EVERYDAY LIFE, RURAL SPACE, AND SPIRITUAL HARMONY IN ALEXANDER FAINBERG’S POEM “SHARQONA HOVLIGA EGILAR HILOL…”
Keywords:
modern Uzbek poetry, Eastern poetics, symbolism, space and time, philosophical lyricism, social consciousness, existential meaning, hermeneutic analysis.Abstract
This scholarly article provides an extensive, multi-layered analysis of the given poem as a representative example of modern Uzbek lyric poetry. The poem is examined as an integrated poetic system, revealing its symbolic structures, philosophical depth, social and cultural dimensions, and implicit ideological meanings. Employing line-by-line analysis alongside structural-semiotic, hermeneutic, philosophical, psychological, and socio-cultural approaches, the study explores the harmony between human beings and nature, the poetics of space and time, and the Eastern worldview embedded in the text. Particular attention is paid to the concepts of tranquility, contentment, and existential sufficiency, which constitute the poem’s core philosophical message.