Abstract
This textbook takes Russian classical literature of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as a source for precedent phenomena (PP) or culturally bound expressions. The purpose of this textbook is to prepare students of Russian as a foreign language for intercultural communication. It teaches students how to decode PP in texts of various genres and to independently use PP both orally and in writing. The textbook is based on an algorithm for working with PP which has been adapted for teaching Russian and introduces students to PP in three stages:1) Culturological facts (knowledge about the author and sources); 2) Linguistic and cultural adaptations (representation of PP in Russian cultural space and the ability to decode and understand PP in different texts); 3) Independent identification and interpretation of the PP covered in the textbook in different genres and communicative situations. The textbook is aimed at students at the B2 level and above.
Translated title of the contribution | Who’s to Judge? The Russian classical literature and Precedent Phenomena: : A Textbook. |
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Original language | Russian |
Place of Publication | Russland |
Publisher | Zlatoust Publishing House |
Number of pages | 220 |
ISBN (Print) | ISBN 978-5-907123-52-6 |
Publication status | Published - Jul 2020 |
Fields of Science and Technology Classification 2012
- 602 Linguistics and Literature