Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2017
The golden era of the study of folklore in the Soviet Union was the first decade after the Revolution, when the party and government, occupied with more urgent tasks, let the literary scholars and folklorists do their work relatively undisturbed. In 1925 the so-called “magna charta libertatis” for Soviet writers was issued by the Central Committee of the party, which permitted “free competition of various groups and currents.” As a result, the 1920s turned out to be rich and fruitful in literary scholarship, including folkloristics. In the study of folklore, different trends could freely coexist and thrive side by side. The most important of them were the historical school, Formalism, and the so-called Finnish school. The historical school continued the traditions of its leader Vsevolod Miller, whose first concern had been to find reflections of concrete historical reality in Russian byliny (epic songs). Thus the tendencies of the historical school are found in the commentaries to some bylina collections in 1918 and 1919, and also appeared strongly in the works of the brothers Boris and Iurii Sokolov, both of them disciples of Miller.
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17. Kriukova, Noviny, p. 35. Translation : “And on the horse sits a wondrous knight, / He holds the reins in his left hand, /In his right hand he holds a telescope./And on the horse sits our bright falcon, /And his name is Klim Voroshilov, our light.” (Sokolov, Russian Folklore, p. 679.)
18. Kriukova, Noviny, p. 75. Translation : “His horse hammered the earth with its right foot, /Mother moist earth heaved up, /In the dark forests the trees swayed, /The waters in the Caspian Sea spread out in billows.“
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41. This theory was outlined in Zhirmunsky's paper given in 1958 at the Fourth International Congress of Slavicists and later was republished, in a slightly reworked form, in his Narodnyi geroicheskii epos (Moscow and Leningrad, 1962), pp. 75-194; see especially pp. 130 ff. The same theory had been applied by D. S. Likhachev to Old Russian literature some time earlier; see his Vozniknovenie russkoi literatury (Moscow and Leningrad, 1952), p. 143 and passim.
42. Journal of the Folklore Institute, 1 (1964) : 130-44