ANDRE MAZON ET LA PHILOLOGIE RUSSE DES ANNEES 1920 (A PROPOS DE QUELQUES LETTRES CONSERVEES DANS LES ARCHIVES DE L’INSTITUT D’ETUDES SLAVES)

Auteurs

  • CATHERINE DEPRETTO Sorbonne université, Paris

Mots-clés :

André Mazon, Petr Bogatyrev, Viktor Žirmunskij, Boris Tomaševskij, Russian Formalism

Résumé

« André Mazon and Russian philology in the 1920s (about some letters kept in the Institut d’études slaves, Paris)». André Mazon (1881–1967), who played a leading role in French Slavic studies from the 1920s to the 1960s, is considered as a rigorous and erudite philologist, but an opponent of phonology and emerging structuralism. However, he was interested by Russian Formalism and had a good relationship with some of its representatives, André Mazon’s unpublished letters, kept in the Institut d’études slaves in Paris, this article examines some cases of scientific cooperation between the French Slavist and the Russian philologists.

Biographie de l'auteur

CATHERINE DEPRETTO, Sorbonne université, Paris

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Publiée

2023-12-14