欧洲文化史上的文学流派与爱沙尼亚书信的出版与研究

Q2 Social Sciences Maetagused Pub Date : 2023-08-01 DOI:10.7592/mt2023.86.ojamaa_hollo
Triinu Ojamaa, Maarja Hollo
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The growing popularity of communication by letters is also shown by the fact that in the middle of the 18th century, when English writer Samuel Richardson published three novels in the form of letters, the epistolary novel was born. In the epistolary novels, for the first time the world of feelings and thoughts of the characters was under observation. At the end of the 19th century, communication by letters increased drastically due to the wider spread of literacy throughout Europe. The writing of letters intensified during the First and Second World Wars, which is considered the last major blooming of the letter genre. This fact is also confirmed by studies on the development of the written communication tradition in Estonia. The article also provides a brief overview about the research and publication of private correspondences in Estonia. In the middle of the 20th century, the Estonian Literary Museum began to systematically deal with the autobiographical heritage (incl. letters) of those persons who had a prominent position in cultural history. In 1984, the serial publication Litteraria: eesti kirjandusloo allikmaterjale (Litteraria: Estonian Literary History Source Materials; since 2005 Litteraria: Estonian Cultural History Source Materials) was founded with the aim of making correspondences, but also various biographical notes, photographs, etc., available to the public. Litteraria has never been published regularly; nevertheless, by 2023 the series had published already twenty-eight issues, which are now also available online (https://www.kirmus.ee/et/teadus/e-litteraria). In 1998, Tuna: Ajalookultuuri ajakiri (The Past: Journal of Historical Culture) came out on the landscape of social science and humanities journals. The new journal included the rubric “Estonian Cultural History Archives”, which allowed the researchers to regularly publish archival sources with commentary four times a year. Over the years, several voluminous text-critical publications of correspondences have been published in parallel with the issues of Litteraria and Tuna, for example, “Akadeemia kirjades” (“Academy in letters”, Olesk 1997), “Minu lamp põleb” (“My lamp is on”, Annuk & Metste 2015), and “Kallid krantsid: Kirjad vangilaagritest ja asumiselt Siberis 1946–1954” (“Dear friends: Letters from prison camps and deportation sites in Siberia 1946–1954”, Kross 2021). The published correspondences have a different historical background, but the common feature of all the authors of the letters is their close connection with Estonian literature. Several historians, literary scholars, cultural historians, folklorists, and philosophers have used private correspondences as source material for their in-depth studies. The analysis of scientific articles of the last decades shows that letters are useful primarily as a source of information that helps to open the hidden aspects of some cultural-historical phenomenon or historical event, for example, the world wars. In addition, different aspects of epistolary practices are also analysed, such as the peculiarities of means of expression, communicativeness or intersubjectivity of letters, etc. Until the turn of the century, prominent creative figures in Estonian cultural history dominated among the authors of the letters used in the studies. 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In 1984, the serial publication Litteraria: eesti kirjandusloo allikmaterjale (Litteraria: Estonian Literary History Source Materials; since 2005 Litteraria: Estonian Cultural History Source Materials) was founded with the aim of making correspondences, but also various biographical notes, photographs, etc., available to the public. Litteraria has never been published regularly; nevertheless, by 2023 the series had published already twenty-eight issues, which are now also available online (https://www.kirmus.ee/et/teadus/e-litteraria). In 1998, Tuna: Ajalookultuuri ajakiri (The Past: Journal of Historical Culture) came out on the landscape of social science and humanities journals. The new journal included the rubric “Estonian Cultural History Archives”, which allowed the researchers to regularly publish archival sources with commentary four times a year. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文论述了20世纪中叶以前欧洲文化史上书信体裁的产生、发展和繁盛。流传至今的最古老的信件可以追溯到公元前3 -2世纪,是用楔形文字写的。书信文学的第一个主要全盛时期是在古罗马时期,当时政治家和哲学家都交换书信,但也有一些作家在他们的作品中使用书信的形式。所谓的书信写作规范形成于中世纪,当时大学开始教授书信写作艺术。在17世纪,书信书写手册和私人信件开始在书中出版,到18世纪已经很普遍了。18世纪中叶,英国作家塞缪尔·理查森(Samuel Richardson)出版了三部书信形式的小说,书信体小说(epistolary novel)由此诞生,这也说明了书信交流的日益普及。在书信体小说中,人们第一次观察到了人物的情感和思想世界。在19世纪末,由于识字在欧洲的广泛传播,信件的交流急剧增加。在第一次和第二次世界大战期间,信件的写作得到了加强,这被认为是信件类型的最后一次主要绽放。对爱沙尼亚书面交流传统发展的研究也证实了这一事实。文章还提供了关于爱沙尼亚私人信件的研究和出版的简要概述。在20世纪中期,爱沙尼亚文学博物馆开始系统地处理那些在文化史上有突出地位的人的自传遗产(包括信件)。1984年,连载《文学史:爱沙尼亚文学史资料来源》;自2005年以来,Litteraria(爱沙尼亚文化史源材料)成立,目的是向公众提供信件,以及各种传记笔记,照片等。《文坛》从未定期出版;然而,到2023年,该系列已经出版了28期,现在也可以在网上找到(https://www.kirmus.ee/et/teadus/e-litteraria)。1998年,《过去:历史文化期刊》(Tuna: Ajalookultuuri ajakiri)在社会科学和人文科学期刊上出版。这份新杂志的标题是“爱沙尼亚文化历史档案”,这使得研究人员可以每年定期发表四次带有评论的档案资料。多年来,与《文学》和《Tuna》杂志同时出版的还有几本关于信件的大量文本评论出版物,例如,“Akadeemia kirjades”(“信件中的学院”,Olesk 1997年)、“Minu lamp põleb”(“我的灯还亮着”,Annuk & Metste 2015年)和“Kallid krantsid: Kirjad vangilaagritest ja asumiselt Siberis 1946-1954年”(“亲爱的朋友:1946-1954年西伯利亚监狱集中营和驱逐地点的信件”,Kross 2021年)。已发表的信件有不同的历史背景,但所有信件作者的共同特点是他们与爱沙尼亚文学的密切联系。一些历史学家、文学学者、文化历史学家、民俗学家和哲学家都使用私人信件作为他们深入研究的原始材料。对过去几十年的科学文章的分析表明,信件的主要用途是作为一种信息来源,有助于揭示一些文化历史现象或历史事件的隐藏方面,例如,世界大战。此外,本文还分析了书信实践的不同方面,如书信的表达方式、交流性或主体间性等。直到世纪之交,爱沙尼亚文化史上杰出的创造性人物在研究中使用的信件的作者中占主导地位。近几十年来,出现了一种新的趋势,研究人员开始更多地关注,例如,普通人的情书和战争信,以及作者与收信人分享日常生活中各种喜怒哀乐的信件。
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Kirjažanrist Euroopa kultuuriloos ning kirjavahetuste avaldamisest ja uurimisest Eestis
The article deals with the emergence, development and blooming of the letter genre in European cultural history until the middle of the 20th century. The oldest letters that have survived to our time date from the 3rd-2nd centuries BC and are written in cuneiform. The first major heyday of the literary genre was in the time of ancient Rome, when both politicians and philosophers exchanged letters, but also several writers used the letter form in their works. The so-called canon of letter writing was formed in the Middle Ages, when the art of letter writing began to be taught at the universities. In the 17th century, letter writing manuals and private letters began to be published in books, and in the 18th century it was already very common. The growing popularity of communication by letters is also shown by the fact that in the middle of the 18th century, when English writer Samuel Richardson published three novels in the form of letters, the epistolary novel was born. In the epistolary novels, for the first time the world of feelings and thoughts of the characters was under observation. At the end of the 19th century, communication by letters increased drastically due to the wider spread of literacy throughout Europe. The writing of letters intensified during the First and Second World Wars, which is considered the last major blooming of the letter genre. This fact is also confirmed by studies on the development of the written communication tradition in Estonia. The article also provides a brief overview about the research and publication of private correspondences in Estonia. In the middle of the 20th century, the Estonian Literary Museum began to systematically deal with the autobiographical heritage (incl. letters) of those persons who had a prominent position in cultural history. In 1984, the serial publication Litteraria: eesti kirjandusloo allikmaterjale (Litteraria: Estonian Literary History Source Materials; since 2005 Litteraria: Estonian Cultural History Source Materials) was founded with the aim of making correspondences, but also various biographical notes, photographs, etc., available to the public. Litteraria has never been published regularly; nevertheless, by 2023 the series had published already twenty-eight issues, which are now also available online (https://www.kirmus.ee/et/teadus/e-litteraria). In 1998, Tuna: Ajalookultuuri ajakiri (The Past: Journal of Historical Culture) came out on the landscape of social science and humanities journals. The new journal included the rubric “Estonian Cultural History Archives”, which allowed the researchers to regularly publish archival sources with commentary four times a year. Over the years, several voluminous text-critical publications of correspondences have been published in parallel with the issues of Litteraria and Tuna, for example, “Akadeemia kirjades” (“Academy in letters”, Olesk 1997), “Minu lamp põleb” (“My lamp is on”, Annuk & Metste 2015), and “Kallid krantsid: Kirjad vangilaagritest ja asumiselt Siberis 1946–1954” (“Dear friends: Letters from prison camps and deportation sites in Siberia 1946–1954”, Kross 2021). The published correspondences have a different historical background, but the common feature of all the authors of the letters is their close connection with Estonian literature. Several historians, literary scholars, cultural historians, folklorists, and philosophers have used private correspondences as source material for their in-depth studies. The analysis of scientific articles of the last decades shows that letters are useful primarily as a source of information that helps to open the hidden aspects of some cultural-historical phenomenon or historical event, for example, the world wars. In addition, different aspects of epistolary practices are also analysed, such as the peculiarities of means of expression, communicativeness or intersubjectivity of letters, etc. Until the turn of the century, prominent creative figures in Estonian cultural history dominated among the authors of the letters used in the studies. In recent decades, a new trend has emerged which shows that researchers have begun to pay more attention to, for example, the love letters and war letters of ordinary people, as well as letters in which the writer shares with the addressee various information about joys and worries of everyday life.
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来源期刊
Maetagused
Maetagused Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: It is the only journal publishing original research on folkloristics, ethnomusicology, cultural anthropology, and religious studies in Estonian, with summaries in English. The journal has an important role in mediating to the scholarly community of one million Estonian speakers original studies and articles by foreign researchers specially submitted to the journal for translating. The journal also publishes translations of selected prime researches from scientific journals in other languages to elaborate specialised terminology in Estonian. In addition, the journal publishes articles on applied sciences, as well as reviews of books and audio materials, conferences and fieldwork, overviews of research centres in the world, defended theses, etc.
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