Abstract
<jats:p>The aim of this study is to analyze the socially conditioned concept of ‘maiden beauty’, quality of all unmarried maidens in Russian folk tradition. The analysis of beauty is supplemented by consideration of such categories of folk culture as: fate, will, freedom, playing an important role in reflection within maiden and wedding folklore. These categories of worldview have retained their archaic connotations, characteristic of the Indo-European and East Slavic archaic worldview in general, and at the same time are key to describing youth as a social group within the Russian agricultural community. Considering the general confusion of terms, their layering on each other within folklore, in this article an additional category of ‘force’ was introduced. ‘Force’ is also a part of the language of folk culture as a synonym for vital forces: age, skillfulness, glory, fate, holiness, both for a person and for the mythopoetic ‘forces’: spirits-masters of the land, folklore characters and folk Orthodoxy. But devoid of mythopoetic connotation, ‘force’ acts as ‘that which allows the possible to become real’. In its most general form, ‘force’ is inherent in everyone, not only people, but also events, deities, spirits, the dead, things, due to the anthropologization of the world around us within the framework of the folklore picture of the world. Revealing the Slavic idea of ‘vampirism’ as a variation of the archaic concept of ‘closed space’ in which all who are endowed with ‘force’ act, a value conflict is shown: the danger of acquiring power for an individual, and those who are allowed to do so: monks, elders. Maiden beauty becomes a form of power, a conscious act of invading oneself as the Other, into the perception of the people around, but also as a purely maiden ability, it is also a manifestation of one of the forms of feminine essence, which must be realized in the short time frame of youth and a form of acquiring this force permitted within the framework of Russian folk culture.</jats:p>