1,763,079 research outputs found
About Nikolay Kolyada
The article presents a transcript of a talk with N. L. Leiderman about N. Kolyada, recorded in February 2010. The author speaks in detail about his meetings with the dramatist, about the history of writing his monograph «Dramatic Works of Nikolay Kolyada» and provides an analysis of the dramatist‘s creative legacy. N. L. Leiderman also dwells on the reasons of popularity of N. Kolyada both in Russia and in the West. The author touches upon the modern state of the Kolyada Theatre and the role of the dramatist in the creation of the Urals dramatic school
Yakut author Nikolay Luginov and his stories
1970 sonrasında yazmaya başladığı ilk hikayeleri ile edebiyat dünyasına adım atan Nikolay Luginov, Saha (Yakut) edebiyatının önde gelen temsilcilerinden birisidir.
Nikolay Luginov'un hikayeleri üzerinde ayrıntılı bir çalışma yapmak ve yazarın modern Yakut edebiyatındaki yerini ortaya koymak amacıyla yapılan bu tezde hikayeler üzerinde metin merkezli bir inceleme yapılmıştır.
Tezimizin "Giriş" bölümünde, tezin amacı, araştırma yöntemleri ile Saha (Yakut) Türkleri ve Saha (Yakut) edebiyatının gelişim süreçleri hakkında genel bir bilgi verilmiştir.
Birinci bölümde, Nikolay Luginov'un hayatı, edebi kişiliği ve eserleri ele alınmıştır. Bu bölümde Nikolay Luginov'un, hikayeden roman türüne geçiş sürecine ve yazarın son çalışmalarına değinilmiştir.
Çalışmamızın ikinci bölümünde, Nikolay Luginov'un üç hikayesi tahlil edilmiş, hikaye tahlillerinde önce olay örgüsü, ardından özet, şahıs kadrosu, zaman ve mekan incelemesi yapılmıştır. Ayrıca hikayelerde yer alan mitolojik ve geleneksel unsurlar ele alınmıştır.
“Sonuç” bölümünde ise Nikolay Luginov’un edebi kişiliği ve eserleri üzerinde yapılan incelemenin sonuçları, yazarın dünya görüşü çercevesinde değerlendirilmiştir.One of the leading representatives of Saha (Yakut) literatureNikolay Luginov involved into the literary word with his first storieswhich he started to write after 1970.
In order to present a detailed study on the stories of Nikolay Luginov and to reveal the place of the author in Saha (Yakut) literatur, the stories of Luginov was examined with a text-cnetered approach.
General information about Yakut Turks and development processes of Yakut literature and aim of the thesis, research methods are given in the “Introduction” section of the thesis.
In the first chapter, Nikolay Luginov’s life, literary identity and his Works were discussed. In the section,Nikolay Luginov’s literary transition process from story to lovel and the aothor’s recent works were eveluated.
Three storiew of Nikolay Luginov were analyzed in the second part of the study. First the plot then the summary, charecters, time and space were examined in the story analysis. Moreover, the mythological and traditional elements in the stories were discussed.
The results of the study into the literary identiy and Works of Nikolay Luginov were presented within the framework of the auuthor’s word view in the conclusion section
The role of the pre-supplementary motor area in the control of action
Although regions within the medial frontal cortex are known to be active during voluntary movements their precise role remains unclear. Here we combine functional imaging localisation with psychophysics to demonstrate a strikingly selective contralesional impairment in the ability to inhibit ongoing movement plans in a patient with a rare lesion involving the right pre-supplementary motor area (pre-SMA), but sparing the supplementary motor area (SMA). We find no corresponding delay in simple reaction times, and show that the inhibitory deficit is sensitive to the presence of competition between responses. The findings demonstrate that the pre-SMA plays a critical role in exerting control over voluntary actions in situations of response conflict. We discuss these findings in the context of a unified framework of pre-SMA function, and explore the degree to which extant data on this region can be explained by this function alone
National Elections Across Democracy and Autocracy
The National Elections across Democracy and Autocracy (NELDA) dataset provides detailed information on all election events from 1960-2006. To be included, elections must be for a national executive figure, such as a president, or for a national legislative body, such as a parliament, legislature, constituent assembly, or other directly elected representative bodies. In order for an election to be included, voters must directly elect the person or persons appearing on the ballot to the national post in question. Voting must also be direct, or “by the people” in the sense that mass voting takes place. That voting is “by the people” does not imply anything about the extent of the franchise: some regimes may construe this to mean a small portion of the population. However, when voting takes place by committee, institution or a coterie, the “election” is not included. By-elections are not counted as elections for the purpose of this project, unless they take the form of midterm elections occurring within a pre-established schedule. In federal systems, only elections to national-level bodies are included. Cases in which any portion of the seats in a national legislative body are filled through voting are included. Beyond these basic requirements, elections may or may not be competitive, and may have any number of other ostensible flaws. In fact, this last feature of the dataset is what separates NELDA most clearly from other available datasets on elections
Nikolay Karamzin’s History in Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Novel The Idiot
The article explores the influence of Nikolay Karamzin’s History of the Russian State (1818–1829) on Fyodor Dostoevsky’s novel The Idiot (1868–1869). Karamzin’s historical and literary work significantly shaped Dostoevsky’s worldview from childhood and remained highly valued by him in adulthood. Dostoevsky owned a copy of Karamzin’s multi-volume work in his library and, according to acquaintances, knew it “almost by heart.” The article demonstrates that the mention of Karamzin’s History in the opening scene of The Idiot should be understood in the context of the heightened public interest in Karamzin during the centenary of his birth, celebrated in Russia in December 1866. This interest persisted during the years when The Idiot was written and published. Karamzin was regarded by several Russian writers and public figures in the late 1860s, including critic Nikolay Strakhov, who was close to Dostoevsky at that time, as a moral guide for contemporaries and as an ideal of a “beautiful man.” This image resonates with that of Prince Lev Myshkin, to whom the know-it-all official Lukyan Lebedev advises immersing oneself in Karamzin’s History. The article also clarifies and supplements previous research on the connection between Dostoevsky’s The Idiot and Karamzin’s History. Special attention is given to comparing The Idiot with Karamzin’s autobiographical novel A Knight of Our Time (1802–1803), whose main character, like Dostoevsky’s hero, is named Leon and shares Don Quixote-like qualities
Interview with Nikolay Koposov, October 7, 2010
Interview Themes: The contours of the historical profession in the USSR in the 1970s (01:49)
Koposov’s path to the study of history (08:03)
Political implications of social history in the USSR in the 1970s (13:10)
Political shifts in the Soviet Union in the 1980s and 1990s as reflected in the historical profession (16:45)
Koposov’s cohort of like-minded historians (26:24)
Retrospective perspectives on the period preceding the collapse of the Soviet Union (28:33)
On the collapse of communism from a historian’s perspective (32:33)
Hopes and aspirations for St. Petersburg State in the 1990s (38:30)
The fate of St. Petersburg State over time (42:23)
On scholars who influenced Koposov (49:32)Interview with Nikolay Koposov, research director at the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies in Finland and former dean of the Smolny college of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Saint-Petersburg State University (1998-2009). Interview conducted in Ithaca, NY on October 7, 2010. Prof. Koposov has written on early modern France, approaches to history, and the politics of historical memory in Russia. His works have been published in French and Russian, including most recently a French translation of his 2001 book originally published in Russian, How Historians Think (De l'imagination historique).1_l1jfdym
NIKOLAY BERDYAEV EXISTENTIALISM
<p><span>This article briefly covers the humanitarian ideas of Nikolay Berdyaev, one of the great representatives of the existentialist philosophy. The article shows that the issue of art occupies a central place in the existentialism of Nikolay Berdyaev.</span></p>
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