TREE SYMBOLISM IN SLAVIC FOLK CULTURE: APPLE TREE

The essay focuses on the mythopoetic image of the apple tree and its ritual use in traditional culture and folklore of the Slavic nations. The work employs folklore material alongside ethnographic and linguistic data that accentuates and develops the folklore symbolism of the apple tree. I argue tha...

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Main Author: Tatyana A. Agapkina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: A.M. Gorky Institute of World Literature of the Russian Academy of Sciences 2017-03-01
Series:Studia Litterarum
Subjects:
Online Access:http://studlit.ru/2017-2-1/Agapkina.pdf
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spelling doaj-3f1f6453daeb4db6b1ff053bdba6cc702020-11-24T23:08:57ZengA.M. Gorky Institute of World Literature of the Russian Academy of SciencesStudia Litterarum2500-42472541-85642017-03-012128430510.22455/2500-4247-2017-2-1-284-305TREE SYMBOLISM IN SLAVIC FOLK CULTURE: APPLE TREE Tatyana A. Agapkina0Institute of Slavic Studies of the Russian Academy of SciencesThe essay focuses on the mythopoetic image of the apple tree and its ritual use in traditional culture and folklore of the Slavic nations. The work employs folklore material alongside ethnographic and linguistic data that accentuates and develops the folklore symbolism of the apple tree. I argue that this image is comprised of a number of relatively autonomous fragments. The apple tree and its apples are a family metaphor of a kind symbolizing a mother and a child. In wedding folklore, the apple tree stands for a bride as the wedding ritual testifies; apple tree branches are widely used in the ritual itself (as a ritual tree or as material used in the making of a wedding banner, wedding wreaths, decorations for a wedding loaf [karavai], etc.). Another manifestation of the apple tree in folklore is the tree of knowledge; it relates the image to a large number of legendary etiological plots such as: Eve’s temptation by the Serpent, fall of Eve and Adam, the origin of Adam’s Apple (adam), prohibition to eat apples before the church holiday of Transfiguration and some others. At the same time, their autonomy regardless, the fragments of the mythopoetic image of the apple tree form part of the solid folklore universe and counteract with each other within this framework.http://studlit.ru/2017-2-1/Agapkina.pdfapple treesymbolismethnobotanySlavs
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tatyana A. Agapkina
spellingShingle Tatyana A. Agapkina
TREE SYMBOLISM IN SLAVIC FOLK CULTURE: APPLE TREE
Studia Litterarum
apple tree
symbolism
ethnobotany
Slavs
author_facet Tatyana A. Agapkina
author_sort Tatyana A. Agapkina
title TREE SYMBOLISM IN SLAVIC FOLK CULTURE: APPLE TREE
title_short TREE SYMBOLISM IN SLAVIC FOLK CULTURE: APPLE TREE
title_full TREE SYMBOLISM IN SLAVIC FOLK CULTURE: APPLE TREE
title_fullStr TREE SYMBOLISM IN SLAVIC FOLK CULTURE: APPLE TREE
title_full_unstemmed TREE SYMBOLISM IN SLAVIC FOLK CULTURE: APPLE TREE
title_sort tree symbolism in slavic folk culture: apple tree
publisher A.M. Gorky Institute of World Literature of the Russian Academy of Sciences
series Studia Litterarum
issn 2500-4247
2541-8564
publishDate 2017-03-01
description The essay focuses on the mythopoetic image of the apple tree and its ritual use in traditional culture and folklore of the Slavic nations. The work employs folklore material alongside ethnographic and linguistic data that accentuates and develops the folklore symbolism of the apple tree. I argue that this image is comprised of a number of relatively autonomous fragments. The apple tree and its apples are a family metaphor of a kind symbolizing a mother and a child. In wedding folklore, the apple tree stands for a bride as the wedding ritual testifies; apple tree branches are widely used in the ritual itself (as a ritual tree or as material used in the making of a wedding banner, wedding wreaths, decorations for a wedding loaf [karavai], etc.). Another manifestation of the apple tree in folklore is the tree of knowledge; it relates the image to a large number of legendary etiological plots such as: Eve’s temptation by the Serpent, fall of Eve and Adam, the origin of Adam’s Apple (adam), prohibition to eat apples before the church holiday of Transfiguration and some others. At the same time, their autonomy regardless, the fragments of the mythopoetic image of the apple tree form part of the solid folklore universe and counteract with each other within this framework.
topic apple tree
symbolism
ethnobotany
Slavs
url http://studlit.ru/2017-2-1/Agapkina.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT tatyanaaagapkina treesymbolisminslavicfolkcultureappletree
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