Presentation on the topic "K.G. Paustovsky". Konstantin Paustovsky (brief biography) - presentation, video lesson on reading (grade 3) on the topic Presentations on the works of Mr. Paustovsky

Presentation on literature “Biography and creativity of K. G. Paustovsky” 5th grade

MBOU Kerch RK Secondary School No. 1 named after V. Dubinin

Chaplygina Galina Viktorovna


He was not a storyteller...

He was a storyteller who made it easy

the story of the difficulty of good .

V.B. Shklovsky


PAUSTOVSKY, KONSTANTIN GEORGIEVICH (1892–1968)

The writer was born on May 19 (31), 1892 in Moscow in the family of a railway statistician. His father, according to Paustovsky, “was an incorrigible dreamer and a Protestant,” which is why he constantly changed jobs. After several moves, the family settled in Kyiv. Paustovsky studied at the 1st Kyiv Classical Gymnasium. When he was in the sixth grade, his father left the family, and Paustovsky was forced to earn his own living and study by tutoring.


... Kyiv forever remained in the writer’s biography as the city of his youth, about which Paustovsky wrote with extraordinary insight and warmth, which he knew well and loved until the end of his life: “Spring in Kiev began with the flood of the Dnieper. One had only to leave the city on Vladimirskaya Hill, and immediately The bluish sea opened before our eyes. But, besides the flood of the Dnieper, another flood was beginning in Kyiv - sunshine, freshness, warm and fragrant wind. Sticky pyramidal poplars were blooming on Bibikovsky Boulevard. They filled the surrounding streets with the smell of incense.


Gottlieb Walker Gymnasium in Kyiv

Early 20th century room

Friends, high school students







In the last years of his life, he worked on a large autobiographical epic, “The Tale of Life.”

Konstantin Paustovsky died


Paustovsky wrote a series of books about creativity and people of art: “Orest Kiprensky”, “Isaac Levitan” (1937), “Taras Shevchenko” (1939), “The Tale of Forests” (1949), “Golden Rose” (1956) - a story about literature, about “the beautiful essence of writing.”






B – draw illustrations in fairy tales by K. G. Paustovsky

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Slide captions:

KONSTANTIN GEORGIEVICH PAUSTOVSKY PRESENTATION OF KARANOVA A.M.

Studied: Paustovsky studied at the Kyiv Classical Gymnasium. After graduating from high school in 1912, he entered Kiev University, the Faculty of History and Philology, then transferred to Moscow University, the Faculty of Law.

World War I

In the 1950s, Paustovsky lived in Moscow and Tarusa-on-Oka

Paustovsky’s first story “On the Water” (1912), written in the last year of his studies at the gymnasium, was published in the Kiev almanac “Lights”. In 1928, Paustovsky’s first collection of stories, “Oncoming Ships,” was published. The story “Kara-Bugaz” (1932) brought fame. In the 1930s, he wrote stories of various themes: “The Fate of Charles Lonseville” (1933), “Colchis” (1934), “The Black Sea” (1936), “Constellation of Hounds” (1937), “Northern Tale” (1938)

During the Great Patriotic War, Paustovsky worked as a war correspondent on the Southern Front and wrote stories

The story “Golden Rose” (1955) is dedicated to the essence of writing. In 1945-1963, Paustovsky wrote his main work - the autobiographical “Tale of Life”, consisting of six books: “Distant Years” (1946), “Restless Youth” (1954), “The Beginning of an Unknown Century” (1956), “The Time of Great expectations" (1958), "Throw to the South" (1959 - 1960), "Book of Wanderings" (1963). In the mid-1950s, Paustovsky gained worldwide recognition. Paustovsky got the opportunity to travel around Europe. He visited Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Turkey, Greece, Sweden, Italy and other countries; in 1965 he lived on the island for a long time. Capri. In the same 1965, he was a likely candidate for the Nobel Prize in Literature, which ultimately went to Sholokhov.

PAUSTOVSKY FOR CHILDREN

“I will not exchange Central Russia for the most famous and stunning beauties of the globe.. I will give all the elegance of the Bay of Naples with its feast of colors for a willow bush wet from the rain on the sandy bank of the Oka or for the winding Taruska river - on its modest banks I now often I live a long time" - Konstantin Georgievich Paustovsky.

died on July 14, 1968 in Moscow, buried in Tarusa, Kaluga Region.


On the topic: methodological developments, presentations and notes

mini-presentations and lesson notes on the works of K. Paustovsky

The works of K. Paustovsky are studied in literary reading lessons in all teaching materials. These presentations and lesson notes were used in literary reading lessons in the 3rd grade at the School 2100 educational complex...

presentation on literary reading K. Paustovsky "Badger's Nose"

this presentation was prepared for a literary reading lesson for grade 2 according to the program “Primary School of the 21st Century” on the topic “Badger Nose” by K. Paustovsky...

Konstantin Georgievich Paustovsky (1892 – 1968)

Paustovsky studied at the Kyiv Classical Gymnasium. After graduating from high school in 1912, he entered Kiev University, the Faculty of Natural History, then transferred to Moscow University, the Faculty of Law. The First World War forced him to interrupt his studies. Paustovsky became a counselor on the Moscow tram and worked on an ambulance train. In 1915, with a field medical detachment, he retreated along with the Russian army across Poland and Belarus. At the front. 1915

During the Civil War, he served in the Red Army in a guard regiment, working for the newspaper "Sailor". From Odessa, Paustovsky left for the Caucasus, living in Sukhumi, Batumi, Tbilisi, Yerevan, and Baku. During the Great Patriotic War, Paustovsky worked as a war correspondent on the Southern Front and wrote stories. At the front. 1941

In the mid-50s, Paustovsky gained worldwide recognition. Paustovsky got the opportunity to travel around Europe. He visited Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Turkey, Greece, Sweden, Italy and other countries.

Paustovsky’s first story “On the Water” (1912), written in the last year of his studies at the gymnasium, was published in the Kiev almanac “Lights”. In 1928, Paustovsky’s first collection of stories, “Oncoming Ships,” was published, although individual essays and stories had been published before that. In the same year, the novel “Shining Clouds” was written.

The story “Kara-Bugaz” (1932) The story “The Fate of Charles Lonseville” (1933) The story “Colchis” (1934) The story “Black Sea” (1936) The story “Constellation of the Hounds” (1937) The story “Isaac Levitan” (1937) The story “Orest Kiprensky” (1937) The story “Northern story” (1938) The story “Taras Shevchenko” (1939)

K.G. Paustovsky. Stories. Watercolor paints. Alexander Dovzhenko. Alexey Tolstoy. English razor. Badger nose. White rabbits. Valor. Road talk. The dense bear. Uncle Gilyay. Heat. Hare's feet. Golden tench. Ivan Bunin. Lump sugar. Cat Thief. Coffee haven. Lacemaker Nastya. Lyonka from Small Lake. Fever. Mikhail Loskutov. Marine inoculation. Fairy tales. The dense bear. Caring flower. Tree frog. The adventures of the rhinoceros beetle. Disheveled sparrow. Steel ring. Warm bread. Oscar Wilde. Sailing master. A pack of cigarettes. Guide. Lost day. Flow of life. Right hand. Order for a military school. Rubber boat. Reporter Rats. Timid heart. Reuben Fraerman. Storyteller. Snow. Old manuscript. Old cook. Telegram. Toast. Valuable cargo. Black networks. Label for colonial goods. and etc.

Questions for the work “Warm Bread” 1. Where did Grandma send Filka in search of advice? 2. How much time did Pankrat give Filka? 3. What did people do to save themselves? 4. What did the horse do after he ate the bread? 5. Why was the magpie angry?

Illustrations for the work

“A person must be smart, simple, fair, brave and kind. Only then does he have the right to bear this high title - Man.”

K. G. Paustovsky died in Moscow and, according to his will, was buried in the city cemetery in Tarusa. The place where the grave is located, a high hill surrounded by trees with a clear view of the Taruska River, was chosen by the writer himself. The grave is located in a green square surrounded by paths. At the head lies a stone of unpolished red granite, on which the inscription “K.G. Paustovsky” is placed on one side, and “1892 - 1968” on the other.

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Paustovsky Konstantin Georgievich (1892-1968) Prepared by student of 3 “D” class Turchin Vadim

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Russian writer. Born in Moscow. Besides him, the family had three more children, two brothers and a sister. The writer's father was a railway employee, and the family often moved from place to place: after Moscow they lived in Pskov, Vilna, and Kyiv. In 1911, in the last class of the gymnasium, Kostya Paustovsky wrote his first story, and it was published in the Kiev literary magazine “Lights”.

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Konstantin Georgievich changed many professions: he was a counselor and conductor of the Moscow tram, a worker at metallurgical plants in Donbass and Taganrog, a fisherman,

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an orderly in the army during the First World War, an employee, a teacher of Russian literature, and a journalist.

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During the Civil War, Paustovsky fought in the Red Army. During the Great Patriotic War he was a war correspondent on the Southern Front.

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During his long writing life, he visited many parts of our country. “Almost every book of mine is a trip. Or, rather, every trip is a book,” said Paustovsky. He traveled to the Caucasus and Ukraine, the Volga, Kama, Don, Dnieper, Oka and Desna, and was in Central Asia, Altai, Siberia, the Onega region, and the Baltic. House in Odessa Paustovsky House-Museum in Tarusa" Moscow In the former house of the forester of the Golitsyn estate there is a literary museum of K. G. Paustovsky.

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But he especially fell in love with Meshchera - a fabulously beautiful region between Vladimir and Ryazan - where he came for the first time in 1930.

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Paustovsky is the author of a series of stories for children and several fairy tales. They teach you to love your native nature, to be observant, to see the unusual in the ordinary and to be able to fantasize, to be kind, honest, and able to admit and correct your own guilt. These important human qualities are so necessary in life. In this photo, Paustovsky is with his cat Barsik.

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May 31, 2011 - 119 years since the birth of Konstantin Georgievich Paustovsky (1892 – 1968)

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“I was born in 1892 in Moscow, on Granatny Lane, in the family of a railway statistician. Our family was large and diverse, inclined towards the arts. The family sang a lot, played the piano, and reverently loved the theater. I still go to the theater as if it were a holiday.” K.G.Paustovsky

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Georgy Maksimovich Paustovsky “My father came from the Zaporozhye Cossacks, who moved after the defeat of the Sich to the banks of the Ros River near Bila Tserkva. Father was a railway statistician. Despite his profession, which required a sober view of things, he was an incorrigible dreamer. He could not bear any burdens or worries. Therefore, among his relatives he gained a reputation as a frivolous and spineless man, a reputation as a dreamer who, in the words of my grandmother, “had no right to marry and have children.” Obviously, because of these properties, my father did not live in one place for a long time. After Moscow, he served in Pskov, in Vilna and, finally, more or less firmly settled in Kyiv, on the South-Western Railway.”

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Maria Grigorievna Paustovskaya (1858 - 1934). “My mother, the daughter of an employee at a sugar factory, was a domineering and unkind woman. All her life she held “strong views”, which boiled down mainly to the tasks of raising children. Her unkindness was feigned. The mother was convinced that only with strict and harsh treatment of children could they be raised into “something worthwhile.”

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About grandfather and grandmother “Grandfather Maxim Grigorievich is a former Nikolaev soldier, and grandmother Honorata (before accepting Christianity, Fatma) is Turkish. Grandfather was a meek, blue-eyed old man. He sang ancient thoughts and Cossack songs in a cracked tenor and told everyone many incredible and sometimes touching stories “from the very past of life.”

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Alexey Konstantinovich Paustovsky (1950 - 1976) Alyosha grew up and was formed in the creative atmosphere of the writers' house, in the sphere of intellectual searches of young writers and artists. But least of all he looked like a “homemade” child, spoiled by parental attention. With a company of artists, he wandered around the outskirts of Tarusa, sometimes disappearing from home for two or three days. The paintings of Alexei Paustovsky are another creative life filled with searches and suffering. To life. Street.

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Paustovsky studied at the Kyiv Classical Gymnasium. After graduating from high school in 1912, he entered Kiev University, the Faculty of Natural History, then transferred to Moscow University, the Faculty of Law. The First World War forced him to interrupt his studies. Paustovsky became a counselor on the Moscow tram and worked on an ambulance train. In 1915, with a field medical detachment, he retreated along with the Russian army across Poland and Belarus. At the front. 1915

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During the Civil War, he served in the Red Army in a guard regiment, working for the newspaper "Sailor". From Odessa, Paustovsky left for the Caucasus, living in Sukhumi, Batumi, Tbilisi, Yerevan, and Baku. During the Great Patriotic War, Paustovsky worked as a war correspondent on the Southern Front and wrote stories. At the front. 1941

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Paustovsky’s first story “On the Water” (1912), written in the last year of his studies at the gymnasium, was published in the Kiev almanac “Lights”. In 1928, Paustovsky’s first collection of stories, “Oncoming Ships,” was published, although individual essays and stories had been published before that. In the same year, the novel “Shining Clouds” was written.

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The story “Kara-Bugaz” (1932) The story “The Fate of Charles Lonseville” (1933) The story “Colchis” (1934) The story “Black Sea” (1936) The story “Constellation of the Hounds” (1937) The story “Isaac Levitan” (1937) The story “Orest Kiprensky” (1937) The story “Northern story” (1938) The story “Taras Shevchenko” (1939)

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In the mid-50s, Paustovsky gained worldwide recognition. Paustovsky got the opportunity to travel around Europe. He visited Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Turkey, Greece, Sweden, Italy and other countries.

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The Meshchersky region occupies a special place in Paustovsky’s work. About his beloved Meshchera, Paustovsky wrote: “I found the greatest, simplest and most ingenuous happiness in the forested Meshchera region. Happiness of closeness to your land, concentration and inner freedom, favorite thoughts and hard work. I owe most of the things I have written to Central Russia - and only to it."

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Since 1953, K.G. Paustovsky lived in Moscow, periodically leaving for Tarusa for a long time. Konstantin Georgievich Paustovsky spent the last thirteen years of his life in Tarusa, a small Oka town in Central Russia, where he enjoyed the respect and love of the residents, and became the first “honorary citizen” of the city. Here he wrote the stories “A Time of Great Expectations”, “A Throw to the South”, chapters from “The Golden Rose”, many short stories and articles: “Alone with Autumn”, “A Asleep Boy”, “A Laurel Wreath”, “A Hut in the Forest” , "Town on the River".

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In 1964, Marlene Dietrich, the shining legendary star of the West, was in Moscow, where she gave several concerts at the Variety Theater. One evening, with a huge crowd of people, a tall, thin old man, K.G., staggered onto the stage of the Central House of Writers. Paustovsky, and Marlene Dietrich suddenly, without any words, silently knelt down in front of him, and then, grabbing his hand, kissed it for a long time and pressed it to her face, drenched in tears. The hall froze as if in paralysis. And then slowly, hesitantly, looking around, as if ashamed of something, he began to slowly get up. And then the hall immediately erupted with a mad waterfall of applause!

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Then the shocked Paustovsky was seated in a chair, and when, shining with tears, the hall fell silent, palms pounding, Marlene Dietrich quietly explained that she had read a lot of books in her life, but the biggest literary shock in her life was the story of the Soviet writer Konstantin Paustovsky's "Telegram", which she accidentally read in a German translation in some collection. And, wiping away the last tear, Marlene said very simply: “Since then, I felt like a kind of duty - to kiss the hand of the writer who wrote it. It came true! I'm happy that I managed to do this. Thank you all - and thanks to Russia”... The 62-year-old beauty admitted that she has a Russian soul, and she admires everything Russian...

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K. G. Paustovsky died in Moscow and, according to his will, was buried in the city cemetery in Tarusa. The place where the grave is located, a high hill surrounded by trees with a clear view of the Taruska River, was chosen by the writer himself. The grave is located in a green square surrounded by paths. At the head lies a stone of unpolished red granite, on which the inscription “K.G. Paustovsky” is placed on one side, and “1892 - 1968” on the other.

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K.G. Paustovsky. Stories. Watercolor paints. Alexander Dovzhenko. Alexey Tolstoy. English razor. Badger nose. White rabbits. Valor. Road talk. The dense bear. Uncle Gilyay. Heat. Hare's feet. Golden tench. Ivan Bunin. Lump sugar. Cat Thief. Coffee haven. Lacemaker Nastya. Lyonka from Small Lake. Fever. Mikhail Loskutov. Marine inoculation. Fairy tales. The dense bear. Caring flower. Tree frog. The adventures of the rhinoceros beetle. Disheveled sparrow. Steel ring. Warm bread. Oscar Wilde. Sailing master. A pack of cigarettes. Guide. Lost day. Flow of life. Right hand. Order for a military school. Rubber boat. Reporter Rats. Timid heart. Reuben Fraerman. Storyteller. Snow. Old manuscript. Old cook. Telegram. Toast. Valuable cargo. Black networks. Label for colonial goods. and etc.

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The Moscow Literary Museum-Center of K. G. Paustovsky, which houses exhibitions dedicated to the Russian writer Konstantin Georgievich Paustovsky (1892-1968), began its existence as a school museum in 1975. In 1982 it was reorganized into the “People's Museum” and after that it was housed in the so-called. "Seraya Dacha" is a monument of wooden architecture of the 18th century, which was part of the former estate of the Golitsyn family, which, unfortunately, was rather hastily rebuilt. It received the status of a state museum in 1987 and was renamed the K. G. Paustovsky Literary Museum-Center. The museum received its current name in August 1994. Since August 1997, the museum has been located on the territory of the Kuzminki-Lublino Natural, Historical and Entertainment Complex. Paustovsky Museum in Moscow.

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Konstantin Georgievich Paustovsky loved to live in old wooden houses where the floorboards creaked. And he placed his heroes in them - the composer Tchaikovsky, the artist Pozhalostin. Remember: “Sometimes at night, waking up, Tchaikovsky heard how, crackling, first one floorboard, then another, would sing, as if remembering his daytime music...” It is these lines from “The Tale of Forests” that are remembered when you approach the Museum of K. G. Paustovsky, hidden in the dense Kuzminsky Park. It was similar to those houses with “creaky floorboards” - one-story, wooden, with a mezzanine. True, Konstantin Georgievich has never been to this house. Nevertheless, you cannot find a better place in Moscow to set up his museum than this ancient outbuilding - it is two hundred years old - of the gardener of the Golitsyn princes.

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The people who created the museum and selflessly love the writer and his work have collected here books, manuscripts, photographs, memorial items that fully and diversely reflect such an extraordinary phenomenon in Russian culture as Paustovsky. The organizers of the museum were school teacher Zoya Vsevolodovna Kvitko, mining engineer Tatyana Bogomolova and a military electronics engineer who served in aerospace units, Ilya Komarov, its current director. At the age of 47, he left the army and completely devoted himself to his true calling - studying and popularizing the life and work of Paustovsky.

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The material was selected by the primary school teacher of the State Educational Institution Secondary School with in-depth study of the English language No. 1363 Tatyana Grigorievna Vikultseva.

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