Abstract
The focus of the article is on the way Gulrukh Alibayli articulates her sense of creative self in her 1998 book "Our Thinking World". This work comprises publicist writings, portrait essays about renowned figures, two stories, and commemorative photos, all enriched with profound social-philosophical and spiritual-moral themes. The author argues that creative individuals are autonomous, possess self-awareness, and cannot be coerced against their will. G.Alibayli posits that self-identification is a product of an individual's consciousness, which reflects their distinctive cultural identity without exceeding the confines of their culturology, philosophy, and psychology. The writer's self-identification as a creative personality, who expresses concern about societal and humanitarian issues in every piece of writing and seeks various solutions, is realized in the book.
Publisher
Scientific Publishing Center InterConf
Subject
General Chemical Engineering
Reference11 articles.
1. https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/self-identification
2. Reggy, M. A. (1973). Self-Identity through Literature. College English, 35(3), 307–311. https://doi.org/10.2307/374986
3. Huseynova, S. (2022). NIZAMI GANJAVI-THE MOST REINCARNATED LITERARY FIGURE IN AZERBAIJANI LITERATURE. Scientific Collection «InterConf+», (23 (117)), 124-128. https://doi.org/10.51582/interconf.19-20.07.2022.012
4. Huseynova, S. (2021). The writer's “self” and Virginia Woolf's search for a creative woman in “A Room of Ones Own. Comparative Literature Online ISSN: 2709–0762 Print ISSN: 2663-4414, (01). https://cljournal.az/index.php/files/article/view/28/167
5. Rotenberg, E., Kushmerick A. (2011). The Author Challenge: Identification of Self in the Scholarly Literature. Cataloging & Classification Quarterly, 503-520, 49(6). https://doi.org/10.1080/01639374.2011.606405