HUMOR AND SATIRE IN THE PROSE OF DULAT ISABEKOV (based on the story "The Marriage of Bonaparte")

HUMOR AND SATIRE IN THE PROSE OF DULAT ISABEKOV (based on the story "The Marriage of Bonaparte")

Authors

Abstract

In this article, author draws attention to the works, the level of research and the special writing style of the outstanding Kazakhstani writer Dulat Isabekov, and also considers his works on describing the character of a person in the author's prose, making references to different opinions. Author widely considers studies on the work of D.Isabekov an assessment of the level of research carried out, while answering the question how to approach the study of his work. To do this, the author focuses on humor and satire in the story "The Marriage of Bonaparte" by the writer and playwright D. Isabekov. In more detail, a theoretical analysis is carried out of how the author describes and reveals the soul, character and nature of a person by using humor and satire. In this regard, the relevance of the article is clear.

The purpose of the study is to give examples and determine the potential for revealing characters through humor and satire. The author of the article shows examples how the purpose of humor is not only to make the reader laugh, but often has an important message in it. The article clearly reveals how different the characters of D. Isabekov are from each other and how the psychology of the people can be seen in them.

The methodological and theoretical foundations of the study were determined by methodological principles, from a philological point of view in the field of scientific and theoretical research and literary criticism, they were based on the definitions of humor, satire, the satirical image and the principles of authorship. The practical meaning of the work is significant for researchers and students of philology.

Author's detail

Bayan Kerimbekova, Suleiman Demirel University

– candidate of philological sciences, Professor

Downloads

Published online

2023-10-19

Issue

Section

Literature studies
Loading...