A couple of years ago I dedicated a post to the fox character in Russian tales. Since then,
the theme has continued to hold my interest, and I've gathered more images and information.
As mentioned before, a large number of Russian and Ukrainian folk tales feature forest animals
such as the fox, the wolf, the bear, and various birds. Domestic animals including the cat,
the dog, and the rooster also appear, usually in secondary roles in combination with the wild ones.
All of these characters mix human abilities and habits with animal instincts and behavior.
the theme has continued to hold my interest, and I've gathered more images and information.
As mentioned before, a large number of Russian and Ukrainian folk tales feature forest animals
such as the fox, the wolf, the bear, and various birds. Domestic animals including the cat,
the dog, and the rooster also appear, usually in secondary roles in combination with the wild ones.
All of these characters mix human abilities and habits with animal instincts and behavior.
Evgenii Rachev, The Cat and the Fox
In this rich genre of stories, animal features are strictly typecast, and the sex of each character
is based on its masculine or feminine noun. Among the males, we find the greedy and stupid wolf,
the clumsy and slow-witted bear,the cowardly and quick hare, the lazy opportunistic cat, and the boastful rooster.
The main female characters are the sneaky and crafty fox, and the cunning, obstinate goat.
Trickstery is one of the fondamental narrrative elements of these stories, and in many of them
the fox plays the role of the sly, calculating animal who vanquishes the stronger ones and fools all the others.
This gallery includes illustrations for some of the most popular Russian and Ukrainian tales,
and lastly a Siberian one. A few, like The Fox and the Crane and The Fox and the Goat,
are also found in Aesop. I've also added links to the stories' text when possible.
The Fox and the Thrush, The Fox Confessor, and more.
Marianna Belyaeva, Sister Fox and Brother Wolf (The Fox and the Wolf),
from a collection of Russian folktales by Alexei Tolstoy, 1988, thanks to ban galbasi
Evgenii Rachev, Cockerel The Golden Comb, 1954
Watch the wonderful animated version made by Yarbusova with her husband Yuri Norstein here.
Igor and Ksenia Ershov, The Cat, the Rooster, and the Fox
Georgiy and Alexander Traugot, The Fox and the Crane
A great thanks for the iconography to HannaRivka and her flickr set,
to Book Graphics, polny_shkaf and other Russian LiveJournals and websites.
And thank you Mark Kats for all the much appreciated clarifications!
And thank you Mark Kats for all the much appreciated clarifications!
absolutely bloomin' amazing!
ReplyDeletei fancy rachev!
n♥
Wonderful selection!
ReplyDeleteWhen my wife was a child she loved this fox by Losin and redrawn it many times. :)
By the way, if you're interested, some clarifications:
- N. Trepenok's name is Natalia
- M. Belyaeva's name is Marianna
- K. and I. Ershov are Igor Ershov and his daughter Ksenia Ershova
- the unknown illustrator is Vladimir Menshikov
- Peter Kirillov Gulin are Petr Gulin and Nadezhda Kirillova
- G. Pavlishina is not Pavlishina but Gennady Pavlishin.
Hi, Laura!
ReplyDeleteWonderful!
My favorite fox is here
http://librarything-svetlana.blogspot.ru/2012/11/togolok-moldo.html
Mark, what is a name of K.Ovchinnikov?
Hi Svetlana,
Deletedo you mean Kirill Vladimirovich?
Yes, thank you!
Delete:)
DeleteI didn't know there were so many folk tales with foxes. I love that they are from eastern Europe with rich illustrations. Thanks for researching and gathering this collection, Laura.
ReplyDeleteWonderful!
ReplyDeleteDo you know the wonderful Yuri Norstein animation of that Fox and Hare (Лиса и заяц) story? :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dvRTM4RKQmc
Dear Rima, many thanks for your suggestion.
ReplyDeletein fact I had already featured that animation a while ago:
http://theanimalarium.blogspot.it/2010/05/fox-and-hare.html
but the link to the video didn't work anymore...
so thanks to you it's up again now!