558 research outputs found

    Istanbul University Library T.Y. transcription and content analysis of song magazine no. 03276

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    Bu çalışmada 19. yüzyılın ikinci yarısında kaleme alındığı tahmin edilen İstanbul Üniversitesi T.Y. 03276 numarada kayıtlı bulunan "Şarkı Mecmuası" incelenmiştir. Mecmuanın müellif kaydı bulunmamaktadır. Üç bölümden oluşan çalışmanın birinci bölümünde mecmuanın tanımı ve tasnifi yapılmış, güfte mecmuaları hakkında bilgiler verilmiştir. İkinci bölümde çalışmaya konu olan mecmua, "Muhteva" ve "Şekil Hususiyetleri" başlıkları altında incelenmiş "Mecmuanın İncelenmesinde Gözetilen Esaslar" başlığı altında metnin kuruluşu ve imlâ problemlerine de yer verilmiştir. Mecmuadan faydalanmayı kolaylaştırmak maksadıyla muhtevası ile ilgili tablolar hazırlanmıştır. Üçüncü bölümde metnin Osmanlıcadan günümüz harflerine aktarımı verilmiştir. Ayrıca metin içerisinde yer almayan fakat Divan Makam ve Türk Sanat Müziği Nota Arşivi gibi kaynaklarda tespit edilen bazı bilgilere de dipnot ve tablolarda yer verilmiştir.In this study, the "Şarkı Mecmuası" (Song Anthology), registered under the number T.Y. 03276 at Istanbul University, which is estimated to have been compiled in the second half of the 19th century, has been examined. The manuscript does not contain any information regarding its author. The study consists of three main sections. In the first section, the anthology is defined and classified, and general information about güfte mecmuası (lyrics anthologies) is provided. The second section analyzes the manuscript in terms of its "Content" and "Formal Characteristics," and addresses the principles followed in the examination of the text, including issues related to orthography and textual structure. To facilitate the use of the anthology, several tables regarding its content have been prepared. In the third section, the text has been transcribed from Ottoman Turkish into the modern Turkish alphabet. Furthermore, additional information not found in the manuscript but identified in sources such as the Divan Makam and Turkish Classical Music Notation Archive has been included in the footnotes and tables

    Author correction: Clear and transparent nanocrystals for infrared-responsive carrier transfer

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    The original version of this Article omitted the fourth author Taizo Yoshinaga, who is from the 'Graduate School of Pure and Applied Sciences, University of Tsukuba, 1-1-1 Tennodai, Tsukuba, Japan'. Consequently, the third sentence of the Author Contributions, 'M.S. and M.K. synthesized the ITO NCs and ITO/semiconductor oxides' was revised to 'M.S., M.K. and T.Y. synthesized the ITO NCs and ITO/semiconductor oxides'. This has been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article

    Avant-garde between east and west: Modern architecture and town-planning in the Urals 1920-30

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    On hearing the term "Soviet modernism", images of Moscow and Leningrad spring to mind. These two cities may compete with each other for the title of the Russian modernist paradigm. Meanwhile little attention has been paid to the developments in more remote areas of Russia. Apparently, the Ural region played a remarkable role in the history of Soviet avant-garde architecture. Without a clear picture of the developments in the Urals, our knowledge of the Soviet modernism is not complete. Within the framework of the state programme of socialist industrialisation, Soviet and Western modernists implemented in the Urals a number of innovative town-planning concepts, such as decentralization of big cities by building satellite towns. Development of cities, industrial sites and settling systems was carried out with consideration of geographical, climatic, economical and other characteristic features of the location. The Urals cities, therefore, represent a unique complex, which fully demonstrates conceptual regularities of modernist town-planning, placed into regional context. In the 1920-30s, Sverdlovsk, the capital of the Ural region, was a major regional centre of architectural and town-planning activities. It was closely connected with the vanguard "headquarters" in Moscow and Leningrad. Today this city (renamed into Ekaterinburg) possesses an extensive collection of modernist monuments that deserves a close attention of specialists.Architectur
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