THE CONCEPT OF THE HUMAN SPIRITUAL WORLD IN COMPARATIVE LITERATURE: A STUDY OF E. HEMINGWAY AND SH. KHOLMIRZAEV
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.55640/Keywords:
comparative literature, spirituality, Hemingway, Kholmirzaev, human soul, East and WestAbstract
The concept of the human spiritual world has been one of the central concerns of world literature, reflecting the complexity of human existence and inner values. This article examines the representation of spirituality in Ernest Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea and Shukur Kholmirzaev’s The Blue Sea. While Hemingway portrays man’s struggle against fate in an existential context, Kholmirzaev emphasizes the harmony of man and nature, rooted in Eastern philosophy. Using comparative and hermeneutic approaches, this research analyzes the universal and specific features of the human soul in East and West. The study concludes that despite cultural and stylistic differences, literature universally reflects the depth of human spirituality and resilience.Downloads
References
1.Aminova, N. (2024). Peculiarities of American Modernism in the 20th Century Literature and Ernest Hemingway’s Artistic Contribution. Vol. 1 No. 2 (2024): O‘ZBEK ADABIYOTSHUNOSLIGINING DOLZARB MASALALARI mavzusidagi xalqaro ilmiy-nazariy anjuman, 1(2), 534–539.
2.Aminova, Nargiza Istamovna. Lexical Problems of Translation (on the Material of 'Sabbai Sayyor' by Alisher Navoi). Молодой исследователь: вызовы и перспективы, № 5(105), 2019.
3.Hemingway, E. (1952). The Old Man and the Sea. New York: Scribner.
4.Kholmirzaev, Sh. (1987). Ko‘k dengiz [The Blue Sea]. Tashkent: G‘afur G‘ulom Publishing.
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