The concept of "antithesis" comes from the ancient Greek term, consisting of two parts: "thesa", which means "position", and "anti" - "against". Putting them together, we get the "opposite", that is, the "opposite". The antithesis, the definition and examples of which we will present to you in this article, is the opposition of composition elements, characters, images, words. This artistic technique in literature, which allows the writers and poets who use it to characterize the characters more fully, to reveal the author's attitude to different sides of the depicted, as well as to the characters themselves.

Condition required for antithesis

The essential condition necessary for one to be able to speak of such a technique as antithesis (examples of which we will give below) is subordination to the general concept of opposites, or some common point of view on them.

Such subordination does not have to be logically precise. For example, such proverbs as "Small spool, but expensive", "Rarely, but aptly", are constructed antithetically, although the concepts that are opposed in them cannot be called logically subordinate, such as, for example, "beginning" and "end", "light and darkness".

But in this context, they are considered as opposites because the words "small" and "rarely" are taken with a specification of the meaning in relation to the words "expensive" and "accurately" compared with them, taken in the direct meaning. Entering the antithesis, the tropes can hide even more its logical precision and clarity.

Verbal antithesis

There are many examples of this technique being used. Verbal antithesis occurs when certain phrases or words with opposite emotional coloring or meaning are combined in one sentence or in a poetic phrase.

Take, for example, an excerpt from a poem by A.S. Pushkin:

"The city is magnificent, the city is poor

The spirit of bondage, a slender appearance ... ".

In the first line here, the antithesis ("poor" - "magnificent") of the epithets matched to the word "city" expresses Alexander Sergeevich's idea of ​​Petersburg, which is concretized in the second line by the antithesis of the corresponding epithets. Here, the external appearance of the city (in the text - "slender appearance") and the spiritual content of its life ("the spirit of bondage") are contrasted. In another poem by the same author, verbal antitheses are used to emphasize the inconsistency with the spirit of the "poor knight" of his appearance. It is said about this hero that he was "pale" and "twilight" in appearance, but "straight" and "bold" in spirit. Such opposition is a verbal antithesis. Examples of it in the literature are quite common.

An antithesis expressing complex emotional states

The antithesis serves to express not only the sides of the phenomenon and the object, as well as the author's emotionally colored attitude towards them, but also various complex emotional states. An example can be found in A.A. Blok in the poem "In the restaurant". The lyrical hero of the work met his beloved in the restaurant "impudently" and "embarrassedly", bowing with a "haughty look".

Often, various verbal antitheses are oxymorons. In other words, it is a combination of words that are opposite in meaning.

figurative antithesis

A figurative antithesis is a contrast that exists between two different images. It could be the characters in the story. Antithesis examples from fiction numerous: these are Lensky and Onegin, Molchalin and Chatsky, Stepan Kalashnikov and Kiribeevich, Pavel Petrovich and Bazarov, Napoleon and Kutuzov and others. ), in addition, to the disharmony of the hero’s soul and universal harmony (Lermontov, “I go out alone on the road”), the image of free nature and the “dungeon” monastery (Lermontov, “Mtsyri”), etc. Figurative antithesis, examples of which we are only what they brought was a favorite technique of such a master of style as Vladimir Vladimirovich Mayakovsky.

Compositional antithesis

There is also such a variation of this technique as compositional antithesis. This is one of the principles on which literary works are built. Compositional antithesis is the opposition of various episodes and storylines, scenes in drama and epic, stanzas and fragments in lyrical poems. Take as an example the novel by Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin "Eugene Onegin".

In it, in the third and fourth chapters, the failed relationship between Onegin and Tatiana is contrasted with the “happy love” of Lensky and Olga. In Ivan Sergeevich Turgenev's novel Fathers and Sons, the antithesis of two conflicts (love and ideological) allows us to understand true meaning views and beliefs of the nihilist Yevgeny Bazarov, as well as the main reason why they collapsed. Other examples can be cited.

Antithesis from literature presented in lyric poems

This technique is also widely used in various lyrical poems. For Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin, these are, for example, "Elegy", "Poet and Crowd", "Poet", "Village" (an example of antithesis in Alexander Sergeyevich's poems is the opposition of the slavery of the people and a peaceful landscape), "To Chaadaev". Mikhail Yuryevich Lermontov - "Poet", "Sail", "Dream", "Dispute", "Gratitude", "Why", "January 1st", "Leaf", "To the portrait". Nikolai Alekseevich Nekrasov - "Reflections at the front door", "Railway" and others.

Antithesis

Based on the studied material, we found out that in order to enliven speech, give it emotionality, expressiveness, figurativeness, they use stylistic syntax techniques, the so-called figures: antithesis, inversion, repetition, etc.

The object of study of this work is the antithesis, and its characteristic "habitat" - aphorisms and winged expressions.

Often sharply opposed concepts are compared in speech: honor is arrogance, work is rest, etc. This has a special effect on the imagination of listeners, evoking vivid ideas about the named objects and events. In order to characterize an object or phenomenon in a special way, one can find not only similarities and associations with another object or phenomenon, but also features of sharp contrast, differences in order to oppose one another. Such a technique based on a comparison of opposite or sharply contrasting characters, circumstances, images, compositional elements, concepts, phenomena and signs, creating the effect of a sharp contrast, is called antithesis. Antithesis is able not only to oppose concepts, but also to emphasize the paradoxical nature of the comparison (as in an oxymoron), the greatness of the object, the universality when contrasting properties are attributed to the object. Thus, the antithesis can weight the meaning, enhance the impression.

This stylistic figure in in a certain sense opposes most other figures precisely by the fact that all the rules of reason are strictly observed in it, the harmonious construction of pairs of oppositions without any violation of the basic logical norms. Antithesis is carried out in order to put concepts in contrast relations, and not only those concepts that are in principle opposite (antonyms), but also concepts that are usually not connected by any relationship, but become conflicting when they are placed side by side.

In antithesis, a comparison of two phenomena occurs, for which antonyms are most often used - words with the opposite meaning: Every sweetness has its own bitterness, every evil has its own goodness (Ralph Waldo Emerson). The use of antithesis, the comparison of opposite concepts allows you to express main idea more vividly and emotionally, more accurately express their attitude to the described phenomena. IN Everyday life, many things become clearer only when one contrasts one with the other: having known chagrin, people value moments of joy more. No wonder they say "Everything is known in comparison."

Antithesis, as a stylistic figure, gives the sharpest contrast to opposing things, causing clear images in the mind. Opposition sharpens the thought, helps to organize the text or part of it, due to which parallel figures, especially antitheses, are used as text-forming means. The purpose of using antithesis is almost always achieved in oratory, in public speaking, and in works of art. But an incomparably deep effect from the use of antithesis is obtained in short and capacious statements, for example, a riddle, an aphorism, a proverb, a chronicle in a newspaper, since the key word in the definition is sharp. The sharpness and contrast are certainly noteworthy, we see a discrepancy. The result: a bright emotional coloring, expressiveness and, often, humor. When a stupid person pretends to be smart, and stupidity creeps out of him. When the evil one pretends to be kind, and we see that this is a wolf in sheep's clothing.

“Antithesis (Greek antithesis - opposition). A stylistic figure that serves to enhance the expressiveness of speech by sharply contrasting concepts, thoughts, images. Where the table was food, there is a coffin (Derzhavin). The antithesis is often built on antonyms: The rich man feasts even on weekdays, and the poor grieves even on holidays (proverb).

“Antithesis, a semantic figure of speech, consisting in the comparison of logically opposite concepts or images, subject to one idea or a single point of view. * The spool is small, but expensive (proverb). "Deceit and love" (F. Schiller).

They agreed. Wave and stone

Poetry and prose, ice and fire

Not so different from each other.

(A. Pushkin)"

Earlier in the work it was already indicated that the most common basis of antithesis is antonyms, for example: good - evil, well-fed - hungry. Also, various facts and phenomena can be contrasted according to all signs, both main and secondary. So two words world and chains, in the above A.I. Galperin's example, are not antonyms. They are involved in the antithesis of The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to win. An antonymous pair here are the verbs to lose and to win, but the words world and chains are also opposed, or rather their signs: world - all, everything and chains - slavery.

“The main figure of contrast is the antithesis. An antithesis is a statement containing an explicit opposition. Most often, this opposition is expressed in the use of antonyms, i.e. words with opposite meanings.

As a rule, in order to create an antithesis, it is necessary that the opposing concepts be in principle comparable, if we consider correlation as an operation in which both similarity and difference can be revealed. However, the antithesis, as a stylistic device, is revealed not only in opposition, but also in the addition of additional shades of meaning to words that do not express opposing concepts. Alien ships hung in the sky just like bricks do not hang in the sky (D. Adams. Hitchhiker's Guide to Galaxy-1). Antithesis is characterized by an unexpected comparison of distant objects, a play with the direct and figurative meaning of words, a paradoxical statement. In this case, the antithesis takes on the features of the oxymoron “Oxymoron, s. In lexical style: a semantic figure of speech, a combination of words that contradict each other in meaning, as a result of which a new concept is born. * The heat of cold numbers (A. Blok). Foreign land, my homeland! (M. Tsvetaeva) Submissive enthusiasm of the crowd (P. Chaadaev). Vertical horizons (V. Solovyov)” [Laguta 1999: 35]. Oxymoron, in turn, is considered by many to be a kind of antithesis, in which the emphasis is on the humorousness of the statement.

The advantage of the antithesis, as a figure, is that both parts mutually illuminate one another. There are several general options for using antithesis: when comparing images or concepts that contrast with each other, when expressing the contrasting essence of a single whole, when a shading of an image is necessary, and also when expressing an alternative.

The opposition of concepts and phenomena can also appear in large sections of the text, but it will be more of a contrasting opposition than a stylistic device of antithesis, just as phraseological units, the formation of which is based on antonyms, will not be an antithesis either. For example: top and bottom, up and down, inside and out. A necessary sign of antithesis, which distinguishes it from any logical opposition, is emotional coloring, the desire for the uniqueness of opposition. But this is possible only in one case - in case of violations of the rules of analogy. The sign by which we correlate objects should not actually be obvious. The reader or listener is invited, to some extent, to think out the meaning for himself (hot, but not scalding; Chinese, but of high quality). Therefore, when counting on a "sharp" semantic effect, it is not recommended to take opposed (for example, antonymic) concepts anyway. This does not mean that the antithesis based on antonymy will become erroneous, but the emotional coloring will be almost invisible.

The relationship between antithetically opposed words in the proverb is more complex, and their semantic connection cannot be summed up under the strict concept of lexical antonymy (cf. mother-stepmother, wolf-brother, milk-water, water-fire, water-wine, night- day, God-hell, etc.).

Antithesis is widely used in prose and drama. She actively participates in the creation of the architectonics of any work. Titles are not complete without antithesis (“Treachery and Love” by Schiller, “Fathers and Sons” by Turgenev, “War and Peace” by Tolstoy, “Wolves and Sheep” by Ostrovsky, “The Prince and the Pauper” by Twain, “Thick and Thin” by Chekhov ...) Antithetical articulation is used in speech to combine opposites, to emphasize some quality in the characterization: “We are shamefully indifferent to good and evil” (M. Lermontov).

Comparison of antonyms in statements and aphorisms gives special significance to each of the objects named by them, which enhances the expressiveness of speech. Antonyms in such cases take on the logical stress, highlighting the semantic centers of the phrase. Sharpness and aphorism are given by antonyms popular expressions: “So few roads have been traveled, so many mistakes have been made. (Yesenin)". Many aphorisms are built using antithesis: “There is nothing more stupid than the desire to always be smarter than others” (La Rochefoucauld). A phrase built on the antithesis sounds strong enough, easy to remember, makes you think.

Antithesis classification

Often the antithesis is emphasized by the fact that the nature of its location in the corresponding parts of the sentence is the same (parallelism).

According to the structure, the antithesis can be simple (single-term) and complex (polynomial). A complex antithesis involves several antonymic pairs or three or more opposed concepts. “Antitheses are of different types. Sometimes their poles are opposed to each other, according to the scheme “not A, but B”, sometimes, on the contrary, they are compared according to the scheme “both A and B” [Khazagerov http].

There is also a complex or extended antithesis. A detailed statement is created by including chains of definitions. The use of a detailed antithesis allows you to more vividly actualize the unexpected in an already familiar phenomenon.

It is also worth noting a special kind of antithesis - inside a synonymous pair: to calm down, but not to be silent, etc. Such figures make a strong impression and provoke figurative development plot. The antithesis can even consist of the same words, i.e. be within the same token. Thus, one action can be contrasted with another action, the feelings of one against the feelings of another, and so on. The secret of managing is to keep the guys who hate you away from the guys who are undecided (Charles Dillon "Casey" Stengel). - The basis of being a good manager is keeping the people who hate me away from the people who haven't decided yet.

There is also a contrast between two grammatical, voice or case forms of one word. Most often, case forms of the word are opposed. Such an antithesis is typical for short forms of eloquence that are aphoristic in nature: “Man is a brother to man”, “Man is a wolf to man”, “War is war”. By analogy, the motto "Peace to the world" was built; where the word "world" is used in different meanings.

Due to the parallelism of the construction of the antithesis, we can single out the rhythm-forming function of the antithesis, as well as the comparative, multiplicative and unifying function. These functions are often implemented together, but, as a rule, the antithesis singles out one function over the others.

ANTITHESIS

- (from the Greek anti - against and thesis - position) - opposition, creating the effect of a sharp contrast of images (for example, Bazarov and P.P. Kirsanov, Oblomov and Stolz), compositional (for example, A.S. Pushkin's "Village") or plot (for example, the alternation of "military" and "peaceful" episodes in L.N. Tolstoy's novel "War and Peace") elements of the work. Antonyms are often used to express A., for example: "War and Peace", "Crime and Punishment", "Thick and Thin", etc.

Dictionary of literary terms. 2012

See also interpretations, synonyms, meanings of the word and what is ANTITHESIS in Russian in dictionaries, encyclopedias and reference books:

  • ANTITHESIS in the Literary Encyclopedia:
    [Greek '????????? - opposition] - one of the methods of stylistics (see "Figures"), which consists in comparing specific ideas and concepts related ...
  • ANTITHESIS in the Big Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    (from the Greek antithesis - opposition) a stylistic figure, a comparison or opposition of contrasting concepts, positions, images ("I am a king, - I am a slave, - ...
  • ANTITHESIS in big Soviet encyclopedia, TSB:
    (from the Greek antithesis - opposition), in fiction, a stylistic figure, a juxtaposition of sharply contrasting or opposite concepts and images to enhance ...
  • ANTITHESIS V encyclopedic dictionary Brockhaus and Euphron:
    (Greek) - literally opposition, means in rhetoric a figure that consists in comparing two opposite, but interconnected by a common point of view, ideas. For example, ...
  • ANTITHESIS in the Modern Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    (from the Greek antithesis - opposition), a stylistic figure, co- or opposition of contrasting concepts, states, images ("Beautiful, like an angel in heaven, like a demon, ...
  • ANTITHESIS
    [from French antithese, ancient Greek antithesis opposition] in stylistics, the opposition of opposing thoughts or images to enhance the impression (for example: "who was nothing, ...
  • ANTITHESIS in the Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    , s, f. 1. Opposition, opposite. The proposed concept was the antithesis of the entire previous scientific tradition. 2. lit. A stylistic figure consisting of…
  • ANTITHESIS in the Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    [te], -s, f. 1. A stylistic figure based on a sharp opposition, opposition of images and concepts (special). Poetic a. "ice and fire"...
  • ANTITHESIS in the Big Russian Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    ANTITHESIS (from the Greek antithesis - opposition), stylistic. a figure, co- or opposition of contrasting concepts, positions, images ("I am a king, - I am a slave, - I ...
  • ANTITHESIS in the Encyclopedia of Brockhaus and Efron:
    (Greek) ? literally "opposition", means in rhetoric a figure that consists in comparing two opposite, but interconnected by a common point of view ...
  • ANTITHESIS in the Full accentuated paradigm according to Zaliznyak:
    antithesis for, antithesis, antithesis, antithesis, antithesis, antithesis, antithesis, antithesis, antithesis, antithesis, antithesis, antithesis, antithesis, antithesis, ...
  • ANTITHESIS in the Dictionary of Linguistic Terms:
    (Greek antithesis - opposition). A stylistic figure that serves to enhance the expressiveness of speech by sharply contrasting concepts, thoughts, images. Where is the table...
  • ANTITHESIS in the Popular Explanatory-Encyclopedic Dictionary of the Russian Language:
    [t "e], -s, f., bookish. Opposition, opposite. The antithesis is impressive - a sharp opposition: "You taught literacy, I went to school. You …
  • ANTITHESIS in the Thesaurus of Russian business vocabulary:
  • ANTITHESIS in the New Dictionary of Foreign Words:
    (gr. antithesis opposition) a stylistic figure consisting in the comparison of words or word groups that are sharply different in meaning, for example. : great...
  • ANTITHESIS in the Dictionary of Foreign Expressions:
    [gr. antithesis opposition] a stylistic figure consisting in the comparison of words or word groups that are sharply different in meaning, for example: (distance); A. typical...
  • ANTITHESIS in the Russian Thesaurus:
    Syn: opposite (lit.), opposite, contrast Ant: ...
  • ANTITHESIS in the dictionary of Synonyms of the Russian language:
    Syn: opposite (lit.), opposite, contrast Ant: ...
  • ANTITHESIS in the New explanatory and derivational dictionary of the Russian language Efremova:
    1. g. 1) Opposite, opposition. 2) A stylistic device that consists in juxtaposing opposite or sharply contrasting concepts and images. 2. g. …
  • ANTITHESIS in the Dictionary of the Russian Language Lopatin:
    antithesis, ...
  • ANTITHESIS in the Complete Spelling Dictionary of the Russian Language:
    antithesis...
  • ANTITHESIS in the Spelling Dictionary:
    antithesis, ...
  • ANTITHESIS in the Dictionary of the Russian Language Ozhegov:
    opposition,...
ἀντίθεσις "opposition") - a rhetorical opposition, a stylistic figure of contrast in artistic or oratory speech, consisting in a sharp opposition of concepts, positions, images, states, interconnected by a common structure or internal meaning.

Antithesis in literature

The figure of antithesis can serve as a principle of construction for entire poetic plays or separate parts. works of art in verse and prose. For example, Petrarch F. has a sonnet (translated by Verkhovsky Yu. N.), entirely built on the antithesis:

And there is no peace - and there are no enemies anywhere;
I fear - I hope, I freeze and burn;
I drag myself in the dust - and soar in the sky;
Alien to everyone in the world - and the world is ready to embrace.

She is in captivity of captivity, I do not know;
They do not want to own me, but the oppression is severe;
Cupid does not destroy and does not break the shackles;
And there is no end to life and torment - the edge.

I am sighted - without eyes; nem - I emit cries;
And the thirst for death - I pray to save;
I hate myself - and I love everyone else;
Suffering - alive; with laughter I sob;

Both death and life are sadly cursed;
And this is the fault, oh donna, - you!

Descriptions, characteristics, especially the so-called comparative ones, are often built antithetically.

For example, the characterization of Peter the Great in A.S. Pushkin's Stanzas:

Now an academician, then a hero,
Either a navigator, or a carpenter ...

Sharply shading the contrasting features of the compared members, the antithesis, precisely because of its sharpness, is distinguished by too persistent persuasiveness and brightness (for which the romantics loved this figure so much). Many stylists therefore treated the antithesis negatively, and on the other hand, poets with rhetorical pathos, such as Hugo or Mayakovsky, are noticeably fond of it:

Our strength is truth
yours - laurel ringing.
Yours is censer smoke,
ours is factory smoke.
Your power is a gold piece,
ours is a red banner.
We will take,
let's borrow
and we will win.

The symmetry and analytical nature of the antithesis make it very appropriate in some strict forms, as, for example, in the Alexandrian verse, with its clear division into two parts.

The sharp clarity of the antithesis also makes it very suitable for the style of works that strive for immediate persuasiveness, as, for example, in works of declarative political, with a social tendency, agitational or moralistic, etc. Examples are:

The proletarians have nothing to lose in it except their chains. They will gain the whole world.

Who was nobody, he will become everything!

The antithetic composition is often seen in social novels and plays with a contrasting comparison of the lives of different classes (for example: "The Iron Heel" by J. London, "The Prince and the Pauper" by Mark Twain, etc.); antithesis can underlie works depicting a moral tragedy (for example.

Hello, dear readers of the blog site. Writers are armed with a lot of tools that make it possible to make the narrative more expressive and vivid.

One of the most effective ways is antithesis. Today we will just talk about what it is, according to what principles they are compiled, and along the way we will give a lot of examples from literature and poetry.

Definition - what is it

This term came into Russian from Ancient Greece, and the word "antithesis" itself is translated as " opposition».

Antithesis is a stylistic device that consists in opposing directly opposite images, properties or actions. Serves to enhance the expressiveness of speech and more accurate transmission of thoughts and feelings.

Most simple examples antitheses can be:

Learning is light and ignorance is darkness
The smart one teaches, the fool gets bored
The quieter you go, the further you'll get
Easy to make friends, hard to part
The rich feast on weekdays, and the poor mourn on holidays

V literary works can be presented in several ways:
  1. Contrasting two heroes or images, (see);
  2. Contrasting various objects, states or phenomena;
  3. Contrasting different qualities of one character or object;
  4. Contrasting the properties of two different objects.

Examples of antitheses in prose literature

Built on antithesis even the names some famous works:

War and Peace (Tolstoy)
The Prince and the Pauper (Twain)
Crime and Punishment (Dostoevsky)
Fathers and sons (Turgenev)
Wolves and sheep (Ostrovsky)
Angels and Demons (Dan Brown)

But in these works, the opposition is not only in the names, but also in content. So, Leo Tolstoy throughout the novel constantly compares the two poles - peace and enmity, good and evil. This manifests itself both in the course of the story, when the author alternates scenes peaceful life and battles, and in the character of some heroes, for example, Napoleon and Kutuzov or Helen and Natasha.

But Dostoevsky uses other methods. He "places the antitheses" inside one character. This is most clearly manifested in Raskolnikov, who before the crime was a good man, and then became a murderer, and his ideals and manners of behavior changed accordingly.

And finally, Turgenev uses the conflict of generations and their views on life as an antithesis.

Examples in poetry

Comparison of opposites is often used by advertisers. With this technique, they create short, but memorable slogans.

We work, you relax (Indesit technique)
In the cold - warm, in the heat - cool (air conditioners "Samsung")
Easy to turn on, hard to stop (unlimited internet)

And even more often you can find slogans based on the opposition "minimum - maximum". For example, "minimum calories, maximum pleasure" (Coca-Cola light), "minimum space, maximum possibilities" ( mobile phone), “minimum labor, maximum effect” (washing powder).

Instead of a conclusion

By the way, thanks to the antithesis, another trick appeared -. So called stable expressions that use words with completely opposite meanings. For example, "hot ice", "terribly beautiful", "living corpse", "bitter joy". You can read more about this on another page of our website.

Good luck to you! See you soon on the blog pages site

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