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         Russian Culture General:     more books (100)
  1. Commerce in Russian Urban Culture, 1861--1914 (Woodrow Wilson Center Press)
  2. Russian Literary Culture in the Camera Age (Basees/Routledgecurzon Series on Russian and East European Studies, 14) by Steph Hutchings, 2004-10-28
  3. Russian Americans (Cultures of America) by Steven Ferry, 1995-09
  4. Russian Children's Literature and Culture
  5. Writing a Usable Past: Russian Literary Culture 1917-1937 (SRLT) by Angela Brintlinger, 2000-06-01
  6. Russian Intellectual Culture in Transition: The Future in the Past by Alexei Elfimov, 2004-03-01
  7. Musical explores clash of Russian, Jewish culture.(Entertainment): An article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
  8. Russian Society and Culture and the Long Eighteenth Century: Esays in Honour of Anthony G. Cross (History: Research and Science) by Roger Bartlett, 2005-02-01
  9. Fiction's Overcoat: Russian Literary Culture and the Question of Philosophy by Edith W. Clowes, 2004-04-30
  10. Central Asians Under Russian Rule: A Study in Culture Change (Cornell Paperbacks) by Elizabeth E. Bacon, 1980-12-31
  11. Russian Masculinities iIn History and Culture
  12. Journeys to a Graveyard: Perceptions of Europe in Classical Russian Travel Writing (International Archives of the History of Ideas / Archives internationales d'histoire des idées) by Derek Offord, 2006-01-31
  13. Film Posters of the Russian Avant-Garde (Jumbo) by Susan Pack, 1996-06
  14. Values of Islamic Culture and the Experience of History: Russian Philosophical Studies (Cultural Heritage and Contemporary Change. Series Iva, Eastern ... Europe Vol 13 Series Iia, Islam Vol 9)

61. Projects Concerning Culture (general) In RUSSIAN FEDERATION
Projects concerning culture (general) in russian FEDERATION. Legend C=Consulting,F=Financing, L=Lobbying, N=Networking, O=Overseas Activity, P=Publishing,
http://66.201.75.104/list/..\PROJ\z1138014.htm
Projects concerning Culture (general) in RUSSIAN FEDERATION
Legend : C=Consulting, F=Financing, L=Lobbying, N=Networking, O=Overseas Activity, P=Publishing, R=Research/Survey
Click here to have a more detailed description of the symbols used. place (region) year(s) - (-) 1993-1995 (O) Aid to Artisans (ATA-USA) Project Cooperating for Cooperation - webmaster@coop4coop.org
(page generated on 5/1/01)

62. Russian - RUSS
The transformation of russian culture after 1917 literature, art, Investigationof special problems under the general direction of a staff member.
http://www.uic.edu/ucat/courses/RUSS.html
Russian - RUSS
The information below lists courses approved in this subject area effective Fall, 2005 . Not all courses will necessarily be offered these terms. Please consult the Schedule of Classes for a listing of courses offered for a specific term.
500-level courses require graduate standing.

Back to Course Index
Elementary Russian I
4 hours.
Phonetics, introductory grammar, and reading. Four additional half hours each week in the language laboratory. Prerequisite(s) : For students who have had no formal work in Russian. Elementary Russian II
4 hours.
Continues RUSS 101. Four additional half hours each week in the language laboratory. Prerequisite(s) : RUSS 101 or the equivalent. Intermediate Russian I
4 hours.
Continues RUSS 102. Four additional half hours each week in the language laboratory. Prerequisite(s) : RUSS 102 or the equivalent. Intermediate Russian II
4 hours.
Continues RUSS 103. Four additional half hours each week in the language laboratory. Prerequisite(s) : RUSS 103 or the equivalent. Russian Culture Before the Revolution
3 hours.

63. "Screening The Word" Conference
VISUAL ADAPTATIONS OF LITERATURE IN russian AND SOVIET culture adaptations sayabout the fate of russian literary culture (literary culture in general)
http://www.surrey.ac.uk/lcts/lvmg/conference.htm
SCREENING THE WORD:
VISUAL ADAPTATIONS OF LITERATURE IN RUSSIAN AND SOVIET CULTURE
An International Conference to be Held at the University of Surrey
Literature and Visual Media Research Group, 28-30 May 2002
Click here for the conference programme
W.J.T. Mitchell describes word-image boundaries as the site at which the fundamental contradictions of culture are acted out. Perhaps the most important 20th-century manifestation of this boundary is the coming together of cinematic (or television) screen and literary text through film adaptations ( ekranizatsii ) of fiction - a phenomenon which has given literary culture a new lease on life. Given the social and moral burden carried by literature in Russia (where it has, since the nineteenth century, been linked with the biblical Word), and given the key role allotted by Lenin and Stalin to cinema in shoring up Communist ideology, this is particularly true of Soviet and Post-Soviet culture. This international conference aims to explore themes relating to the image-text boundary by examining a broad range of topics centred around: 1) Russian, Soviet and Postsoviet film and television adaptions of fiction, and 2) general issues connected with the relationship between the verbal and the visual in Russian culture.
Papers might address some of the following themes/categories, although

64. Novosibirsk Summer School "Communicative Strategies Of Culture"
Theory of discourse and general communicative strategies, Discourse ofImposture in russian culture by Professor Igor Smirnov (University of Konstanze,
http://www.nsu.ru/ssc/siv/SCHOOL_E.HTM
Russian version
NOVOSIBIRSK SUMMER SCHOOL COMMUNICATIVE STRATEGIES OF CULTURE:
MODERN DISCURSIVE PRACTICES
August 3-20, 2000 General Info
Program

Languages

Participants
...
Contacts
General Information
Novosibirsk academic community is pleased to announce the 3d international Novosibirsk International Summer School 2000 and to invite you to attend its program "Communicative Strategies of Culture". The aim of this Summer School is - in a three week intensive training program, to be held in Novosibirsk - to encourage interested young faculty members and researchers from states of CIS and new Baltic countries to get acquainted with studies in communicative strategies of modern culture. The distinct interdisciplinary nature of the Summer school is becoming its major feature. The problems of communicative culturology is important for the wide spectrum of humanitarian disciplines - history, philosophy, psychology, anthropology, sociology, linguistics, literature, etc. By that, the Summer School is addressing one of the most important trends in the development of modern humanities, making an effort for methodological and objective synthesis of the earlier separate humanitarian disciplines. Within the framework of the Summer School, lectures on proposed topics given by leading Russian and foreign researchers, conducting seminars and workshops, organisation of the round table discussions, preparation of individual research projects by the School participants, informal research communication are planned.

65. 2004 TLC Clusters
PSY 202, general Psychology, 3 credits. ALS 199, TLC Cohort, 3 credits The russian culture TLC allows students start learning russian while also
http://oregonstate.edu/ap/TLC/2004_clusters.htm
TLC Course Clusters Fall Term 2004 Community Service What's Going On With Your Family? Education Effective Communication ... Women Engineering Their Futures Community Service - Affiliated with Halsell Hall Do you enjoy working with people and giving back to the community? Students in this TLC join an active group dedicated to learning through service. The cluster courses give participants the opportunity to learn about issues affecting society and to get an introduction to the basic computer software applications vital to college students. SOC 204 Introduction to Sociology 3 credits PHL 205 Ethics 4 credits ALS 199 TLC Cohort 3 credits What's Going On With Your Family? - Affiliated with Callahan Hall Motivation and emotion; personality and lifespan development - it's all here in this TLC to give you a better grasp on human behavior. This is an excellent cluster for those interested in psychology, human development, or pre-elementary education. HDFS 201 Individual and Family Development 3 credits PSY 202 General Psychology 3 credits ALS 199 TLC Cohort 3 credits - Affiliated with Hawley-Buxton Hall

66. Russian At WSU
Students should consult the general Catalog for course planning and must meet course russian Area Studies Study russian language and culture.
http://academics.wsu.edu/fields/study.asp?id=RUS_T

67. The Image Of Ukraine And The Ukrainians In Russian Political Thought (1860-1945)
which could be utilized for the enrichment of culture in general. By Struve,only one high and dominant russian culture was to be permitted in the
http://src-h.slav.hokudai.ac.jp/publictn/acta/16/volodymyr/volodymyr-2.html
ACTA SLAVICA IAPONICA No.16 (1998) Slavic Research Center ,Hokkaido University.
Second generation
At the turn of the century the Russian liberal opposition was enforcing its ideas of individual liberty and the ways of limiting the dominant role of tsar and the state. The opposition was doing it at first through zemstvos and dumas and then through different professional organizations. In the autumn of 1905 the first congresses of legal liberal parties were taking place, and in April 1906 Russia became a constitutional monarchy.
The two foremost theorists of the twentieth-century Russian liberalism were Pavel Miliukov (1859-1943) and Petr Struve (1870-1944). In his first scholarly works Miliukov tried to underline the difference between Kievan period of Russian history from the Moscow one. Three major premises connect the vision of Russian history by Miliukov in his early historical works: the changeability of Russia throughout its existence, due to its own internal dynamic; in decided contrast to this, the external nature of the formative influences on the state order, culture and national ideas; and the fact of the imposition of borrowed culture from above. Also of great importance was the decision to exclude Kievan history from the history of state order and of national ideas, since "in the north-east there were entirely different conditions of historical development than in the south." At the same time this statement represents a retreat from his bolder assertion, in the lecture course, that "The ancient Kievan period of our history is separated from more recent times not only chronologically, but actually."

68. PAPER XII TWENTIETH-CENTURY RUSSIAN LITERATURE -
The Cambridge Companion to Modern russian culture (Cambridge, 1998). Monographs on individual figures with good general accounts of the period include
http://www.mod-langs.ox.ac.uk/russian/ppxii.html

PAPER XII TWENTIETH-CENTURY RUSSIAN LITERATURE
Back to Bibliographies Back to Russian Sub-Faculty Home

LIST OF BACKGROUND READING
The list below comprises well-annotated works, for the most part published recently or fairly so, and mostly in English, which are available in Oxford libraries. The bias is towards the first half of the twentieth century (but this reflects the present state of scholarship as well.) Further and more detailed bibliography will be found in the works listed under Reference Sources below, as well as in any of the monographs. REFERENCE SOURCES:
Neil Cornwell (ed.), A Reference Guide to Russian Literature (London, 1998) Wolfgang Kasack (ed.), Lexicon of Russian Literature since 1917 (New York, 1988) (see also the improved second edition of the German original, Lexikon der russischen Literatur des 20-sten Jahrhunderts (Munich, 1992) Victor Terras (ed.)

69. PAPER VIII (1820-1917) -
The Cambridge Companion to Modern russian culture (Cambridge, 1998) has some goodarticles, eg Bassin on Asia . general HISTORIES OF russian LITERATURE
http://www.mod-langs.ox.ac.uk/russian/ppviii.html
PAPER VIII (1820-1917)
Back to Bibliographies Back to Russian Sub-Faculty Home

BACKGROUND READING GENERAL HISTORICAL BACKGROUND Richard Pipes, Russia Under the Old Regime (various edns.); J. Westwood, Endurance and Endeavour: Russian History 1812-1980 (Oxford, various edns.) Both of these are more reader-friendly than Seton Watson's classic History of the Russian Empire G. Hosking, Russia: People and Empire, 1552-1917 (London, 1997) centres on the theme of nationalism. Useful and thought-provoking. N. Rzhevsky (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Modern Russian Culture (Cambridge, 1998) has some good articles, e.g. Bassin on 'Asia'. REFERENCE GUIDES TO RUSSIAN LITERATURE Russkie pisateli: biograficheskii slovar' (Moscow, 1987-) is one of the many Russian biographical dictionaries to have run into the sand half-completed (it has been stuck for several years at volume 4, in the middle of the Ms). However, it is immensely useful for the writers it does cover (e.g. Gogol', Dostoevsky, Lermontov, Leskov). Neil Cornwell (ed.)

70. University Of Wyoming General Bulletin: Russian Course Descriptions
Nineteenth Century russian culture and Literature in English. 3. C1, W3 (none)Explores classics of russian fiction of 19th century. In English.
http://uwadmnweb.uwyo.edu/registrar/bulletin/russ.html
Main Page
Front Section

University Calendar

College/Division Programs
...
UW Home
Russian (RUSS)
1000 Level 2000 Level 3000 Level 4000 Level
1000. Practical Russian. 1-3 (Max. 3). Studies fundamentals of Russian grammar for reading comprehension in professional fields. Credit granted cannot be substituted for credit in RUSS 1010 or . (Offered based on sufficient demand and resources)
1005. Introduction to the Russian Sound System. 1 (Max. 2). Introduces phonetics, alphabet and intonation. Fifteen 50-minute lab sessions. Offered S/U only. (Offered fall and spring semesters)
1010. First Year Russian I. 4. Studies fundamentals of grammar, composition, conversation and reading. (Offered fall semester)
1020. First Year Russian II. 4. Studies fundamentals of grammar, composition, conversation and reading. Prerequisite: RUSS 1010 or two years of high school Russian. (Offered spring semester)
2005. Russian Intonation, Phonetics and Pronunciation. 1.0 (Max. 2). Reviews phonetics and intonation. For second year Russian students. Fifteen 50-minute lab sessions. Offered S/U only. Prerequisite: RUSS 1000 or . (Offered fall and spring semesters)
2030. Second Year Russian I. 4.

71. EVA 2004 Moscow The State Tretyakov Gallery 29 November - 3
Information educational multimediacourse «Introduction in art culture of western CD-ROM «The general dictionary. English-russian, russian-English»
http://conf.cpic.ru/eva2004/eng/catalog/product_100.html
EVA 2004 Moscow
The State Tretyakov Gallery
29 November - 3 December 2004
Home page
List of products List of Institutions
Data bases
Hardware Internet-Projects Multimedia Editions Printed editions Software

72. Bristol University - Russian Department - Units: Year Four
of the reforms of Peter the Great and the Westernisation of russian culture; general themes and topics to be examined will include the role of the
http://www.bris.ac.uk/russian/undergrad/ug4.html
skip menus Russian home contacts help THE DEPARTMENT Staff RUSSIAN Admissions Undergraduate programme » Unit Catalogue » First Year ... » Year Abroad » Final Year Postgraduate programme Links CZECH Admissions Undergraduate programme Links University home ... Undergraduate Programme Units: Year Four
Units: Year Four
The Final Year: Unit Descriptions
RUSS 30026 : 20th-century Short Prose [Unit director: Mr Basker]
This unit will concentrate on close reading and analysis of texts of shorter Russian prose of the 20th century (read in Russian) chosen for their formal and experimental interest. Some non-technical attention will be given to formalist theory and methods of analysis (taking as an example, for illustrative purposes, analysis of Chekhov's Student).

73. German & Slavic Studies
RUS 2710 Study of russian culture (FC) Fulfills the University general EducationForeign culture requirement. RUS 3600 Literature Before Communism (PL)
http://www.worldbridge.wayne.edu/GermanSlavic/russiancourses.html
RUS 1010: Elementary Russian
RUS 1020: Elementary Russian
RUS 2010: Intermediate Russian (FC)
Fulfills the University General Education Foreign Culture requirement.
RUS 2020: Intermediate Russian
RUS 2700: Anguish and Commitment: European Existentialish Literature (PL)
Fulfills the University General Education Philosophy and Letters requirement.
RUS 3010: Intermediate/Advanced Russian I
RUS 3020: Intermediate/Advanced Russian II
RUS 3410: Immigrant Experience (FC)
Fulfills the University General Education Foreign Culture requirement. RUS 2710: Study of Russian Culture (FC) Fulfills the University General Education Foreign Culture requirement. RUS 3600: Literature Before Communism (PL) RUS 3650: Literary Masterpieces (PL) RUS 3710: Russian and East European Film (VP) This course is an approved elective for the interdepartmental Film Studies Program, and f ulfills the University General Education Visual and Performing Arts requirement.

74. General Works (from Union Of Soviet Socialist Republics) --  Encyclopædia Brit
Maurice Friedberg, russian culture in the 1980s (1985), The general andMunicipal Workers Union was formed in 1924 by the merger of the National Union
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-42084
Home Browse Newsletters Store ... Subscribe Already a member? Log in Content Related to this Topic This Article's Table of Contents Expand all Collapse all Introduction The Russian Revolution Late tsarist Russia The February Revolution Lenin and the Bolsheviks The Bolshevik coup ... The struggle for succession The U.S.S.R. from the death of Lenin to the death of Stalin The NEP and the defeat of the Left The Party versus the peasants Postwar The U.S.S.R. from 1953 to 1991 The Khrushchev era The transition The 20th Party Congress and after Nationality policy The cultural Thaw ... Khrushchev's fall The Brezhnev era Collective leadership Economic policy Cultural retrenchment Nationality policy ... The Interregnum: Andropov and Chernenko The Gorbachev era Gorbachev's succession Economic and social reforms Political restructuring Economic policy ... The attempted coup Additional Reading General works History General The Russian Revolution The U.S.S.R. from the death of Lenin to the death of Stalin The U.S.S.R. since 1953 ... Print this Table of Contents Shopping Price: USD $1495 Revised, updated, and still unrivaled.

75. Russian Minority In General
russian Minority in Estonia general Information distressed regions) andculture (German/Westernbased Estonian culture and russian Orthodox culture).
http://www.lichr.ee/eng/researchers.analysis/russian_minority_in_general.htm
Home Search Contents Contact Information
Russian minority in General
Up Archive Differences in the Legal Status II About P.I. documents in Estonia ... Presidential Roundtable [ Russian minority in General ] The Orthodox Church in Estonia Nation Building and Integration (in pdf format) Naturalization and Integration Illegals in Estonia ... Language Legislation and the EU Russian Minority in Estonia: General Information In numbers: 406 049 (1999) Total Estonian population: 1 445 580 (1999) Language: Russian Religion: Orthodox Christians The main problem: absence of the Estonian nationality and mass-statelessness Russians are historical national minority on the territory of the Estonian Republic. Russians participated in the Estonian Independence War - the White Guard (primarily the Northwestern Army of General Judenich) together with Estonian patriots fought against bolshevism. 1920 Estonia received independence according to the Tartu Peace Treaty with the Lenin’s Government. Then the percentage of Russians in the population of the country was about 5% (other minorities - 3-4%). In some border regions they composed and still compose a majority. In 1940 Estonia was incorporated into the Soviet Union. As a result of some industrialization projects, in 1989 Russians composed 30% of population (474 834 of 1 565 662 inhabitants at the moment). The majority of them occupy the Northeastern industrialized area.

76. SFSU Russian Undergraduate Program
In this postSoviet era the study of russian language and culture, aspects ofthe russian language and culture in addition to general and specialized
http://www.sfsu.edu/~puboff/programs/undergrad/russian.htm
Russian
College of Humanities Undergraduate Programs
The Russian program offers lower division language courses and courses in advanced language, conversation, composition, linguistics, culture, and civilization as well as a considerable range of literature-both in Russian and in English translation. In this post-Soviet era the study of Russian language and culture, and the knowledge of the country as a whole, becomes even more imperative. Students are either frequently visiting Russia or working there for an extended period of time. In addition, there is now a greater availability of Russian archival material to Western students, researchers, and scholars. Today Russia's extensive natural resources and other business opportunities stimulate the interest of many businesses throughout the United States and other parts of the world. Cognizant of this reality, the Russian program strives to implement courses to respond to these various interests, which are also evident among our students. As a result, the program attempts to balance traditional academic offerings with such practically-oriented courses as Business Russian, the Contemporary Russian Press, and a Translation Workshop. Many business, science, and international relations majors take Russian as a minor or as a second major. The purpose of the Russian program of the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures is to expose its students to various aspects of the Russian language and culture in addition to general and specialized courses in literature, linguistics, and culture.

77. SFSU Bulletin 2005/06--General Education Program
Courses that fulfill the Written Communication requirement in general Education are russian culture and Civilization. RUSS 510. russian Literature I
http://www.sfsu.edu/~bulletin/current/ge.htm
GENERAL EDUCATION PROGRAM
The SFSU Bulletin describes the requirements in effect for the current year. Refer to the Bulletin Rights section of the university Bulletin for additional information about GE Program requirements and other important graduation requirements.
SEGMENT I: BASIC SUBJECTS12 units
All students must complete a minimum of twelve units in Segment I including a minimum of three units in each of the following four areas: Written Communication, Oral Communication, Critical Thinking, and Quantitative Reasoning. Specific test and course prerequisites are printed in the Undergraduate Graduation Requirements section of the Bulletin
Summary of Written English Requirements
Note: All SFSU undergraduate baccalaureate degree candidates are required to complete TWO semester-long courses in written composition (ENG 114 and ENG 214 at SFSU) or their equivalents.
  • English Placement Test (EPT): Must be taken before the first semester of attendance unless a course or test exemption is granted. Non-native speakers of English must also take the ESLPT.
  • ENG 114, First Year Composition:

78. Willamette University L College Of Liberal Arts Catalog
RUSS 233 (W; TH) russian culture russian Ways and Views of Russia (1) OR Considered against the background of general European cultural history,
http://www.willamette.edu/cla/catalog/Sect2/courses/german.html

College of Liberal Arts Catalog

GERMAN/RUSSIAN SECTION 1 l SECTION 2 l SECTION 3 l SECTION 4
GERMAN/RUSSIAN Foreign Language Department
REQUIREMENTS FOR THE GERMAN MAJOR (8 credits)
German majors are required to complete 8 credits of course work beyond the intermediate-level language courses, including Composition and Discussion, at least 1 credit in Civilization, 3 credits in Literature and a Senior Year Experience.
GERM 331
(W) German Composition and Discussion (1)
GERM 333
Contemporary German Culture (1) Three credits in German literature, from the following: (3)

79. General Russian Art
general Art and Architecture. general Art Architecture Famous Architectual Sites.general Art Dartmouth College russian culture
http://www.usc.edu/dept/LAS/IMRC/russianart/artarchitecture.HTM
General Art and Architecture General Art Architecture Famous Architectual Sites General Art This site contains an alphabetical list of major Russian artists, and has links to a few of each artist’s most famous works. Images enlarge, but not textual descriptions are available. An excellent resource on Russian painters from icons to the 20 th century avant-garde, with links to many informative texts and images. Also, this site gives concise but well-informed information on the important movements and schools of Russian art, from Neo-primitivism to Suprematism. Devoted to Russian artists before 1917, this site provides a limited selection of images by some lesser known Russian painters. The site provides no textual information on the artists, besides painting titles and dates. A comprehensive site of Russian art, with good textual information and many links with images. Wait for the welcome page to load, then click on "Culture," and then on "Art." Links here to early Russian art through art of the avant-garde, with concise historical information accompanying a selection of images. While not the most in-depth discussion you will find, these pages are a good summary and useful place to start to gain perspective on various art movements. The images enlarge, and are of decent qualitybut load slowly.

80. UO Catalog
The student completes the general education requirements for each degree 204, 205, 206 Introduction to russian Literature. 240 russian culture
http://www.uoregon.edu/~uopubs/bulletin/registration_and_academi.shtml
Information for Undergraduate
and Graduate Students
University of Oregon
:: Catalog Frontpage

:: UO Home

:: DuckWeb

Catalog
Welcome

General Information
:: Degrees, Majors, Minors,

and Certificates
:: Reader's Guide to the Catalog Entering the University :: Admissions :: Registration and Academic Policies :: Tuition and Fees ... :: Academic and Career Planning Graduate Studies and Research :: Graduate School :: Research Institutes Honors at Oregon :: Robert Donald Clark Honors College :: Honors and Awards Liberal Arts and Sciences :: College of Arts and Sciences Professional Schools :: School of Architecture and Allied Arts :: Charles H. Lundquist College of Business ... :: School of Music Academic Resources and Student Services :: Academic Resources :: Services for Students Registration and Academic Policies Academic Year Grading Systems Application for an Undergraduate Degree Bachelor's Degree Requirements ... Alternate Ways to Earn Credit Student Records Policy In compliance with the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, the University of Oregon has formulated the Student Records Policy to outline the proper handling and release of student educational records. The following is a summary of that policy. The university maintains only student records relevant to the educational or related purposes of the university. Students enrolled in the university generally have the right to inspect educational records maintained by the university that directly affect them. Those records are not released to anyone other than the student without the signed, written consent of the student, with the following exceptions: (1) university personnel who have legitimate interests, (2) at the direction of a court, (3) in situations of health or safety emergency. Upon request the university releases directory information about the student, but the student may request, in writing, that such information not be released.

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