Kereső
Bejelentkezés
Kapcsolat
![]() |
"Népmese" és mondahagyomány : A János vitéz lehetséges mondai forrásai |
Tartalom: | http://real.mtak.hu/183425/ |
---|---|
Archívum: | REAL |
Gyűjtemény: |
Status = Published
Subject = G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation / földrajz, antropológia, kikapcsolódás: GT Manners and customs / néprajz, szokások, hagyományok Subject = P Language and Literature / nyelvészet és irodalom: PN Literature (General) / irodalom általában: PN0441 Literary History / irodalomtörténet Subject = P Language and Literature / nyelvészet és irodalom: PH Finno-Ugrian, Basque languages and literatures / finnugor és baszk nyelvek és irodalom: PH04 Hungarian language and literature / magyar nyelv és irodalom Type = Article |
Cím: |
"Népmese" és mondahagyomány : A János vitéz lehetséges mondai forrásai
|
Létrehozó: |
Magyar, Zoltán
|
Dátum: |
2023
|
Téma: |
GT Manners and customs / néprajz, szokások, hagyományok
PH04 Hungarian language and literature / magyar nyelv és irodalom
PN0441 Literary History / irodalomtörténet
|
Tartalmi leírás: |
Petőfi’s work John the Valiant has received a large number of inter-
pretations. Some of them are folkloristic, due to the fact that the author con-
sciously incorporated various folklore motifs into his narrative poem, as indi-
cated by the poem’s subtitle (folktale). However, while previous studies mainly
highlighted the folk tale and popular poetry aspects of the poem, the authors
paid almost no attention to the large number of legend motifs in the work, or
their folk poetry analogies.
This paper analyses the aspects of legend found in John the Valiant in light
of historical sources and intensive legend collections over the last two or three
decades. The author of the study seeks to show that the legend motifs in John
the Valiant (the hero’s unknown origin; defeating the forest robbers; dog-
headed Tatars; the star falling from the sky as a sign of death; Darius’ treasure;
bag of gold; girl-kidnapping Turks and rescuing the abducted girl; splitting in
two the enemy warrior with a single blow; field of blood; mountain rising from
corpses; hero with supernatural strength; stone-eating giants; giant who helps
people; graveyard ghosts; dragon slaying in an inventive way; Fairyland; golden
hair of blonde fairy girls, etc.) are deeply embedded in the Hungarian epic
tradition. Furthermore, the legend motifs’ geographic dispersion is analysed,
and whether the poet knew the legends or at least could have known them.
This paper also indicates that, while active folk poetry of the mid-19th
century was a clear source for Petőfi’s poem, a reverse process can also be
observed after the publication of the work (1845), in which some parts of it
were folklorised and returned to the peasant oral tradition.
|
Nyelv: |
magyar
|
Típus: |
Article
PeerReviewed
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
|
Formátum: |
text
|
Azonosító: |
Magyar, Zoltán (2023) "Népmese" és mondahagyomány : A János vitéz lehetséges mondai forrásai. IRODALOMTÖRTÉNETI KÖZLEMÉNYEK, 127 (5). pp. 559-579. ISSN 0021-1486
|
Kapcsolat: |
MTMT:34463704 10.56232/ItK.2023.5.02
|
Létrehozó: |
cc_by_nc_sa
|