mythological literature - перевод на голландский
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mythological literature - перевод на голландский

LITERARY GENRE
Mythological fiction

folk literature         
volksverhalen
literary work         
  • Library]] of the [[Palais Bourbon]] in Paris
  • A [[calligram]] by [[Guillaume Apollinaire]]. These are a type of poem in which the written words are arranged in such a way to produce a visual image.
  • The intricate frontispiece of the [[Diamond Sutra]] from [[Tang dynasty]] China, the world's earliest dated printed book, AD 868 ([[British Library]])
  • [[Soviet]] poet [[Anna Akhmatova]] (1922), whose works were condemned and censored by the [[Stalin]]ist authorities
  • Kyrgyz]] [[manaschi]] performing part of the [[Epic of Manas]] at a [[yurt]] camp in [[Karakol]], [[Kyrgyzstan]]
  • Giordano]]'s opera ''[[Andrea Chénier]]''
  • [[Egyptian hieroglyphs]] with [[cartouche]]s for the name "[[Ramesses II]]", from the [[Luxor Temple]], [[New Kingdom]]
  • Parnassus]]'' fresco (1511), key figures in the Western canon
  • one of the best-selling books]] ever published.<ref>...remains the most translated Italian book and, after the Bible, the most widely read... by Francelia Butler, ''Children's Literature'', Yale University Press, 1972.</ref>
  • Sculpture in [[Berlin]] depicting a stack of books on which are inscribed the names of great German writers
  • Limestone [[Kish tablet]] from [[Sumer]] with pictographic writing; may be the earliest known writing, 3500 BC. [[Ashmolean Museum]]
POLYSEMOUS TERM REFERRING TO A WRITTEN ART FORM, AND THE SET OF LITERARY WORK
LiteraryArt; LiteraTure; Literary Art; Literary; Literatures; Literary work; Literary arts; Literary works; Ltierature; Literature by region; Prose fiction; Litterature; Literary art; Literary aesthetics; The literature
literair werk
Yiddish literature         
  • Leading poet [[Abraham Sutzkever]] (1913–2010) was among the Modernists of the 1930s "Young Vilna" group in [[Vilnius]], a historical centre of Yiddish culture. After the War he revived Yiddish in [[Tel Aviv]] and depicted the [[Holocaust]]
  • romance]] in Yiddish, its name later passed into popular phrase as "bubbe meise"-"grandmother's tale"
  • The painter [[Marc Chagall]] at the front, and the Yiddish writer [[Der Nister]] (1884–1950) behind him, with school teachers and children near Moscow in 1923. The writer's pseudonym, "The Hidden One", reflected his interest in symbols and esoteric Jewish ideas. He returned to Russia to join the Yiddish flowering, but fell victim to the Purges.
  • mysticism]] over rationalism
  • 2009 Ukrainian stamp of [[Sholem Aleichem]] (1859-1916). Together with [[Mendele Mocher Sforim]] and [[I. L. Peretz]], the three "classic" Yiddish writers, he helped found the latter 19th-century cultural and artistic [[Yiddish Renaissance]] movement of Eastern Europe.
GENRE OF WRITTEN MATERIAL
Yiddish Literature; Yiddish poetry; Judaeo-German literature; Old Yiddish literature
Yiddische literatuur

Определение

fantastic
¦ adjective
1. imaginative or fanciful; remote from reality.
2. informal extraordinarily good, attractive, or large.
Derivatives
fantastical adjective
fantasticality noun
fantastically adverb
Origin
ME: from OFr. fantastique, via med. L. from Gk phantastikos, from phantazein 'make visible', phantazesthai 'have visions', from phantos 'visible'.

Википедия

Mythic fiction

Mythic fiction is literature that is rooted in, inspired by, or that in some way draws from the tropes, themes, and symbolism of myth, legend, folklore, and fairy tales. The term is widely credited to Charles de Lint and Terri Windling. Mythic fiction overlaps with urban fantasy and the terms are sometimes used interchangeably, but mythic fiction also includes contemporary works in non-urban settings. Mythic fiction refers to works of contemporary literature that often cross the divide between literary and fantasy fiction.

Windling promoted mythic fiction as the co-editor (with Ellen Datlow) of The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror annual volumes for sixteen years, and as the editor of the Endicott Studio Journal of Mythic Arts.

Though mythic fiction can be loosely based on mythology, it frequently uses familiar mythological personages archetypes (such as tricksters, or the thunderer). This is in contrast to mythopoeia, such as the works of J. R. R. Tolkien, which invent their own legends and folklore or construct entirely new pantheons.