GLORIA

GEOMAR Library Ocean Research Information Access

Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    INOITs ALMAVEST Ltd. ; 2021
    In:  Philological Sciences. Scientific Essays of Higher Education , No. 1 ( 2021-01), p. 96-106
    In: Philological Sciences. Scientific Essays of Higher Education, INOITs ALMAVEST Ltd., , No. 1 ( 2021-01), p. 96-106
    Abstract: The article proves it that A.K. Voronsky’s role in the fate of S.A. Yesenin was determined by the fact that the latter was an author of “Krasnaya Nov’” journal. It was clear to Voronsky that the popularity of the journal depended on that it carried Yesenin’s works as well as materials relating to them. Those circumstances predetermined the intensity of the communication between Voronsky and Yesenin in 1923–1925. The nature of the critic’s attitude to Yesenin is evidenced by the high assessment of Esenin’s works in a number of Voronsky’s monographic reviews about the poet. Voronsky also contributed to that the collected works of S.A. Yesenin be published. Voronsky’s participation in Yesenin’s fate deepened the conflict between the editor of “Krasnaya Nov’” and the ‘napostovtsy’, which ended in Voronsky’s defeat. The analysis of the creative relationships between Voronsky and Yesenin makes it possible to update the biographies of the poet and his leading critic of the 1920s.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2310-4287
    Uniform Title: Из истории отношений А.К. Воронского с С.А. Есениным
    RVK:
    Language: Unknown
    Publisher: INOITs ALMAVEST Ltd.
    Publication Date: 2021
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2826270-0
    SSG: 7,39
    SSG: 7,11
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    In: Voprosy literatury, Voprosy Literatury, , No. 2 ( 2020-07-29), p. 290-293
    Abstract: Malygina’s book portrays Andrey Platonov in the context of the literary period in which he was active. Malygina also summarizes the history of the journal Krasnaya Nov , the Krug Publishers, and the Pereval Group. While depicted as particularly close to Pilnyak due to his expressionist tendencies, Platonov, however, remained faithful to the utopian ideal of ‘proletarian literature’ and reserved tongue-incheek comments for Soviet literary aristocrats. Although a fi   ce critic of Soviet reality, Platonov cherished his own ‘Soviet project’ – he envisaged a truly revolutionary, progressive ideal of a genuinely democratic nature. The literary period in question is shown to have a complex structure, unyielding to ideological abstractions.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0042-8795
    URL: Issue
    RVK:
    Language: Unknown
    Publisher: Voprosy Literatury
    Publication Date: 2020
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2207320-6
    SSG: 7,39
    SSG: 7,12
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Voprosy Literatury ; 2023
    In:  Voprosy literatury , No. 3 ( 2023-06-14), p. 93-106
    In: Voprosy literatury, Voprosy Literatury, , No. 3 ( 2023-06-14), p. 93-106
    Abstract:    The article is concerned with the story of K. Batyushkov’s analysis of the prose penned by the 18th-c. writer M. Muravyov. This study of Batyushkov’s critical review of Muravyov’s legacy, written and published in the journal Syn Otechestva in 1814, discusses not only Batyushkov’s literary preferences and writing technique, but also his social-political and moral-philosophical reasons to reacquaint the public with the ideas of his literary predecessor. The article details the social-political tendencies of the early 19 th  c., the effect that the outcome of the Napoleonic wars had on Batyushkov’s generation, and the general sentiment among his contemporaries (Batyushkov himself fought against Napoleon). According to Shulpyakov, the moral questions posed by Batyushkov (man’s attitude to nature, European culture, the Enlightenment and its ideology, etc.) had been anticipated and promoted by his friend and mentor M. Muravyov. However, Batyushkov’s interpretation is influenced by the new era with its disillusionment, discoveries, and semantic atmosphere.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0042-8795
    URL: Issue
    RVK:
    Language: Unknown
    Publisher: Voprosy Literatury
    Publication Date: 2023
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2207320-6
    SSG: 7,39
    SSG: 7,12
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Institute of Russian Literature Pushkinskij Dom RAN ; 2020
    In:  Vremennik Pushkinskoi Komissii Vol. 34 ( 2020), p. 10-31
    In: Vremennik Pushkinskoi Komissii, Institute of Russian Literature Pushkinskij Dom RAN, Vol. 34 ( 2020), p. 10-31
    Abstract: This article offers a comparison of Pushkin’s “The Bronze Horseman” and Western European poems about the St. Petersburg flood, with the focus on An tonio Mezzanotte’s poem “La inondazione di Pietroburgo avvenuta nel dì 19. Novembre 1824” (1825). Pushkin often used the same techniques as Mezzanotte, an aesthetically conservative Italian classicist poet. In the article, possible newspaper and journal sources of some episodes in both poems are identified, as well as close motifs and similar rhetorical and poetic devices. The compositional features of the two poems are compared. The Italian poem has a traditional construction in which the natural elements are opposed to the beneficial State power embodied in the Savior Sovereign. For this reason, Mezzanotte begins with the horrors of the flood and ends with a eulogy for the Emperor. In Pushkin’s “Petersburg Tale,” in which two impersonal forces (that of Nature and that of the State) oppose the fate of an individual, Peter the Great appears as an ally of the destructive elements. The Russian poem begins with a panegyric to Peter and ends with the tragic death of the main character and his loved ones.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0236-2481
    Uniform Title: ПОЭМА АНТОНИО МЕДЗАНОТТЕ О ПЕТЕРБУРГСКОМ НАВОДНЕНИИ И «МЕДНЫЙ ВСАДНИК»
    URL: Issue
    RVK:
    Language: Unknown
    Publisher: Institute of Russian Literature Pushkinskij Dom RAN
    Publication Date: 2020
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 339299-5
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 3079581-3
    SSG: 7,39
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Institute of the Ukrainian Language of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine ; 2022
    In:  Culture of the Word , No. 97 ( 2022), p. 99-113
    In: Culture of the Word, Institute of the Ukrainian Language of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, , No. 97 ( 2022), p. 99-113
    Abstract: The study of a document as the main research object by various sciences led to the formation of document science as a metascience for all sciences of the document and communication field: library science, bibliography, bibliology, archival science, computer science and other disciplines. The purpose of this research is a scientific article in a professional publication within the hierarchy of concepts: from a publication as a document (in a number of names: a publication (periodical, journal, professional); a scientific journal (printed, electronic)) to hypothesizing a scientific article as a document (primary and secondary) with functions, details, typical composition and language formulas of scientific style. A special place in documentary communication belongs to the following publications: books, magazines, newspapers, posters, maps, notes, divided by frequency, material structure, iconic nature of information, and purpose. In Ukraine a scientific professional publication is a periodical or ongoing publication (also electronic) included by the Attestation Board of the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine in the list of publications in which the results of dissertation research for obtaining the degree of doctor and candidate of science can be published. The interesting material for the study is provided by the scientific professional publication of Ukraine in the field of social communication “Bulletin of the Book Chamber” (the articles from all issues during 2020 were selected for the analysis). It promotes materials on publishing activities, legal support of book publishing and book distribution, analytical and statistical reviews of publications in Ukraine, problematic articles on the development of the media, bibliology and library science, reviews of new publications, and historical research. Within the framework of the article, the following concepts are considered: “primary document”, “secondary document”, “details”. The primary document is a text of the article, drawn up in accordance with the rules for submitting scientific articles. The secondary document includes the UDC index, DOI, abstracts, keywords, bibliography, and references. In any article certain details are singled out: 1) information about the author (authors); 2) title of the article – in Ukrainian and English; 3) text of the article with the necessary elements; 4) date (submission of the article to the editorial office). The resolution of the Presidium of the Higher Attestation Commission of Ukraine on January 15, 2003 No. 7–05/1, which is now known to any scientist, significantly unifies the scientific article. Paragraph 3 obliges the editorial boards of professional publications to accept publications according to previously known formal requirements: statement of the problem, analysis of recent studies and publications, formulation of goals, presentation of the main material of the study, and conclusions. Of course, it encourages authors to use well-established lexical and grammatical constructions that “serve” the aforementioned semantically completed compositional parts.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0201-419X
    URL: Issue
    RVK:
    Language: Ukrainian
    Publisher: Institute of the Ukrainian Language of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
    Publication Date: 2022
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 3051171-9
    SSG: 7,39
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Institute for Bulgarian Language Prof. Lyubomir Andreychin at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences ; 2021
    In:  Journal of Bulgarian Language Vol. 68, No. 02 ( 2021-6-30), p. 11-12
    In: Journal of Bulgarian Language, Institute for Bulgarian Language Prof. Lyubomir Andreychin at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Vol. 68, No. 02 ( 2021-6-30), p. 11-12
    Abstract: The papers featured in Issue 2/2021 of the Journal deal with major topics in the theory and practice of lexicography – both in a contemporary and historical perspective. The authors address problems of onomastic lexicography, neography, explanatory lexicography and the history of Bulgarian dictionary crafting. One of the papers sheds light on some aspects of the lexicographic practice in Poland. The issue is dedicated to one of the most eminent representatives of contemporary Bulgarian academic lexicography – Prof. DSc Maria Choroleeva – on the occasion of her forthcoming jubilee. Boris Parashkevov’s paper outlines a project for the creation of a dictionary of Bulgarian surnames. The concept of the dictionary envisages the organisation of family names in nests based on semantic equivalence (correspondence), associative reference and shared structural membership, thus making it possible to reveal the structural and semantic relations among the names under study. In addition, the dictionary entries document the derivational paradigm of the respective surnames, including short forms, diminutives and suffixal derivatives. Sia Kolkovska addresses some peculiarities in the lexicographic description of Bulgarian neologisms motivated by specific types of polysemy and synonymy. The author comments on the lexicographic description of the semantic structure of new polysemous loanwords and discusses the criteria for selecting a dominant synonym in synonym sets composed of neologisms. Diana Blagoeva and Sia Kolkovska’s paper also deals with issues in neography. The authors discuss the views on the categorial nature of neologisms of the type бизнесцентър/бизнес център (business centre) in Bulgarian and comment on the reasons for the emergence and establishment of this type of lexemes in the language, while considering the dynamics of their functioning. The paper motivates the necessity for the application of a special approach to the lexicographic description of this type of neologisms. Tsvetelina Georgieva comments on Nayden Gerov’s understanding of the so-called „равнознаменаменователни речи“ and highlights the contribution of the renowned lexicographer of the National Revival and the Post-liberation period to the representation of such names in an explanatory dictionary. The author maintains that these names should be considered not synonyms but heteroyms as they belong to different dialects. Nadezhda Kostova also takes a look at the history of Bulgarian lexicography in her discussion on the arrangement of dictionary entries in different types of dictionaries from the beginning of the 20th century. The author provides a comparative analysis of the peculiarities in the application of the alphabetical-nest arrangement in the lexicographic works under discussion. In his paper Petar Sotirov studies the application of the qualifier colloquially (potoczne) in Polish explanatory lexicography, taking as a point of departure the views on the notion of colloquialism in Polish linguistics. The author concludes that the dominant notion of colloquialism in Polish lexicography is the stylistic one and goes on to identify certain cases of inconsistencies and discrepancies in the use of the qualifier. Mihaela Kuzmova discusses the place of precedent phenomena (in par-ticular, the so-called “winged words”) in phraseology. The author proposes an analysis of several popular expressions of domestic precedent origin which have neither been described in lexicographic works, nor commented in the linguistic literature, and offers some observations on their phraseologisation and usualisation.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2603-3372 , 0005-4283
    URL: Issue
    URL: Issue
    RVK:
    Language: Bulgarian
    Publisher: Institute for Bulgarian Language Prof. Lyubomir Andreychin at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences
    Publication Date: 2021
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2257111-5
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 339189-9
    SSG: 7,39
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Ivan Franko National University of Lviv ; 2021
    In:  Problems of slavonic studies Vol. 70 ( 2021), p. 99-110
    In: Problems of slavonic studies, Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, Vol. 70 ( 2021), p. 99-110
    Abstract: Background: Having lived for several centuries in areas with a polyethnic population, Croatian Rusyns and Ukrainians have repeatedly found themselves on the path of interethnic confrontation between Serbs and Croats. The events of the Serbo-Croatian War (1991–1995) were one of the peak moments of such confrontations in the Yugoslav state. The Serbo-Croatian War is the most favorite topic of Croatian historiography of the entire period of independence. However, the question about the state of the Croatian national minorities during the war was covered only by few researchers. Local researchers actually don't raise the issue of collaborationism in the 1990s. Purpose: to assess the extent of collaboration of Rusyns and Ukrainians with self proclaimed Serbian Krajina, to find out the nature, motives and causes of this phenomenon. Results: The Serbo-Croatian War of 1991–1995 was caused by the disintegration of the SFRY, Croatia's desire to secede from the Federation, and the presence of a large Serb minority on its territory that did not share that desire. Because of military campaigns at the end of 1991, Croatian Serbs completely sepa-rated from Croatia, taking a quarter of its territory under control, and proclaimed the formation of the Republic of Serbian Krajina. It occupied the territory where a large part of the non-Serb population lived. In particular, most of the descendants of immigrants from Ukrainian lands were in a city Vukovar, villages Petrovci and Mikluševci (Eastern Slavonia). The non-Serb population of Serbian Krajina (including Rusyns and Ukrainians) found itself on the path of a “Serbisation” policy of the occupied territories. So an occu-pation regime was established for Rusyns and Ukrainians of this region. Destruction, looting, rape, beatings, damage to the Greek Catholic Churches, “ethnic cleansing”, bru-tal killings of particular families – this is the list of actions of the new government. Territorial Defense headquarters were organized in each settlement occupied by the YPA and insurgent Serbs, which included individual Rusyns and Ukrainians who sympathized with official Belgrade. Due to active collaboration with Serbs, some Rusyns from Mikluševci lived well under Serbian authority. They opened shops, hotels, businesses. Individual Rusyns from Mikluševci, at the behest of local Serbs, tortured fellow villagers and helped to deport them. According to the expelled locals, the hardest thing for them was not to ac-cept the Serbian occupation itself, but the betrayal of their compatriots. There was also a forced collaborationism. Due to the compact location of Ukraini-ans in the border areas between Serbia and Croatia, during the war a large number of Ukrainian men were mobilized to the YPA or the Croatian forces, depending on the place of residence. In 1995, Croatia regained considerable territory during its armed operations. The return of Eastern Slavonia, where most Rusyns and Ukrainians lived, was to be done gradually and under the control of the UN Transitional Administration. During the process of reintegration a complex process of return of refugees and exiles, psychological normalization of social relations, and adaptation of people to new circumstances, has continued. After the reintegration of the Danube region, Croatia has failed to establish an effective mechanism for punishing war criminals. The so-called “Mikluševci’s process” gained considerable resonance. The case was directed against those who deported 98 and killed four people from Mikluševci in the spring of 1992 (all the victims were Rusyns). The investigation was constantly delayed, and the number of defendants decreased due to the deaths of suspects or lack of evidence. At the announcement of the sentence, only three ethnic Rusyns were present (other convicted had fled to Serbia and were inaccessible to the Croatian judiciary). So it turned out that only Rusyns were actually convicted for the war crime of genocide against the Rusyns. Thus, during the Croatian-Serbian war, the policy of the so-called Serbian Krajina, aimed at implementing the “Greater Serbia” plan, left Ukrainians no choice as to whom to support. However, even under such conditions, there were cases of collaboration between the Rusyn-Ukrainian diaspora and the Serbian occupation administration. If we omit forced collaborationism (mobilization into the ranks of the Serbian armed forces), then voluntary cooperation had various reasons: the desire to regain power lost as a result of the 1991 elections; nostalgia for socialist Yugoslavia and stability; as a means of resolving domestic conflicts and settling accounts with neighbors. Voluntary collaborationism among the inhabitants of Mikluševci and Petrovtsi did not become widespread. It was much less common among Ukrainians than among Rusyns – but this can also be explained by the much larger number of the Rusyns in the region. After the reintegration of the Danube, Croatia did not prosecute anyone for collaborationism, but mostly Ruthenians were convicted for “genocide” and “crimes against humanity”. However, this rather indicates the imperfection of the Croatian judiciary. Key words: Croatia, Rusyns, Ukrainians, Serbs, collaborationism, terror, Serbo-Croatian war. Biki, Đ., 2001. Rusyns of Mikluševci in the Homeland War of 1991. Mikluševci. (In Croatian) Burda, S., 1998. From the work of the Crisis Staff of the Union 1991–1993 (2). New opinion, 106, pp.43–45. (In Croatian) Bičanić, J., 1998. News about the return of expelled citizens of Petrovci. New opinion, 104, p.20. (In Ruthenian) Crime in Mikluševtsi, 2016. Documents. Center for Combating the Past. [online] Avialable at: https://www.documenta.hr/hr/zločin-u-mikluševcima.html [Accessed 15 july 2021] (in Croatian) Furminc, J., 1990. At the co-working of coexistence. New opinion, 88, p.2. (In Croa-tian) Jolić, S., 1993. “I have to find my sons grave”. New opinion, 98/99, p.13. (In Rutheni-an) Jurista, M., 1991. We have yours on guard. New opinion, 90/91, p.10. (In Croatian) Kiš, M., 1997. UNTAES Mandate and Reintegration. New opinion, 101/102, pp.7–8. (In Ruthenian) Kostelnik, V. and Takać, G., 2008. 40 years of the Union of Ruthenians and Ukraini-ans of the Republic of Croatia. Vukovar. (In Ruthenian) Lipovlyanians on the front line, 1992. New opinion, 92/93, pp.18–19. (In Ukrainian) Liskyi, B., 2002. Anton Ivakhniuk is a great Ukrainian–Croatian patriot. In: S., Burda and B., Gralyuk, eds. Ukrainians of Croatia: materials and documents. Zagreb, pp.62–73. (In Ukrainian) Malynovs’ka, O., 2002. Ukrainian diaspora in the South Slavic lands. In: S., Burda and B., Gralyuk, eds. Ukrainians of Croatia: materials and documents. Zagreb, pp.6–20. (In Ukrainian) Marijan, D., 2000. Yugoslav People's Army in the aggression against the Republic of Croatia 1990–1992 years. Journal of Contemporary History, No. 2, pp.289–321. (In Croa-tian) Pap, N., 2015. The suffering of the Ruthenians in the 1991/92 Homeland War. Vuko-var. (In Croatian) Perić Kaselj, M., Škiljan, F. and Vukić, A., 2015. Event and ethnic situation: changes in the identity of national minority communities in the Republic of Croatia. Studia ethnologica Croatica, 27 (1), s.7–36. Avialable at: https: //dx.doi.org10.17721/2524-048X.2018.11.8-27 [Accessed 1 august 2021] (In Croatian) Radoš, I. and Šangut, Z., 2013. We defended the homeland: members of national minorities in the defense of Croatia. Zagreb: Udruga pravnika “Vukovar 1991”. (In Croa-tian) Simunovič, J., 1995. Rusyns and Ukrainians in the Republic of Croatia – immigration and the situation before 1991]. In: S. Burda, ed. Rusyns and Ukrainians in the Republic of Croatia (1991–1995). Zagreb, pp.25–29. (In Croatian) Szekely, A. B., 1996. Hungarian Minority in Croatia and Slovenia. Nationalities Pa-pers, 24 (3), pp.483–489. Takać, G., 1991. Miklushevtsi's military chronology (1). New opinion, 92/93, p.11. (In Ruthenian) Takać, G., 1992a. Miklushevtsi's military chronology (2). New opinion, 92/93, pp.20–23. (In Ruthenian) Takać, G., 1992b. Miklushevtsi's military chronology (3). New opinion, 92/93, pp.9–12. (In Ruthenian) Takać, G., 1992c. Miklushevtsi's military chronology (4). New opinion, 92/93, pp.5–9. (In Ruthenian) Takać, G., 1992d. Petrovtsi fell among the last (1). New opinion, 92/93, pp.24–27. (In Ruthenian) Takać, G., 1992e. Petrovtsi fell among the last (2). New opinion, 92/93, pp.13–18. (In Ruthenian) Takać, G., 1992f. Petrovtsi fell among the last (3). New opinion, 92/93, pp.10–13. (In Ruthenian) Tatalović, S., 1997. Minority Peoples and Minorities. Zagreb. (In Croatian) Varga, B., 2016. Tragedy of Ukrainians and Ruthenians from Vukovar. [online] Avialable at: http://balkans.aljazeera.net/vijesti/tragedija-ukrajinaca-i-rusina-iz-vukovara [Accessed 10 may 2021] (in Croatian) Wertheimer-Baletić, A., 1993. One and a half centuries in the numerical development of the population of Vukovar and the Vukovar region. Social research, 4–5 / God. 2, Br. 2–3, pp.455–478. (In Croatian) Zivić, D., 2006. Demographic framework and losses during the Homeland War and postwar period. In: Z., Radelić, ed. The creation of the Croatian state and the Homeland War, pp.420–4 83. (In Croatian)
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0203-9494
    Uniform Title: Колабораціонізм русинів й українців Хорватії під час сербсько-хорватської війни (1991–1995)
    URL: Issue
    RVK:
    Language: Unknown
    Publisher: Ivan Franko National University of Lviv
    Publication Date: 2021
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 3063737-5
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...