots, slop tubs, and also to create shameful chains and hoops that are hung on criminals as punishment. All this, according to More, should destroy the citizens' craving for money-grubbing.

It seems to me that the island described by More is some kind of frenzied concept of collective farms.

The prudence and practicality of the author's view are striking. In many ways, he approaches social relations in the society he invented as an engineer who creates the most efficient mechanism. For example, the fact that utopians prefer not to fight, but to bribe their opponents. Or, for example, the custom when people choosing a mate for marriage are required to consider him or her naked.

Any progress in the life of Utopia does not make sense. There are no factors in society that force science and technology to develop, to change attitudes towards certain things. Life, as it is, suits citizens and some kind of deviation is simply not needed.

Utopia society is limited on all sides. There is practically no freedom in anything. The power of equals over equals is not equality. There can be no state in which there is no power - otherwise it is anarchy. Well, since there is power, there can no longer be equality. The person who controls the lives of others is always in a privileged position.

Communism is literally built on the island: from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs. Everyone is obliged to work, being engaged in agriculture and handicrafts. The family is the basic unit of society. Its work is controlled by the state, and what is produced is donated to a common piggy bank. The family is considered a social workshop, and not necessarily based on consanguinity. If children don't like their parents' craft, they can move to another family. It is easy to imagine what kind of unrest this will result in in practice.

Utopians live boring and monotonous. Their whole life is regulated from the very beginning. Lunch, however, is allowed not only in the public dining room, but also in the family. Education is open to all and is based on a combination of theory and practical work. That is, children are given a standard set of knowledge, and at the same time they are taught to work.

More was especially praised by social theorists for the absence of private property on Utopia. In the words of More himself, "wherever there is private property, where everything is measured by money, it is hardly ever possible for the state to be governed justly or happily." And in general, "for public welfare there is only one way - to declare equality in everything."

Utopians strongly condemn the war. But even here this principle is not observed to the end. Naturally, Utopians fight when they defend their borders. But they also fight in the case “when they pity some people oppressed by tyranny.” In addition, “Utopians consider it the most just cause of war when a people does not use their own land, but owns it, as it were, in vain and in vain ". After examining these reasons for the war, we can conclude that the Utopians must fight constantly until they build communism and "peace in the world." Because there is always a reason. Moreover, “Utopia”, in fact, should be an eternal aggressor, because if rational, non-ideological states wage war when it is beneficial for them, then utopians always, if there are reasons for it. After all, they cannot remain indifferent for ideological reasons.

All these facts, one way or another, suggest the thought: was Utopia a utopia in the full sense of the word? Was it the ideal system to which one would like to aspire?

On this note, I would like to turn to the work of E. Zamyatin “We”. humanism personality mor zamyatin

It should be noted that Evgeny Ivanovich Zamyatin (1884--1937), who is a rebel by nature and outlook, was not a contemporary of Thomas More, but caught the time of the creation of the USSR. The author is almost unknown a wide range Russian readers, since the works written by him back in the 1920s were published only in the late 1980s. Last years The writer spent his life in France, where he died in 1937, but he never considered himself an emigrant - he lived in Paris with a Soviet passport.

The work of E. Zamyatin is extremely diverse. He wrote a large number of stories and novels, among which the anti-utopia "We" occupies a special place. Dystopia is a genre that is also called negative utopia. This image of such a possible future, which frightens the writer, makes him worry about the fate of mankind, for the soul of an individual, a future in which the problem of humanism and freedom is acute.

The novel “We” was created shortly after the author returned from England to revolutionary Russia in 1920 (according to some reports, work on the text continued into 1921). In 1929, the novel was used for massive criticism of E. Zamyatin, and the author was forced to defend himself, justify himself, explain himself, since the novel was regarded as his political mistake and "a manifestation of wrecking the interests of Soviet literature." After another study at the next meeting of the writers' community, E. Zamyatin announced his withdrawal from the All-Russian Union of Writers. The discussion of Zamyatin's "case" was a signal for a toughening of the party's policy in the field of literature: the year was 1929 - the year of the Great Turning Point, the onset of Stalinism. It became meaningless and impossible for Zamyatin to work as a writer in Russia, and, with the permission of the government, he went abroad in 1931.

E. Zamyatin creates the novel “We” in the form of diary entries of one of the “lucky ones”. The city-state of the future is filled with bright rays of the gentle sun. Universal equality is repeatedly confirmed by the hero-narrator himself. He derives a mathematical formula, proving to himself and to us, the readers, that “freedom and crime are as inseparably linked as motion and speed...”. He sarcastically sees happiness in the restriction of freedom.

The narrative is a note-summary of the builder of the spaceship (in our time he would be called the chief designer). He talks about that period of his life, which he himself later defines as an illness. Each entry (there are 40 of them in the novel) has its own title, consisting of several sentences. It is interesting to see that usually the first sentences indicate the micro-theme of the chapter, and the last gives an outlet for its idea: “The bell. Mirror Sea. I burn forever”, “Yellow. 2D shadow. Incurable soul”, “Author's duty. Ice swells. The hardest love.

What alerts the reader right away? - not "I think", but "we think". The great scientist, a talented engineer, does not realize himself as a person, does not think about the fact that he does not have his own name and, like the rest of the inhabitants of the Great State, he wears a “number” - D-503. “No one is 'one', but 'one of'. Looking ahead, we can say that in the most bitter moment for him, he will think about his mother: for her, he would not be the Builder of the Integral, number D-503, but would be "a simple human piece - a piece of herself."

The world of the United State, of course, is something strictly rationalized, geometrically ordered, mathematically verified, with the dominant aesthetics of cubism: rectangular glass boxes of houses where people-numbers live (“divine parallelepipeds of transparent dwellings”), straight overlooked streets, squares (“Square Cuba. Sixty-six powerful concentric circles: stands. And sixty-six rows: quiet lamps of faces ... ". People in this geometrized world are an integral part of it, they bear the stamp of this world: "Round, smooth balls of heads floated past - and turned around." Sterile clear planes of glass make the world of the United State even more lifeless, cold, unreal. The architecture is strictly functional, devoid of the slightest decorations, “unnecessities”, and this is a parody of the aesthetic utopias of the futurists of the early twentieth century, where glass and concrete were sung as new building materials of the technical future.

The inhabitants of the United State are so devoid of individuality that they differ only by index numbers. All life in the One State is based on mathematical, rational foundations: addition, subtraction, division, multiplication. Everyone is a happy arithmetic mean, impersonal, devoid of individuality. The appearance of geniuses is impossible, creative inspiration is perceived as an unknown kind of epilepsy.

This or that number (resident of the United State) does not have any value in the eyes of others and is easily replaceable. Thus, the deaths of several “neglected” builders of the “Integral” who died while testing the ship, the purpose of which was to “integrate” the universe, are perceived indifferently by numbers.

Individual numbers that have shown a tendency to independent thinking are carried out by the Great Operation to remove fantasy, which kills the ability to think. The question mark - this is evidence of doubt - does not exist in the One State, but in abundance, of course, the exclamation mark.

Not only the state regards any personal manifestation as a crime, but the numbers do not feel the need to be a person, a human individual with their own unique world.

The protagonist of the novel, D-503, cites the story of the "three scapegoats" well known to every schoolchild in the United State. This story is about how three numbers, in the form of experience, were released from work for a month. However, the unfortunate returned to their workplace and spent hours doing those movements that at a certain time of the day were already the need of their body (sawed, planed the air, etc.). On the tenth day, unable to stand it, they joined hands and entered the water to the sounds of the march, sinking deeper and deeper until the water stopped their torment. For the numbers, the guiding hand of the Benefactor, complete submission to the control of the custodians-spies, has become a need:

“It's so nice to feel someone's keen eye, lovingly protecting from the slightest mistake, from the slightest wrong step. Let it sound a little sentimental, but the same analogy comes to my mind again: the guardian angels that the ancients dreamed of. How much of what they only dreamed of materialized in our lives ... "

On the one hand, the human personality recognizes itself as equal to the whole world, and on the other hand, powerful dehumanizing factors appear and intensify, first of all, technological civilization, which introduces a mechanistic, hostile principle to man, since the means of influencing a technical civilization on a person, the means of manipulating his consciousness become ever more powerful, global.

One of the most important questions the author is trying to solve is the question of freedom of choice and freedom in general.

Both More and Zamyatin have forced equality. People cannot differ from their own kind in any way.

Modern researchers determine that the main difference between dystopia and utopia is that “utopians are looking for ways to create an ideal world based on the synthesis of the postulates of goodness, justice, happiness and prosperity, wealth and harmony. And dystopians seek to understand how the human person would feel in this exemplary atmosphere.

It is quite obvious that not only equality of rights and opportunities is expressed, but also forced material equality. And all this is combined with total control and restriction of freedoms. This control is needed to maintain material equality: people are not allowed to stand out, do more, surpass their own kind (thus becoming unequal). But this is the natural desire of everyone.

No social utopia talks about specific people. Everywhere the masses or individual social groups are considered. The individual is nothing in these works. "One is zero, one is nonsense!" The problem with utopian socialists is that they think about the people as a whole, and not about specific people. As a result, complete equality is realized, but this is the equality of unfortunate people.

Is it possible for people to be happy in a utopia? Happiness from what? From victories? So they are done by everyone equally. Everyone is involved in it and, at the same time, no one. From lack of exploitation? Thus, in a utopia, it is replaced by social exploitation: a person is forced to work all his life, but not for the capitalist and not for himself, but for society. Moreover, this social exploitation is even more terrible, since here a person has no way out. If, working for a capitalist, you can quit, then it is impossible to hide from society. Yes, and moving anywhere is prohibited.

It is difficult to name at least one freedom that is respected in Utopia. There is no freedom to move, no freedom to choose how to live. A person driven into a corner by society without the right to choose is deeply unhappy. He has no hope for change. He feels like a slave locked in a cage. People cannot live in a cage, either material or social. Claustrophobia sets in, they want change. But this is not feasible. The society of utopians is a society of deeply unhappy, depressed people. People with depressed consciousness and lack of willpower.

Therefore, it should be recognized that the model of the development of society, proposed to us by Thomas More, seemed ideal only in the 16th and 17th centuries. In the future, with increasing attention to the individual, they lost all sense of realization, because if we build a society of the future, then it should be a society of pronounced individualities, a society strong personalities and not mediocre.

Considering the novel “We”, first of all, it is necessary to indicate that it is closely connected with Soviet history, the history of Soviet literature. The ideas of ordering life were characteristic of all the literature of the early years. Soviet power. In our computerized, robotic era, when the “average” person becomes an appendage to the machine, is only able to press buttons, ceasing to be a creator, a thinker, the novel is becoming more and more relevant.

E. Zamyatin himself noted his novel as a signal of danger threatening man and humanity from the hypertrophied power of machines and the power of the state - it doesn’t matter which one.

In my opinion, with his novel, E. Zamyatin affirms the idea that the right to choose is always inseparable from a person. The refraction of "I" into "we" cannot be natural. If a person succumbs to the influence of an inhumane totalitarian system, then he ceases to be a person. It is impossible to build the world only according to reason, forgetting that a person has a soul. The machine world should not exist without the world, the humane world.

Ideologically, the devices of the Unified State of Zamyatin and Mora's Utopia are very similar. Although there are no mechanisms in Mora's work, the rights and freedoms of people are also squeezed by the vise of certainty and predetermination.

Conclusion

In his book, Thomas More tried to find the features that an ideal society should have. Reflections on the best state system took place against the backdrop of cruel morals, inequality and social contradictions in Europe 16-17 centuries.

Yevgeny Zamyatin wrote about what he saw with his own eyes. At the same time, the thoughts of More and Zamyatin for the most part are only hypotheses, a subjective vision of the world.

More's ideas were certainly progressive for their time, but they did not take into account one important detail, without which Utopia is a society without a future. Utopian socialists did not take into account the psychology of people. The fact is that any Utopia, by making people compulsorily equal, denies the possibility of making them happy. After all, a happy person is someone who feels better in something, superior in something to others. He can be richer, smarter, prettier, kinder. Utopians, on the other hand, deny any possibility for such a person to stand out. He must dress like everyone else, study like everyone else, have exactly as much property as everyone else. But after all, a person by nature strives for the best for himself. Utopian socialists proposed to punish any deviation from the norm set by the state, while simultaneously trying to change the mentality of a person. Make him an unambitious, obedient robot, a cog in the system.

Zamyatin's anti-utopia, in turn, shows what can happen if this “ideal” of society, proposed by utopians, is achieved. But it is impossible to completely isolate people from the outside world. There will always be those who, at least out of the corner of their eye, will know the joy of freedom. And it will no longer be possible to drive such people into the framework of totalitarian suppression of individuality. And in the end, it is precisely such people, who have known the joy of doing what they want, who will bring down the entire system, the entire political system, which happened in our country in the early 90s.

What kind of society can rightfully be called ideal, given the achievements of modern sociological thought? Undoubtedly, it will be a society of complete equality. But equality in rights and opportunities. And it will be a society of complete freedom. Freedom of thought and speech, action and movement. Closest to the described ideal is modern Western society. It has many disadvantages, but it makes people happy. If society is truly ideal, how can there be no freedom in it?

List of used literature

1. http://humanism.ru

2. Anthology of world political thought. In 5 volumes. T.1. - M.: Thought, 1997.

3. World history in 10 volumes, V.4. M .: Institute of Social and Economic Literature, 1958.

4. More T. Utopia. M., 1978.

5. Alekseev M.P. "Slavonic Sources of Thomas More's Utopia", 1955

6. Varshavsky A.S. “Ahead of time. Thomas More. Essay on life and activity, 1967.

7. Volodin A.I. "Utopia and history", 1976

8. Zastenker N.E. "Utopian socialism", 1973

9. Kautsky K. "Thomas More and his Utopia", 1924

10. Bak D.P., E.A. Shklovsky, A.N., Arkhangelsky. "All the heroes of the works of Russian literature." - M.: AST, 1997.-448 p.

11. Pavlovets M.G. “E.I. Zamyatin. "We"

12. Pavlovets T.V. "Text analysis. Main content. Works. - M .: Bustard, 2000.-123 p.

13. http://student.km.ru/

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