Abstract

The topic of deportation has always been and will always be in the world literature. The eras are changing, so are the literary themes, new realities are emerging, but, unfortunately, there are always reasons why a person is forced to emigrate. Evidence of this is the last Artsakh war, which after some time will be reflected in fiction. The purpose of the article is to show the influence of various factors (including war) on an individual’s psychology and the desire to emigrate. In literary works, the authors do everything so that love wins, but in real life, the opposite happens. Explosions, abandoned houses, memories and an uncertain future. Loss of ideals, disappointment, alienation. War destroys everything. After the war, the individual is spiritually and morally abandoned, defenseless, without hopes and goals. During the war, the most important thing dies - love. After the war, the individual has feelings of alienation, self-alienation, self-destruction. Unfortunately, emigration often comes to the rescue of the individual. In conclusion, it should be noted that it is impossible to talk about modern literature without touching the topics of globalization and migration. To understand how the migrant feels, one must at least once feel the real danger of losing home, be displaced, live with the fate of a migrant, lose homeland and go into uncertainty.

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