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The Russian Stories (C. J. Cherryh)
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The Russian Stories (C. J. Cherryh) : ウィキペディア英語版
The Russian Stories (C. J. Cherryh)

''The Russian Stories'', also known as the ''Russian Series'', the ''Russian Trilogy'' and the ''Rusalka Trilogy'', are a series of fantasy novels by science fiction and fantasy author C. J. Cherryh. The stories are set in medieval Russia,〔 in a fictional alternate history of Kievan Rus', a predecessor state of modern day Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. The three books in the series are ''Rusalka'' (1989), ''Chernevog'' (1990), and ''Yvgenie'' (1991). ''Rusalka'' was nominated for a Locus Award in 1990.〔
The stories draw heavily from Slavic mythology and concerns the fate of a girl who has drowned and become a rusalka. For example, a "Rusalka" is a type of life-draining Slavic fairy that haunts a river or lake. And "Chernevog" is an alternate spelling of Chernobog, a mysterious Slavic deity. Other creatures in the books derived from Slavic folklore include Bannik, Leshy and a Vodyanoy.
How magic operates in these books sets them apart from other Cherryh works of fantasy. Wizards are presented as especially dangerous in these novels because even their most casual desires, if expressed, may set into action a course of events with unpredictable outcomes. Wizards in the series therefore must carefully attend to what they think lest they accidentally set loose magical forces that could result in negative outcomes.
The books can therefore be read as a cautionary tale regarding the incompatibility of magic and human society, and also as a criticism of the cavalier treatment of magical power in many works of fantasy, especially high fantasy. They are best described as historical fantasy, although they also borrow elements from the horror fiction genre.
==Magic in the series==
In an essay entitled "Shifting Ground: Subjectivities in Cherryh's Slavic Fantasy Trilogy", academic Janice M. Bogstad says the ''Russian Series'' describe three levels of magic:
#Folkloric magic performed by local creatures, including bannicks, leshys and vodyanois, which is often misinterpreted as peasant superstition;
#Wish magic performed by wizards, an imprecise art because of the way wishes interact with other wizards' wishes;
#Power magic, the "most destruction of magics" that draws its power from "dark forces" in a "parallel realm", practised by some wizards, but considered sorcery by others.
Franco-Bulgarian philosopher Tzvetan Todorov called this second level of magic "pan-determinism" where "the limit between the physical and the mental, between matter and spirit, between word and thing, ceases to be imperious".〔
Bogstad says that besides the books being a story about a girl-turned-rusalka, it is about "humaniz() the experience of magic". Each characters' experience with magic is subjective as they never get to see the complete picture, and can only speculate as to what they think the "presence of magic" is causing. Bogstad calls the story "a kind of science of magics" because of the way in which the characters explore of this phenomena.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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