Preview

Neophilology

Advanced search

Verbalization of corporality in blockade texts

https://doi.org/10.20310/2587-6953-2023-9-1-31-42

Abstract

Modern philology is increasingly turning to interdisciplinary problems, which include corporality, which is studied at the intersection of biology, medicine, cognitive science and philosophy. At the same time, the interest of linguistics in the conceptualization and verbalization of bodily and psychological individual experience leads to the need to study ego-documents that tell about the most difficult, traumatic life situations (hunger, war, disability, fatal illness, loss of loved ones, etc.). The purpose of the work is to explication of the specifics of the perception of the corporality of a resident of besieged Leningrad through the verbalization of one’s own and others’ bodily experience. The number of specific elements of the conceptualization of corporality (hunger, dystrophy, cold, trauma, etc.) were revealed. An analysis of the memories of the blockade survivors convincingly proves that the body was perceived by the starving inhabitants as deformed, destroyed and striving for inevitable death. Reflection on the body and corporality inevitably leads to the realization of the rigid connection of corporality with the psyche and morality. Such specific forms of comprehension and verbalization of the physicality of blockade runners as hunger trauma, winter trauma, and alienation of the body are identified and analyzed. The analysis of the traumatic bodily experience of the inhabitants of the besieged Leningrad can serve as a further development of linguistic studies of both corporality and traumatic experience. 

About the Authors

V. A. Efremov
Herzen State Pedagogical University of Russia
Russian Federation

Valerii A. Efremov, Doctor of Philology, Associate Professor, Professor, Head of Russian Language Department

48 Moika Emb., St. Petersburg 191186



D. A. Popovich
Umax LLC
Russian Federation

Daria A. Popovich, Master of Pedagogical Education, Senior Lecturer

1 bldg 42 Bol’shoi Blvd., Moscow 121205



References

1. Sobolev G.L., Khodyakov M.V. The confrontation between life and death: some results of studying the history of the siege of Leningrad. Noveishaya istoriya Rossii = Modern History of Russia, 2021, no. 2, pp. 294-323. (In Russ.) http://doi.org/10.21638/11701/spbu24.2021.201, https://elibrary.ru/xxqwgw

2. Yarov S.V. Blokadnaya ehtika: predstavleniya o morali v Leningrade v 1941–1942 gg. [Siege Ethics: Ideas about Morality in Leningrad in 1941–1942]. St. Petersburg, European University Press at Saint-Petersburg, 2021, 590 p. (In Russ.) Available at: https://spirech.org/b/src/1649673681086-0.pdf

3. Pavlovskaya A.Yu. «Ya znayu, chto tak pisat’ nel’zya»: Fenomen blokadnogo dnevnika [“I Know is Impossible Write like that”: The Phenomenon of the Siege Diary]. St. Petersburg, European University Press at Saint-Petersburg, 2022, 462 p. (In Russ.)

4. Barskova P., Nikolozi R. Blokadnye narrativy [The Narrative of the Siege]. Moscow, Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie Publ., 2017, 330 p. (In Russ.)

5. Barskova P. Sed’maya shcheloch’: teksty i sud'by blokadnykh poehtov [The Seventh Alkali: Texts and Fates of Blockade Poets]. St. Petersburg, Ivan Limbakh Publishing House, 2020, 224 p. (In Russ.)

6. Rudova Yu.V. Linguocultural features of body representation (exemplified by the Russian and English humorous discourse). Vestnik Severnogo (Arkticheskogo) federal’nogo universiteta. Seriya: Gumanitarnye i sotsia’nye nauki = Vestnik of Northern (Arctic) Federal University. Series: Humanitarian and Social Sciences, 2022, no. 1, pp. 90-99. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.37482/2687-1505-V158, https://elibrary.ru/gzaddr

7. Voronina T. Review: Alexis Peri. The war within: diaries from the siege of Leningrad. Cambridge, Ma, Harvard University Press, 2017. Laboratorium: zhurnal sotsial’nykh issledovanii = Laboratorium: Russian Review of Social Research, 2017, no. 3, pp. 169-172. (In Russ.) https://elibrary.ru/ytxldb

8. Simonenko V.B., Magaeva S.V. Fundamentals of survival in sieged Leningrad from the standpoint of sanogenesis. Klinicheskaya meditsina = Clinical Medicine (Russian Jornal), 2014, no. 2, pp. 5-14. (In Russ.) https://elibrary.ru/rvmlet

9. Kosenko L.V. Psychological effects of starvation on the example of the people who survived the siege of Leningrad. Zdorov’e – osnova chelovecheskogo potentsiala: problemy i puti ikh resheniya [Health is the Basis of Human Potential: Problems and Ways to Solve them], 2014, vol. 9, no. 2, pp. 522-523. (In Russ.) https://elibrary.ru/vqdjff

10. Aierman R, Khlevnyuk D. Social theory and trauma. Sotsiologicheskoe obozrenie = Russian Sociological Review, 2013, vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 121-138. (In Russ.) https://elibrary.ru/qzvgmj

11. Morina L.P. Kognitivnye aspekty telesnosti [Cognitive aspects of corporality]. Vestnik SanktPeterburgskogo universiteta. Seriya 6. Filosofiya. Kul’turologiya. Politologiya. Pravo. Mezhdunarodnye otnosheniya = Vestnik of Saint-Petersburg University. Series 6. Philosophy. Cultural Studies. Political Science. Law. International Relationships, 2013, no. 4, pp. 46-52. (In Russ.) https://elibrary.ru/ruwgsl


Review

For citations:


Efremov V.A., Popovich D.A. Verbalization of corporality in blockade texts. Neophilology. 2023;9(1):31-42. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.20310/2587-6953-2023-9-1-31-42

Views: 63


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2587-6953 (Print)
ISSN 2782-5868 (Online)