Sergey Yurievich Neklyudov (Russian: Сергей Юрьевич Неклюдов) (born March 31, 1941) is a Soviet and Russian philosopher, folklorist and orientalist. As of 2023[update], he is professor and scientific director of the Center for Typology and Semiotics of Folklore at the Russian State University for the Humanities.[1]
In 1965 he graduated from the department of philology, Moscow State University and in 1973 earned his kandidat (Ph.D.) degree with the thesis "Epic traditions of the peoples of Central Asia and the problem of literary contacts between East and West in the Middle Ages".[1] In 1985/1986 he earned the degree of doktor nauk.[2]
He is an author of over 500 articles, translated in many languages. His research interests include:[1]
theoretical folkloristics, with emphasis on functional-semantic study of oral narrative forms
He was a visiting professor in Canada, Germany, Ukraine, Brasil, Estonia, and Poland.[1]
Books
1982: (with Ж. Тумурцерен [Zhogdovzhavyn Tumurtseren, Tomortseren]): Монгольские сказания о Гесере. Новые записи. (Mongolian Epics about Gesar. New Records), Moscow, Наука, 1982. German translation (Mongolische Erzahlungen uber Geser : neue Aufzeichnungen): Wiesbaden, 1985
1984: Героический эпос монгольских народов. Устные и литературные традиции. Moscow, Наука, Chinese translation: Hohhot, 1991
2001: (among editors and authors) Структура волшебной сказки (The Structure of the Magic Fairy Tale), Moscow
Initially published in proceedings of Tartu workshop on semiotics (the obsuscated name "secondary modeling systems" was used for the workshop due to suppressed research in the Soviet Union) 1961–1971, translated into English (1971), German (1986), French (1992) and Italian (1977), first printed as a monograph by Russian State University for the Humanities in 2001
2010: Историческая поэтика фольклора: от архаики к классике
2019: Фольклорный ландшафт Монголии, vol.1: Миф и обряд, vol. 2: Эпос книжный и устный[3]