Reforms of Russian orthography

The reform of Russian orthography refers to official and unofficial changes made to the Russian alphabet over the course of the history of the Russian language, and in particular those made between the 18th-20th centuries.

Early changes

The Old East Slavic adopted the Cyrillic script, approximately during the 10th century and at about the same time as the introduction of Eastern Christianity into the territories inhabited by the Eastern Slavs.

In this way, no sharp distinction was drawn between the vernacular language and the liturgical, though the latter was based on South Slavic rather than Eastern Slavic norms. As the language evolved, several letters, notably the yuses (Ѫ, Ѭ, Ѧ, Ѩ) were gradually and unsystematically discarded from both secular and church usage over the next centuries, and none of the several attempts at linguistic standardization properly succeeded.

18th-century changes

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Introduction of the civil Russian alphabet by Peter I.

The printed Russian alphabet began to assume its modern shape when Peter I introduced his civil script (гражданскій шрифтъ, graždanskij šrift (spelled "гражданский шрифт" in modern Russian), [ɡrɐʐˈdanskʲɪj ˈʂrʲift]) in 1708. The reform was not specifically orthographic in nature. However, with the effective elimination of several letters (Ѯ, Ѱ, Ѡ, Ѧ) as well as all diacritics and accents (with the exception of й) from secular usage, there appeared for the first time a visual distinction between Russian and Church Slavonic writing. With the strength of the historic tradition diminishing, Russian spelling in the 18th century became rather inconsistent, both in practice and in theory, as Mikhail Lomonosov advocated a morphological orthography, Vasily Trediakovsky a phonetical one.

19th-century changes

Throughout the 18th and 19th centuries, miscellaneous adjustments were made on an ad hoc basis, as the Russian literary language came to assume its modern and highly standardized form. These included the introduction of the letter ё (yo) and the gradual loss of ѵ (izhitsa, corresponding to the Greek upsilon and the Latin y), in favor of и (both of which represented /i/); and ѳ (corresponding to the Greek theta), in favor of ф or т. (The Russian language neither has nor ever had a "th" sound. The ѳ was used only for foreign words, particularly Greek.) By 1917, the only two words still usually spelled with ѵ were мѵро (müro, [ˈmʲirə], 'myrrh') and сѵнодъ (sünod, [sʲɪˈnot], 'synod'), and that rarely. The ѳ remained more common, though it became quite rare as a "Western" (French-like) pronunciation had been adopted for many words; for example, ѳеатръ (ḟeatr, [fʲɪˈatr], 'theater') became театръ (teatr, [tʲɪˈatr]). Attempts to reduce spelling inconsistency culminated in the standard textbook of Grot (1885), which retained its authority through 21 editions until the Russian Revolution of 1917. His fusion of the morphological, phonetic, and historic principles of Russian orthography remains valid to this day, though both the Russian alphabet and the writing of many individual words have been altered through a complicated but extremely consistent system of spelling rules that tell which of two vowels to use under all conditions.

The post-revolution reform

The most recent major reform of Russian spelling was prepared by Aleksey Shakhmatov and carried out shortly after the Russian Revolution of 1917.

Shakhmatov headed the Assembly for Considering Simplification of the Orthography whose proposals of May 11, 1917 formed the basis of the new rules soon adopted by the Ministry of Popular Education.[1]

Specific changes

The Old Russian letter 'yat'

The Russian orthography was made simpler by unifying several adjectival and pronominal inflections, replacing the letters ѣ (Yat) with е, і (depending on the context of Moscovian pronunciation), ѵ with и, and ѳ with ф, and dropping the archaic mute yer, including the ъ (the "hard sign") in final position following consonants (thus eliminating practically the last graphical remnant of the Old Slavonic open-syllable system). For instance, Рыбинскъ became Рыбинск ("Rybinsk").

Practical implementation

In December 1917 the People's Commissariat of Education, headed by A. V. Lunacharsky, issued a decree stating "all state and government institutions and schools without exception should carry out the transition to the new orthography without delay... from 1 January 1918 all government and state publications, both periodical... and non periodical" were to be printed in the new style.[2][3] The decree was nearly identical to the proposals put forth by the May Assembly, and with other minor modifications formed the substance of the decree issued by the Soviet of People's Commissars in October 1918.[4][5]

In this way, private publications could formally be printed using the old (or more generally, any convenient) orthography. The decree forbade the retraining of people previously trained under the old norm. A given spelling was considered a misspelling only if it violated both the old and the new norms.

However, in practice, the Soviet government rapidly set up a monopoly on print production and kept a very close eye on the fulfillment of the edict. A common practice was the removal of not just the letters І, Ѳ, and Ѣ from printing offices, but also Ъ. Because of this, the usage of the apostrophe as a dividing sign became widespread in place of ъ (e.g., под’ём, ад’ютант instead of подъём, адъютант), and came to be perceived as a part of the reform (even if, from the point of view of the letter of the decree of the Council of People's Commissars, such uses were mistakes). Nonetheless, some academic printings (connected with the publication of old works and documents and printings whose typesetting began before the revolution) came out in the old orthography (except title pages and, often, prefaces) up until 1929.

Russian — and later Soviet — railroads operated locomotives with designations of "І", "Ѵ" and "Ѳ". Despite the reformed orthography, the series names remained unchanged up until these locomotives were discontinued in the 1950s.

Some Russian émigré publications continued to appear in the former orthography until the 1970s.[6]

Favourable aspects of the reform

The reform reduced the number of orthographic rules having no support in pronunciation—for example, the difference of the genders in the plural and the need to learn a long list of words which were written with "yat"s (the composition of said list was controversial among linguists, and different spelling guides contradicted one another).

The reform resulted in some economy in writing and typesetting, due to the exclusion of Ъ at the end of words—by the reckoning of Lev Uspensky, text in the new orthography was shorter by one-thirtieth.

The reform removed pairs of completely homophonous graphemes from the Russian alphabet (i.e., Ѣ and Е; Ѳ and Ф; and the trio of И, I and Ѵ), bringing the alphabet closer to Russian's actual phonological system.

More recent modifications

While there have not been any significant changes since the 1918 decree, debates and fluctuations have to some degree continued.

During the 1930s and 40s the use of "ё" in printed publications increased, purportedly due to Stalin's inability to distinguish between the letters, though no guidelines on usage were ever published. Committees worked throughout the 1930s to codify the rules, and following the suspension of their activities during the Second World War, work was not resumed until the last years of Stalin's rule.[7]

A codification of the rules of Russian orthography and punctuation[8] was published in 1956 but only a few minor orthographical changes were introduced at that time.[9] The 1956 codification additionally included a clarification of new rules for punctuation developed during the 1930s, and which had not been mentioned in the 1918 decree.[10]

A notable instance of renewed debate followed A. I. Efimov's publication on March 23, 1962 of an article in Izvestiia.[11][12] The article proposed extensive reform to move closer to a phonetic representation of the language.[13] Following the renewed discussion in papers and journals a new Orthographic Commission began work in 1962, under the Russian Language Institute of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR. The Commission published its report, Predloženija po usoveršentvovaniju russkoj orfografii, in 1964. The publication resulted in widespread debate in newspapers, journals, and on radio and television, as well as over 10,000 letters, all of which were passed to the Institute.[14]

Responses to the article pointed to the need to simplify Russian spelling due to the use of Russian as the language of inter-national communication in the Soviet Union and an increased study of Russian in the Eastern Bloc as well as in the West. That instruction for non-native speakers of Russian was one of the central concerns of further reform is indicated in the resistance to Efimov's proposal to drop the terminal "ь" (soft sign) from feminine nouns, as it helps learners identify gender category. Additionally, Efimov claimed that a disproportionate amount of primary school class time was devoted to orthography, rather than phonetics and morphology. Efimov asserted that the existing orthography was essentially unchanged since Grot's codification, and that only by bringing orthography closer to phonetic realization, and eliminating exceptions and variants, could appropriate attention be paid to stylistics and the "development of speech culture". The state's focus on proper instruction in Russian, as the national language of ethnic Russians, as the state language, and as the language of inter-national communication continues to the present day.[15][16]

See also

References and notes

  1. Comrie, Stone, and Polinksy 1996, 288-9.
  2. qtd. in Comrie, Stone, and Polinsky: 1996: 290
  3. For full text of the decree, see Černyshev, V. I. "F. F. Fortunatov i A. A. Šaxmatov--reformatory russkogo pravopisanija (po materialam Arxiva Akadmii Nauk SSSR i ličnym vospominanijam." In A. A. Šaxmatov: Sbornik statej i materialov, edited by S. P. Oborskogo, 167-252. Moskva: Izdatel'stvo Akademii Nauk SSSR, 1947.
  4. Comrie, Stone, and Polinsky 1996: 290.
  5. Full text in Černyshev 1947: 248-9.
  6. Bermel, Neil (2007). Linguistic Authority, Language Ideology, and Metaphor: The Czech Orthography Wars. Language, Power and Social Process 17. Walter de Gruyter. p. 31. ISBN 9783110197662. Retrieved 2014-12-07. [...] the Russian spelling reforms of 1917-1918 were based on proposals drawn up by an imperial commission thirteen years earlier, slightly watered down. However, because they were implemented at time of great social upheaval, these reforms divided Russian literati into two camps. Adherence to the old orthography became a mark of adherence to pre-revolutionary values, and some émigré presses continued to employ the pre-Soviet conventions until the 1970s.
  7. Comrie, Stone, and Polinksy 1996: 296.
  8. (Russian) Правила русской орфографии и пунктуации 1956 г.
  9. These include the changing of "цы" to "ци" in a few words such as "панцирь" and adding a hyphen to the words "по-видимому" and "по-прежнему". Отбой учебной тревоги (Russian)
  10. (Comrie, Stone and Polinksy 1996: 296)
  11. Efimov, 1962. http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/24642226. Accessed 8 April 2014.
  12. Klein, Kurt. "Recent Soviet Discussion on Reform of Russian Orthography." The Slavic and East European Journal 8, no. 1 (1964): 54-61.
  13. Morton, Benson. "A Note on Russian Orthography." The Slavic and East European Journal 37, no. 4 (1993): 530-32.
  14. Comrie, Stone, and Polinsky 1996: 303.
  15. Judina, Natal'ja Vladimirovna. Russkij jazyk v xxi veke: Krizis? Evoljutsija? Progress? Moskva: Gnozis, 2010: 223.
  16. Kurt 1964: 58.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, April 18, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.