DEVELOPMENT AND TRENDS OF MYTHOPOETIC STUDIES IN WORLD AND UZBEK LITERARY STUDIES
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Abstract
This article analyzes the formation, development stages, and contemporary directions of mythopoetic research in world and Uzbek literary studies. It explores theoretical concepts that approach myth as an aesthetic, semiotic, and cultural phenomenon, including ideas by C. Lévi-Strauss, M. Eliade, N. Frye, and other scholars, focusing on the transformation of mythological elements in literary texts. The study examines the poetic function of myth in Uzbek literary criticism, the harmony between national tradition and modern artistic thinking, and the role of mythopoetic imagination in literary processes. The findings demonstrate that myth is not merely a system of archaic symbols, but an active model of aesthetic and spiritual experience.
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