282 research outputs found
Nadezhda Ivanovna Gainullina: In Memoriam
The article is written in memory of an outstanding philologist and an amazing person - Doctor of Philology, Professor Nadezhda Ivanovna Gainullina. The text does not have one author; it is a polyglossia of memories and impressions about the Person, who for many years set the standards of higher education of the Republic of Kazakhstan. As an application, the reader is offered a list of works protected under the guidance of N.I. Gainullina. This is a kind of navigation map on modern lexicology of Kazakhstan, which can be useful to anyone who explores the state of the Russian language in the post-Soviet space
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: From Tetraalkylphosphonium Ionic Liquids to Phosphonium Ylides: How the Ionic Sizes Influence Carbon Dioxide Capture?
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
From Tetraalkylphosphonium Ionic Liquids to Phosphonium Ylides: How the Ionic Sizes Influence Carbon Dioxide Capture?
Vitaly V. Chaban and Nadezhda A. Andreeva
(a) Yerevan State University, Yerevan, 0025, Armenia.
(b) Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University, Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation.
Corresponding author: [email protected].</p
A methodology for research on international cooperation on marine environment protection: application of the Baltic Sea practices to the northern seas
This article is dedicated to the methodology for the study of international cooperation on marine environment protection. The author suggests applying the practices of marine environment protection in the Baltic Sea to the northern seas as well as examining earlier projects for the effective implementation of interdisciplinary initiatives bringing together international law, international relations and world politics
Concept of „death" in the lyrics of Nadezhda Teffi
Nadezhda Teffi (former Buczynska, born as Lochwicka, 1872-1952) - poet and novelist, one
of the most interesting characters in Russian literature of the first half of the twentieth century. In
1920 Teffi left Russia supplying the same community of thousands of Russian immigrants. In
Paris, still accompanied by the opinion of eminent satirist, but a poetic works can trace many
aspects of the Teffi creative attitude, and especially reflective and nostalgic nature of the emigration
work. The experience of exile provoked to think about the country, the world and herself in
this world. Similar sentiments reflect the poems included in the books of poetry: Шамрам. Песни
Востока (Songs of the East, Berlin, 1923), Passiflora (Berlin 1923) and in the poems published
in collective volumes and anthologies.
The article analyses the concept of death in the lyrics of Teffi. Semantical structure of this
concept includes both objective senses and individual imaginations of the author
“LIFE IS A DREAM...” AN ONEIRIC WORLD IN NADEZHDA TEFFI’S POETRY (1872-1952)
This article’s topic is the analysis of the theme of sleep and ways of his linguistic representation in Nadezhda Teffi’s poetry. The author distinguishes various updates of the selected motif, divided them according to their meaning and thematic scope and
pointed out their importance in the poetic achievements of the Russian emigrant. The subject of the analysis is the context of direct nominations of the lexeme, its derivates, semantic words and antonyms, appearing in the debut volume of poems Seven Fires (1910) and in Poetry Poems published in Exile: Passiflora Shamram. Songs of the East (1923). The research concept adopted by the author remains in line with the communication style of the text, whose tasks cover various aspects of the analysis of the literary text perceived as a form of communication reflecting both the stylistic standard and the individual style of the author
A. Brusilov's Wife Portrait: N. Brusilova at Her Motherland and in Emigration
The author reveals the life and personality of an outstanding fignhting commander of World War I, Aleksei Brusilov’s wife. Her role in his life was shadowed during the Soviet period because of her anti-soviet position mostly due to her orthodox religious views. The paper is based on the unpublished correspondence between Nadezhda Brusilov) and her husband in 1914–1917 when A. A. Brusilov was at the front, and his wife was engaged in charity work in the rear, as well as her diary written during the years she lived in Czechoslovakia as an emigrant (5972 GARF F. A. A. and N. V. Brusilov). The letters show a great emotional unity of the couple although the relationship between them has not always been smooth. N. V. Brusilov had a strong character, tried to infl uence her husband, give recommendations how to conduct military operations, to avoid casualties, but she managed to brighten up the loneliness of the commander in the last period of his life, taking care of him, preserved and published his memoirs. Brusilov believed their marriage happy. After Aleksei Brusilov’s death in 1926, Nadezhda Brusilov went to Czechoslovakia (1930) under the guise of treatment and did not returned to Russia. She was marginalized in the emigrants’ milieu because of Alexei Brusilov’s position during the Soviet — Polish War in 1920 when he joined the Red Army. The position of her husband she unequivocally justified patriotic motives. She fixed her nostalgic feelings for the lost homeland and her loneliness in a foreign land in her diary. It was not intended to be published as N. V. Brusilov feared damage to people stay in Russia. Her diary is an important source on her life abroad as an emigrant, her thoughts about her lost homeland, her views on Orthodox Church, both in Russia and abroad
The November Uprising in Nadezhda Golitsyna’s "The Memoirs"
The article presents Nadezhda Ivanovna Golitsyna’s (1796—1868) memories of the Polish November Uprising. Golitsyna was a wife of a count Alexander Fyodorovitch Golitsyn(1796—1864), who was a high‑ranking Tsarist official. They lived in Warsaw, where the husband of the author of the Memoirs worked in the office of the Grand Prince Konstantin. Golitsyn was, most probably, a secret agent of the Third Division. After the outbreak of the November Uprising the Golitsynys, together with prince Konstantin’s troops, left Warsaw. The Poles’ struggle for independence is presented in Golitsyna’s Memoirs as a sudden and unexpected rebellion organised by a group of students against the Russian ruler. Golitsyna criticises the participants of the uprising, and describes their actions as imprudent and reckless. In her opinion, the November Uprising is mainly associated with necessity of marching off from the capital of the Kingdom of Poland, with difficult living conditions, suffering, arrests, and death of the loved ones. Golitsyna shared the views expressed by the Russian courtly circles of the time.The article presents Nadezhda Ivanovna Golitsyna’s (1796—1868) memories of the Polish November Uprising. Golitsyna was a wife of a count Alexander Fyodorovitch Golitsyn(1796—1864), who was a high‑ranking Tsarist official. They lived in Warsaw, where the husband of the author of the Memoirs worked in the office of the Grand Prince Konstantin. Golitsyn was, most probably, a secret agent of the Third Division. After the outbreak of the November Uprising the Golitsynys, together with prince Konstantin’s troops, left Warsaw. The Poles’ struggle for independence is presented in Golitsyna’s Memoirs as a sudden and unexpected rebellion organised by a group of students against the Russian ruler. Golitsyna criticises the participants of the uprising, and describes their actions as imprudent and reckless. In her opinion, the November Uprising is mainly associated with necessity of marching off from the capital of the Kingdom of Poland, with difficult living conditions, suffering, arrests, and death of the loved ones. Golitsyna shared the views expressed by the Russian courtly circles of the time
The Role of Green Investment in Achieving Sustainable Marketing
In today’s complex and dynamic times, the ever-improving digitalization and automation, the changes in consumer behavior, the tremors in economic and social aspects, are testing the marketing strategies of companies. A number of issues come to the fore, which are related to the challenge of realizing green investments and, at the same time, building successful sustainable marketing strategies. For this reason, studying the role of green investment in achieving sustainable marketing is crucial for the future survival and development of companies and remodeling consumer behavior
<i>EUROPE IN OUR BLOOD</i>... About the Nadezhda Venediktova`s book <i>Caesar and Venediktova. Cultural excavations</i>
Cultural Excavations by Nadezhda Venediktova were published in late autumn 2021, at the time most suitable for philosophical speculations. This way of thinking brings us close to a collapse that might equally turn out productive or catastrophic. Its anaemic academic manner stands out among full-blooded well-crafted literature of saturated and inspiring reality. Pandemic or not, we seek to know whether there is a need to distinguish between various cultures if at the end of the day people are still people. The author does not provide the answer but rather invites us to join a sophisticated mental game in fine textual decorations. And readers will walk away a little confused about simplicity of binary oppositions, and straightforwardness of the logic that a bored visitor so happily lays their hands on, eager and happy to get down to work. The book evolves around the topic of meeting thyself in different cultural surroundings. Sunlit essays bear the imprint of the bitter rationalism of the French enlightenment coupled with a weathered love of personal presence in the world. In her latest work, Nadezhda Venediktova ‘ambitiously comments on life’s creative abilities’. Vivid sketches entitled Passions for Europe may take place by a nameless lake in Zurich but remind readers of Michel Houellebecq’s concrete jungle, of Spengler’s mathematics. But nothing here speaks of The Decline of the West, under the author’s thoughtful gaze Europe comes to life fresh and real — a proverbial sphynx with its intriguing riddles. The author’s underworld meetings with the world literature alternate with colorful Italian landscapes. Vibrant images of friends are so true to life that remind of the immortality of soul. The soul of Europe is truly immortal and found across the continent — Italy, Britain, Austria, Germany, France, Greece, Switzerland, Spain — gave their name to the chapters but cannot be reduced to a dusty catalogue. Nadezhda Venediktova presents European countries through effortless florid metaphors. This what happens when Europe looks into the author’s soul, though it might look otherwise from an outside perspective
The Trouble with Queer Celebrity: Aleksandr Aleksandrov (Nadezhda Durova)'s A Year of Life in St Petersburg (1838)
Zapiski kavalerist-devitsy (The Notes of the Cavalry Maiden) by Aleksandr Aleksandrov (1783–1866), who left his life as Nadezhda Durova to serve in the Russian army during the Napoleonic wars, brought its author fame upon publication in 1836. This article discusses Aleksandrov's later God zhizni v Peterburge, ili nevygody tretʹego poseshchenia (A Year of Life in St Petersburg, 1838) as an account of early nineteenth-century Russian queer celebrity. How did Aleksandrov's experience compare with other gendered celebrity practices, such as lionization? How was it narrated in literary texts? How did this public representation map onto private discourses of the queer self
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