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         Slavic:     more books (100)
  1. Illuminated Gospel of st Matthews : Iconographic Calligraphy and Illuminations in the Byzantine Slavic Tradition
  2. Reciprocity Between the Various Tribes and Dialects of the Slavic Nation by Jan Kollar, 2009-03-30
  3. Nicolaas van Wijk (1880-1941): Slavist, linguist, philanthropist (Studies in Slavic and General Linguistics 31) (Studies in Slavic & General Linguistics) by Jan Paul Hinrichs, 2006-05-30
  4. Formal Approaches to Slavic Linguistics #16: The Stony Brook Meeting 2007 (Michigan Slavic Materials) by Andrei Antonenko, John F. Bailyn, et all 2008-05-31
  5. Poles Apart: Women in Modern Polish Culture (Indiana Slavic Studies)
  6. My Share in the Stolypin Agrarian Reforms (Odense University Slavic Studies) by C. A. Kofoed, 1985-12
  7. Engendering Slavic Literatures
  8. Keys to the Gift: A Guide to Vladimir Nabokov's Novel (Studies in Russian and Slavic Literatures, Cultures, and History) by Yuri Leving, 2011-02-24
  9. The Overcoming of History in 'War and Peace' (Studies in Slavic Literature and Poetics, 42) by Jeff Love, 2004-08
  10. Myth and Symbol in Soviet Fiction: Images of the Savior Hero, Great Mother, Anima, and Child in Selected Novels and Films (Studies in Slavic Language and Literature) by Thomas F. Rogers, 1992-03
  11. The schizoid nature of modern Hebrew: A Slavic language in search of a Semitic past (Mediterranean language and culture monograph series) by Paul Wexler, 1990
  12. Grammars and Dictionaries of the Slavic Languages from the Middle Ages Up to 1850: An Annotated Bibliography by Edward Stankiewicz, 1985-03
  13. A historical phonology of the Slovene language (Historical phonology of the Slavic languages) by Marc L Greenberg, 2000
  14. South Slavic Discourse Particles (Pragmatics & Beyond New Series)

101. GOLOSA - THIRD EDITION
Richard Robin, Karen EvansRomaine, Galina Shatalina, Joanna Robin. Information. FAQ. For teachers. Contact Prentice Hall. Audio Book 1 Book 2. Video. Grammar.
http://www.gwu.edu/~slavic/golosa/golosa.htm
Richard Robin, Karen Evans-Romaine, Galina Shatalina, Joanna Robin Information FAQ For teachers Contact ...
Prentice Hall
Audio
Book 1
Book 2 Video Grammar ... Supplements
This page also contains links to the Second Edition
Webmaster: Richard Robin Help! I don't see îëîñà in Cyrillic!

102. WHAT IS SEES?
slavic East European Section Section Information SEES Committees SEES Officers Annual Newsletter SEES Bylaws Conference Information SEES Programs Conference
http://www.gwu.edu/~sees/
S
E
ast
E uropean
S ection
Section Information
SEES Committees
SEES Officers
Annual Newsletter
SEES Bylaws

Conference Information
SEES Programs
Conference Minutes
Conference Schedule

Other Information
Internet LinksGeneral
Internet LinksSlavlibs
Slavic Cataloging FAQ
What Is SEES?
The Slavic and East European Section (SEES) represents over 300 librarians and specialists involved in Slavic and East European studies. In addition to Russia and the countries of Eastern and Central Europe, the section is concerned with those aspects of library service relating to the study of the Baltic, Central Asia and the Caucasus. The Section came into being in 1963 with the establishment of three committees. Today these committees are the Committee for the Continuing Education on Slavic and East European Librarianship in North America, the Automated Bibliographic Control Committee and the Newsletter Committee. In 1990 the section expanded its focus with the creation of the Committee for the Preservation of Slavic Materials and Special Collections and again in 1998 with the addition of the Electronic Resources Committee.
To Get Involved In SEES
Everyone interested is welcome at Slavic and East European Section meetings and activities. For further information about SEES committees, please refer to the

103. Slavic Languages - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
slavic languages. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. The slavic languages (also called Slavonic languages) are the languages of the slavic peoples.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavic_languages
Slavic languages
From Wikipedia , the free encyclopedia.
The Slavic languages (also called Slavonic languages ) are the languages of the Slavic peoples . They are a group of Indo-European languages spoken in most of Eastern Europe , much of the Balkans , parts of Central Europe , and the northern part of Asia Scholars divide the Slavic languages into three branches: Map of Slavic languages in eastern Europe The tripartite division of the Slavic languages does not take into account the spoken dialects of each language. Of these, certain so-called transitional dialects and hybrid dialects often bridge the gaps between different languages, showing similarities that are not apparent when Slavic literary (i.e., standard) languages are compared. There are, however, enough differences existing between the various Slavic dialects and languages to make communication between Slavs of different nationalities difficult, but not impossible. Within the individual Slavic languages, dialects may vary to a lesser degree, as in Russian, or to a much greater degree, as in Slovenian. Modern

104. Slavic - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
slavic. (Redirected from Slav). Slav, slavic or Slavonic can refer to
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slav
Slavic
From Wikipedia , the free encyclopedia.
(Redirected from Slav Slav Slavic or Slavonic can refer to: This is a disambiguation page; that is, one that points to other pages that might otherwise have the same name. If you followed a link here, you might want to go back and fix that link to point to the appropriate specific page. Views Personal tools Navigation Search Toolbox

105. Department Of Slavic Languages, Georgetown University
Provides contentbased instruction in Russian, Ukrainian, and Polish as well as a variety of courses in Russian literature, culture, and linguistics. Undergraduate major and minor in Russian and a concentration within the M.A. degree in Russian Area Studies. Cources, faculty, and activities.
http://www.georgetown.edu/departments/slavic/
Updated 6/17/03
Georgetown University

106. Slavic Shamanism Psi Research
RESONATE. FROM slavic MYSTERIES TO CONTEMPORARY PSI RESEARCH AND BACK, Part 3 by Larissa Vilenskaya Menlo Park, California. WHERE
http://www.resonateview.org/places/writings/larissa/myth.htm
FROM SLAVIC MYSTERIES TO CONTEMPORARY PSI RESEARCH AND BACK, Part 3
by Larissa Vilenskaya
Menlo Park, California

WHERE MYTH MERGES WITH REALITY: SLAVIC MYSTERIES "To see a world in a grain of sand
And a heaven in a wild flower,
Hold infinity in the palm of your hand
And eternity in an hour.
He who doubts from what he sees
Will ne'er believe, do what you please.
If the sun and moon should doubt
They'd immediately go out." William Blake (1757-1827), Poems from the Pickering Manuscript (c. 1805), Auguries of Innocence. Initiation Rituals in the Slavic Tradition: Traces in Mythology Among all the strange characters of the Russian folk tales, Baba-Yaga is perhaps the one who occurs most frequently and is the best known. She is believed to have a horrifying appearance. An aged, ugly crone, she is emaciated like a skeleton. Indeed, she is sometimes called Baba-Yaga Bony Leg. Her nose and teeth are long and sharp. She is usually depicted living in the forest, riding in a mortar, rowing herself along with a pestle and brushing her traces away with a broom. This strange figure appears to be connected with the world of the dead. Not only does she look like a skeleton herself but the fence and gates of her house are built of human bones, along the top of which are stuck human skulls with glaring eyes. Some folklore researchers (e.g., Propp, 1986:73, 77) say this house and its mistress guard the frontier between the territory of mortals and the spirit world.

107. College Of Humanities Hilandar Library
The world's largest microform collection of medieval slavic manuscripts.
http://www.cohums.ohio-state.edu/cmrs/rcmss/
Students - Faculty - Alumni - News - ... Directory
Thank you
... for visiting the Web site of the Hilandar Library at The Ohio State University. We want your visit with us to be as informative and enjoyable as possible. To achieve this goal we have recently updated our servers and have moved our site. We are now located at: http://cmrs.osu.edu/rcmss/ This page will soon redirect you to the new site. If you do not wish to wait for it to do so, please select the URL above and the link will immediately take you to the new Home page. We are sorry for any inconvenience. Hopefully the efficiency and usefulness of the new location will make up for this temporary nuisance. College of Humanities , 186 University Hall, 230 North Oval Mall, Columbus, OH 43210 P:614-292-1882, F:614-292-8666 croley.1@osu.edu.

108. Slavic Magick
slavic Magick Folk Medicine. Spoiling Spoiling is a slavic term for cursing. The following spells are posted here only for research purposes
http://members.aol.com/hpsofsnert/slavrit.html
Spells
Divinations Remedies Superstitions
Spells • Prosperity and Domestic Tranquility
To Attract a Domovoi:
Go outside of your home wearing your finest clothing and say aloud "Dedushka Dobrokhot, Please come into my house and tend the flocks."
To rid yourself of a rival Domovoi: Sometimes a home may have one too many Domoviki. In this case poltergeist-like activity may occur. Beat the walls of your home with a broom shouting "Grandfather Domovoi, help me chase away this intruder."
•To Gain Magickal Knowledge
Calling a Leshii:
Cut down an Aspen tree so that it's top falls facing the East. Bend over and look through your legs saying "Leshi, Forest Lord, Come to me now; not as a grey wolf, not as a black raven, not as a flaming fir tree, but as a man."
The leshii will teach the arts of magick to any whom he befriends.
from Ivanits - Russian Folk Lore)
•For Love
a zagorovui, or runespell, to capture the one you love:
In the ocean sea, on the island of Buyan, there live three brothers, three winds: the first Northern, the second Eastern and the third Western. Waft, O winds, bring on (lover's name) sorrow and dreariness so that without me s/he may not be able to spend a day nor pass an hour! and yet another...

109. Nouvelle Page 1
slavic and East European Studies (EBSEES) Europäische
http://www1.msh-paris.fr/betuee/
Bibliographie européenne des travaux sur l'ex-URSS et l'Europe de l'Est
European Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies (EBSEES)
Europäische Bibliographie zur Osteuropaforschung I
Présentation I Liste des institutions participant à la base I Aide à l'interrogation I Contacts I English version ISSN 1638-1742
Maison des Sciences de l'Homme, 54 boulevard Raspail, 75270 Paris cedex o6 - France

110. Department Of Germanic And Slavic Languages
Information about the department and classes offered.
http://germslav.byu.edu/
Mission Statement Contact Us Job Openings Mission Statement Contact Us Job Openings

111. Department Of Slavic Languages And Literatures, University Of Pittsburgh
department of slavic languages and literatures. UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH. The new SLI site is now up and running. Please click here to visit the site.
http://www.pitt.edu/~slavic/
department of slavic
languages and literatures UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH
The new SLI site is now up and running. Please click here to visit the site. The new SLI application is now available as well! You can view it here . Details about our excellent six, eight, and nine-week programs in Pittsburgh, Moscow and Poland in East European languages are now available. Also, we are pleased to announce a new study abroad program in Bulgaria. Scholarship opportunities are available; please refer to the SLI application or email us for further information.
Our culture courses such as Vampire: Blood and Empire and Russian Fairy Tales (CAS) and (Saturday College) are also offered in the summer session.
Undergraduate Program
Courses Faculty
Graduate Program
... CREES Virtual Library

112. Slavic Dept., WCAS
Graduate Undergraduate Language Programs Study Abroad Upcoming Events Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences Department of slavic Languages and
http://www.slavic.northwestern.edu/
The Department of Slavic Languages and Literature provides a rich array of courses both for majors and for students who may take only one or two of our offerings. Our extremely popular courses in English translation cover 19th and 20th-century Russian literature, visual arts and theatre, East European literature and society, Russian and East European cinema, and Slavic and Russian civilization.
Courses in literature and culture are structured to allow our faculty to work closely with students, helping them to appreciate broad processes of literary and cultural evolution, literary theory, and aesthetics as well as to improve their analytic reading and writing skills. All members of the faculty teach undergraduate and graduate courses, and many have won awards for their teaching. Our diverse and productive faculty members are committed to excellence and imagination without attempting in any way to impose a specific research or teaching model. This lends the program a characteristic eclecticism, which we feel is its greatest strength. Andrew Wachtel
Bertha and Max Dressler Professor in the Humanities
Chair, Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures

113. SLAVIC STUDIES
Annual publication devoted to slavic and Central European studies (mostly history, politics, literature) issued by the slavic Research Center at Hokkaido University in Japan. Full versions of the articles (in Japanese) are available in pdf files. Detailed abstracts in English online.
http://src-h.slav.hokudai.ac.jp/publictn/slavic-studies/slavicstu-e.html
May.2004 SLAVIC
STUDIES
No.51
Contents

(PDF format ( including English/Russian Summary) Contributors
- PDF format ( including English/Russian Summary Back Numbers
(contents only) Only English/Russian Summary Publisher : Slavic Research Center, Hokkaido Univ.
Contact : mika@slav.hokudai.ac.jp
SRC Home
Japanese
English Acta Slavica Iaponica
Proceedings of Symposia
...
List of All Publications

114. Connecticut College - Slavic Studies
Chair's letter plus information on faculty, academics, events and students.
http://camel2.conncoll.edu/academics/departments/slavicstudies/

Slavic Studies

Home
Faculty Major ...
requirements
Courses
Catalog

Web-based

Interdisciplinary

Studies
... Links
Slavic Studies
Several features set Slavic Studies apart from other Humanities departments at Connecticut College. Our academic program is interdisciplinary in its design; the Slavic Studies major encompasses courses not only in language and literature, but also in linguistics, history, philosophy and film studies. At the same time, we encourage our students to propose alternate paths to completing major requirements in order to meet their academic potential and interests. A unique asset of our first-year language curriculum is an intensive team-taught course in beginning Russian that blends the study of language and Russian literary masterpieces. In Slavic Studies we teach not only Russian, but also Czech, Croatian and Polish as Individual Study courses. We currently have students in three Slavic languages. In order to accomplish the above, the Department draws on its diverse faculty: Eva Eckert, a linguist by training, chairs Slavic Studies and teaches its courses in Russian, Czech and linguistics. Andrea Lanoux, a graduate of UCLA, teaches courses on Russian literature and film in both Russian and English, in addition to Polish language. Marijan Despalatovic teaches Russian literary masterpieces as well as intellectual history, semiotics of film, Marxism and Croatian language. Sofi Pais, a native speaker of Russian, teaches advanced courses in Russian language and literature. In the fall of 2004 we will welcome Charles Arndt of Brown University to teach elementary and intermediate Russian language.

115. Russian 110 Handouts: East Slavic Paganism
EAST slavic PAGANISM. The slavic peoples held the IndoEuropean concept of a universe divided into the three realms of heaven, earth, and an underworld.
http://pandora.cii.wwu.edu/vajda/russ110/handout_p1_paganism.htm
EAST SLAVIC PAGANISM
1. Indo-European heritage.
The Slavs inherited from the Indo-Europeans a threefold functional division of society (called tripartition ) into priest-rulers warriors , and peasant-producers . The Slavic peoples held the Indo-European concept of a universe divided into the three realms of heaven earth , and an underworld . This tripartite division of the worldly universe was sometimes called by the deity name Triglav , which means "three-head". In what we can piece together of the ancient Slavic pantheon, each realm had its own set of divinities, and each class seems to have worshipped its own favorite gods. 2. Gods of sun, sky or atmosphere (worshipped mainly by the priestly or warrior class).
Belbog
(BELL-bog), also called Div , the god of life. The general, distant god of good, law and order opposed to Chernobog , the god of evil. (Slavs worshipped him too as a sort of insurance.) These were gods of the priestly class. The following more defined atmospheric gods seem to have been important to both the priestly and the warrior classes: Svarog (SVAR-ug) God of the sky (cf. Sanskrit

116. Slavic Languages University Of Texas At Austin
Programs of study, course descriptions, language information and list of tutors and translators in Russian, Czech, Polish, Serbian, Croatian and other slavic languages.
http://www.utexas.edu/cola/depts/slavic/index.htm
This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them.

117. UCLA Library Slavic & East European Studies
UCLA Library Collections and Internet Resources in slavic EAST EUROPEAN STUDIES. Boyan Cooperatives UCLA slavic and East European Collections.
http://www.library.ucla.edu/libraries/url/colls/slavic/
UCLA Library Collections and Internet Resources in:
Boyan - legendary Russian bard;
verso of Borodin commemorative medal; designed by Iurii F. Ivanov, Leningrad, 1984
Contents
UCLA Slavic and East European Collections UCLA Slavic and East European Academic Units Slavic and East European Online News Services Online Directories ... Slavic and East European Library Cooperatives
UCLA Slavic and East European Collections
Return to Contents
UCLA Slavic and East European Academic Units
Return to Contents
Slavic and East European Online News Services (For Subscriptions)
Return to Contents
Return to Contents
Online Directories

118. Slavic Languages And Literature - Princeton University
Top/Reference/Education/Colleges_and_Universities/North_America/United_States/New_Jersey/Princeton_University/Departments
http://www.princeton.edu/~slavic/
site by GreggSmith.com

119. Library Slavic Department
Collections, guides, bibliographies, databases.
http://www.ukans.edu/~slavlib/
The University of Kansas Libraries Slavic Department Watson Library
University of Kansas
Lawrence, KS 66045
husic@ku.edu [Search this site] [Email] [KU Libraries Home]
KU Libraries Slavic Dept. Links
[Library Slavic Dept. Collection, Staff, Hours] [Departmental News (updated [Gifts to our Library] [Consortial Documentation] ... [Technical support (Software, Cyrillic fonts, etc.)]
Databases Pertaining to Slavic Studies
(May require authorized logon)
[ABSEES Online]
[Columbia International Affairs Online (CIAO)] [Current Digest of the Soviet/Post-Soviet Press] (1984-2002 backfile avialable on CD-rom in Watson Reference) [EastView Russian/NIS Universal Database] Foreign Broadcast Information Service(1975-1996 archives only) [Erik Herron's Guide to Post-Communist States] [ISI Emerging Markets] ... [World News Connection]
Other KU Slavic Sites
[University of Kansas Slavic Languages Department] [KU center for Russian and East European Studies]
Other Recommended Slavic Sites
[REESWeb (University of Pittsburgh)]

120. Canadian Association Of Slavists
An organization of teachers and scholars in the field of slavic and related studies in Canada.
http://www.utoronto.ca/slavic/cas/
CANADIAN ASSOCIATION OF SLAVISTS
ASSOCIATION CANADIENNE des SLAVISTES

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