Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_R - Russian Culture General
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 6     101-104 of 104    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6 
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Russian Culture General:     more books (100)
  1. Mother Russia: The Feminine Myth in Russian Culture (Midland Book) by Joanna Hubbs, 1993-09
  2. The Rebirth of Russian Democracy: An Interpretation of Political Culture by Nicolai N. Petro, 1998-06-09
  3. Performing Russia: Folk Revival and Russian Identity (Basees/Routledgecurzon Series on Russian and East European Studies, 7) by Laura Olson, 2004-03-04
  4. Alexander Tcherepnin: The Saga of a Russian Emigre Composer (Russian Music Studies) by Ludmila Korabelnikova, 2007-10-30
  5. Songs for Fat People: Affect, Emotion, and Celebrity in the Russian Popular Song, 1900-1955 by David MacFadyen, 2003-02
  6. Youth in Revolutionary Russia: Enthusiasts, Bohemians, Delinquents (Indiana-Michigan Series in Russian and East European Studies) by Anne E. Gorsuch, 2000-11
  7. Russian Pulp by Anthony Olcott, 2001-11-15
  8. The Dogmatic Principles of Soviet Philosophy (as of 1958): Synopsis of the `Osnovy Marksistskoy Filosofii' with complete index. Translated from the German ... the Russian by T.J. Blakeley (Sovietica) by J.M. Bochenski, 1963-07-31
  9. Semiotics of Russian Cultural History: Essays by Iurii M. Lotman, Lidiia Ia. Ginsburg, Boris A. Uspenskii by Alexander D. Nakhimovsky, 1985-03
  10. Estrada: Grand Narratives and the Philosophy of the Russian Popular Song Since Perestroika by David MacFadyen, 2002-12
  11. Russian Philosophical Terminology (in English, German, Russian and French) (Sovietica) by K.G. Ballestrem, 1965-07-31
  12. Lavrov - Years of Emigration Letters and Documents in Two Volumes: Vol. I: Lavrov and Lopatin (Correspondence 1870-1883) Vol. II: Other Correspondence ... and Varia (Russian Series on Social History)
  13. Short Handbook of Communist Ideology: Synopsis of the `Osnovy marksizma-leninizma' with complete index. Translated from the German in accordance with the Russian by T.J. Blakeley (Sovietica) by H. Fleischer, 1965-07
  14. The Morphology of Russian Mentality: A Philosophical Inquiry into Conservatism and Pragmatism by Vladimir A. Zviglyanich, 1993-05

101. He Information Society & Technology (IST) In Russian Culture: Strategic Review
In turn the situation is then described of elements of the russian cultural sectorgeneral overview including contemporary arts, libraries, museums, archives
http://www.cpic.ru/Publicat/46-02.htm
Nadezda V Brakker, Leonid A Kujbyshev Centre on the Problems of Informatisation in the sphere of Culture (Centre PIC) The 5 th Magistralnaja ul, 5, Moscow 123007, Russia Tel/Fax: +7 095 940 02 84 Email: lku@artinfo.ru WEB: www.evarussia.ru Abstract: The paper presents new trends in state information policy in the Russian cultural sphere; legislation supporting the information society; the best examples of IST in Russian museums, galleries, libraries, archives, non-movable heritage, performing arts; new perspectives of international co-operation Key words: information society technologies, Internet, culture, art, museums, libraries, archives, non-movable heritage, Russia, State policy, EVA, international co-operation
Introduction
'Culture x Technology' is an extremely important strategic area for Russia. Despite the economic problem of the last decade, substantial progress has been made in this field and with international help from organizations such as Mellon, Soros Foundation, UNESCO and the European Union the pace is increasing. The paper begins with an overview of the 'face of the Russian Internet' before describing Russian government policy and the Internet. In turn the situation is then described of elements of the Russian cultural sector: general overview including contemporary arts, libraries, museums, archives and non-moveable heritage.

102. Russian
working toward the BA in russian must meet the College of Liberal Arts and Sciencesgeneral degree requirements 041098 Introduction to russian culture, 3 sh.
http://www.registrar.uiowa.edu/registrar/catalog/CollegeofLiberalArtsandSciences
Go To Page Catalog Home About Iowa Learning At UI Student Life Resources Colleges Continuing Educ Admin Officers Faculty Iowa Code
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
Page Index
Russian
Program coordinators: Margaret H. Mills, Russell Valentino
Professor: Margaret H. Mills
Professors emeriti: Vadim Kreyd, Norman Luxenburg, Ray J. Parrott Jr., Helene A. Scriabine, Harry B. Weber
Associate professor: Russell Valentino
Associate professor emeritus: Christopher A. Wertz
Assistant professor emerita: Miriam J. Gelfand
Undergraduate degree: B.A. in Russian
Undergraduate nondegree program: minor in Russian
Graduate degree: M.A. in Russian
Department web site: http://www.uiowa.edu/~russian The Russian program trains students in both written and spoken Russian and in Russian literature. It also provides them with an understanding and appreciation of Russian culture. A knowledge of Russian is seldom an end in itself; rather it complements another endeavor. Accordingly, the program encourages all of its students to pursue a joint major and to develop their interests in related or complementary fields. Traditionally at Iowa, many students have combined study of Russian with a double major in economics, global studies, history, journalism and mass communication, or political science. Recent trends have shown an increase in Russian students pursuing the International Business Certificate. These students enhance their future employment opportunities and lay a better foundation for graduate and professional programs in Russian area studies.

103. The Russian Church And Native Alaskan Cultures
In the Beginning Was the Word. The russian Church and Native Alaskan Cultures. WARNING. The text and images in this exhibit are for the personal use of students, scholars, and the public. by the
http://lcweb.loc.gov/exhibits/russian/s1a.html
In the Beginning Was the Word
The Russian Church and Native Alaskan Cultures
WARNING
The text and images in this exhibit are for the personal use of students, scholars,
and the public. Any commercial use or publication of them is strictly prohibited.
The coming together of a renowned scholar and a rich, but relatively unknown and unused archive of historically significant documents is a rare phenomenon. Last winter the Librarian of Congress, Dr. James H. Billington, asked Dr. Vyacheslav Ivanov, one of the foremost linguists of our day, to review and evaluate the Alaskan Russian Church Archives, and to select some items for an exhibition. This installation is the direct result of that encounter, and it offers a rare opportunity to witness the insights that such an exchange can produce. In the space of little more than a month, Dr. Ivanov scoured hundreds of documents in the Archive, probing deeply for the vital, historical truths that lay within them. The results of that remarkably intense experience were an evaluative essay written by Dr. Ivanov about the Archive; an oral presentation of his findings and observations, shared with Dr. Billington and interested Library staff; and this exhibition based on objects Dr. Ivanov selected and commented upon while reviewing them, day after day, in the Manuscript Division, whose staff generously provided a room and brought forth box after box of documents. In confronting these documents, mostly written in Russian but some in the Alaskan Native languages of Aleut, Eskimo, and Tlingit, Dr. Ivanov has resuscitated the vibrant, incredibly moving human exchanges that took place between the priests of the Russian Orthodox Church in Alaska and Native Alaskans, during the years 1794 to about 1915. These remarkable priests, intrepid heroes such as the Russian "giant" Ioann Veniaminov and the Creole Iakov Netsvetov, were not merely essential to the success of the colony established by the Russian American Company in 1784, they were also the agents through which much of the culture and languages of Native Alaskans were preserved. Only in recent years has the magnitude of their achievement been recognized and most appropriately during this 200th anniversary of the founding of the first Orthodox mission in North America in 1794.

104. ÀâòîÏðàéì | Îôèöèàëüíûé äèëåð LAND ROVER è RENAULT â
The summary for this russian page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://www.avtoprime.ru/

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 6     101-104 of 104    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6 

free hit counter