EDNote: I'd recommend Victor Erlich's Russian Formalism and Peter Steiner's Russian Formalism: A Metapoetics.  Both of them discuss Andrei Bely's importance for early formalism.  Formalism was characterized, among other things, by application of scientific terminology to the study of literature.  One such term, "morphology," became famous in Vladimir Propp's Morphology of the Folktale (1926), one of the foundational works of formalism.  Curiously, one might say ironically, the term "morphology" was coined by Goethe in his own studies of nature's forms, and so far as I have been able to discern, Andrei Bely was the very first person to apply the word to literary or cultural forms (in English or Russian, at least; I've done less thorough searching in German), in his essay called “Comparative morphology of the rhythm of Russian lyrics in iambic dimeter”, from his theoretical volume Symbolism (1909).--SB


Subject:
suggestions for remedial reading
From:
Carolyn Kunin <chaiselongue@earthlink.net>
Date:
Sat, 13 Jan 2007 08:31:05 -0800
To:
Vladimir Nabokov Forum <NABOKV-L@listserv.ucsb.edu>



To Jansy and Charles,

'Who is Ayn Rand?' and "What is Formalism?' are questions both too basic and too enormous to tackle in an email message. So I think some remedial reading is in order.

For Jansy: read The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand (interesting if unpleasant and should have been done in adolescence, but necessary if you want to know who she is);

For Charles: Unfortunately I can't come up with a good introduction to the subject of Formalism, but there must be such a thing. Does someone on the List, one of our literary profs perhaps, have a suggestion?

Carolyn

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