Newsukraine Representatives of the Steering Committee of the CIS Mr. sinyavsky and Mr. Zelinsky NuclearPolicy and Nuclear Safety at the Verkhovna Rada andrey Klyuev. http://www.arena-eco.kiev.ua/en/news/newsukraine.htm
Extractions: Subsidized legal services ADVERTISEMENT: Home Literature Authors T ... Tertz, Abram : APAP Archives 1997: Adrey Sinyavsky (Abram Tertz) Andrey Sinyavsky, Russian writer, dies at 71. Visit Literature: Authors: T: Tertz, Abram: APAP Archives 1997: Adrey Sinyavsky (Abram Tertz) Be the first to review this link!
Russian Literature - Background Information itself been parodied by Russian authors, including the satirist Mikhail Zoshchenko,the absurdist Daniil Kharms, and, most recently, andrey sinyavsky in his http://www.sunport.com/RussianLiterature/background.html
Extractions: Background Biographies Resources History ... Course Materials Contact Information Background Russian Literature Russian Literature is the body of written works produced in the Russian language, beginning with the Christianization of Kievan Rus in the late 10th century. The most celebrated period of Russian literature was the 19th century, which produced, in a remarkably short period, some of the indisputable masterworks of world literature. It has often been noted that the overwhelming majority of Russian works of world significance were produced within the lifetime of one person, Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910). Indeed, many of them were written within two decades, the 1860s and 1870s, a period that perhaps never has been surpassed in any culture for sheer concentrated literary brilliance. Russian literature, especially of the Imperial and post-Revolutionary periods, has as its defining characteristics an intense concern with philosophical problems, a constant self-consciousness about its relation to the cultures of the West, and a strong tendency toward formal innovation and defiance of received generic norms. The combination of formal radicalism and preoccupation with abstract philosophical issues creates the recognizable aura of Russian classics. Old Russian Literature (10th-17th Centuries) The Kievan Period The Kievan period (so called because Kiev was the seat of the grand princes) extends from the Christianization of Russia in 988 to the conquest of Russia by the Tatars (Mongols) in the 13th century. Russia received Christianity from Byzantium rather than from Rome, a fact of decisive importance for the development of Russian culture. Whereas Catholic Poland was closely linked to cultural developments in western Europe, Orthodox Russia was isolated from the West for long periods and, at times, regarded its culture as dangerous. Conversion by Byzantium also meant that the language of the church could be the vernacular rather than, as in the West, Latin; this was another factor that worked against the absorption of Western culture.
Extractions: World-Of-Newave WorldSearch World-Of-Celebrities RingsWorld Tuesday, March 25, 2003 Famous Birthday: Sarah Jessica Parker Home News Directory Shop Link to this page Home Authors S Celebrities Models Athletes Directors Authors Search For: Celebrities DVD DVD VHS Books WorldSearch RingsWorld Browse S by Last Name: A B C D E F G H I J K L M
Cas.prelim.2001a.html andrey sinyavsky's The Russian Intelligentsia as a point of departure into a discussionof this group's postrevolutionary and post-Soviet position in Russian http://www.ualberta.ca/~csp/cas.prelim.2001a.html
Extractions: o C POU 2505 **SPECIAL SESSION: 7:30-8:30 The HSSFC would like to invite the members of the Modern Language Associations to an information session from 7:30 to 8:30 am on Friday, May 25 at the Universite Laval: Room 1320 of La Laurentienne Building . A continental breakfast will be served. Following last year's meeting at the University of Alberta to discuss the current crisis in the departments of language and literature, the Federation approached Dr David Graham, Head of the Department of French and Spanish at Memorial University, to see if he would be willing to chair a working group and to submit a proposal under SSHRC's Research Development Initiatives (RDI)Programme to carry out a comprehensive survey of the Modern Language disciplines in Canadian universities. Dr Graham accepted and he and members of his Working Group will report on the submission and what they hope can be achieved through such an initiative. SESSION I: 9:00-10:45 A DEVELOPMENTS IN ELECTRONIC DATABASES P1 Zina Somova, (East View Publications, USA)
S Information Sites Jennifer; Sinclair, Upton@; Singer, Isaac Bashevis; Siniavski, Andrei@;sinyavsky, andrey@; Skelton, John; Slonczewski, Joan@. Smiley, Jane; http://www.artsorgs.com/Literature/Authors/S/
S Top Arts Literature Authors S Sinclair, Iain; Sinclair, Jennifer; Sinclair, Upton; Siniavski, Andrei;sinyavsky, andrey; Skelton, John; Slonczewski, Joan; Smiley, Jane. Smith http://alchoholism.gowebinfo.com/Top/Arts/Literature/Authors/S/
East European Constitutional Review In the worst case, you were turned into an overt enemy of socialism, as happenedto Josef Brodsky, andrey sinyavsky, Yury Daniel, and many others. http://www.law.nyu.edu/eecr/vol7num3/special/property.html
Extractions: Victor Nemchinov On March 11, 1998, the Russian Consti-tutional Court handed down an unprecedented decision, abolishing the feudal rights that have, until now, allowed the state to confiscate an artists work without due process of law. The issue was brought to the Courts attention by two citizens who questioned the administrative norms of the Customs Code and the Code on Administrative Infractions. The rules in question permitted officials forcibly to confiscate personal property for the states use without paying compensation. Aleksei Pestriakov, the first plaintiff, alleged that the state illegally expropriated his Izh-brand hunting weapons. In a related case, artist Marina Gagloeva complained that she had been wrongly deprived of her own artwork. The latter occurrence, which is far from unusual in Russia, raises serious questions about the rights of Russian citizens to retain control over their intellectual property and the fruits of their personal labor. After a successful exhibit of her paintings last year in France, Gagloeva decided not to sell her artwork. Instead, intending to keep her paintings in her personal collection, she shipped them back home to Russia. Thus they landed in the Pulkovskaya Customs House warehouse where customs officials confiscated the works for the benefit of the state. How could this happen?
Extractions: Author/s: Igor Golomstock Forgers disrupt our sense of reality more queasily than any Surrealist.... [T]o have this world exposed as a forgery is like entering Salvador Dali's landscape of soft watches, where history melts. from a British newspaper In 1963, while working as a senior researcher at the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow, I received an urgent request from the publishing house Iskusstvo ("Art") to review the manuscript of a book on Pablo Picasso's famous painting Guernica by the British art historian Sir Anthony Blunt. I was told that the request came directly from the Central Committee of the Communist party, which was demanding its immediate publication. The request rather puzzled me: why should the Central Committee be so eager to publish a work about an artist, Picasso, who, despite his leftist political sympathies, had been condemned by the Soviet leadership as the premier "bourgeois formalist"? After all, not long before, my own small book on Picasso, which I had co-authored with Andrey Sinyavsky (soon to become a famous dissident), had barely made it through the censors. Although commissioned to mark the award to Picasso of the Soviet International Peace Prize, our work was blocked several times and was finally cleared only after considerable pressure from the French Communist party. After publication, it was severely criticized in the Soviet press as "a book that undermines the foundations of socialism."
Vindex, De Vindplaats Van Het Nederlandse Web Olesha, Yuri Karlovich@ Pasternak, Boris@ Prutkov, Kozma@ Pushkin, AleksandrSergeevich@ Rybakov, Vyacheslav sinyavsky, andrey@, Solzhenitsyn, Alexander http://www.vindex.nl/dir/Arts/Literature/World_Literature/Russian/Authors
Vindex, De Vindplaats Van Het Nederlandse Web Simons, Paullina Simpson, Louis Sinclair, Iain Sinclair, Jennifer Sinclair, Upton@Singer, Isaac Bashevis Siniavski, Andrei@ sinyavsky, andrey@ Skelton, John http://www.vindex.nl/dir/Arts/Literature/Authors/S
RICE VITA (10) andrey Bely A k dokladu A. Siniavskogo 'Chelovek vne izmerenii Dostoevskiiv XX veke Russian A Response to A. sinyavsky's Lecture 'Mankind beyond http://www.uoregon.edu/~reesc/rice.vita.htm
Catcllit order of their original publication and include contributions by Lionel Trilling,Frank O'Connor, Renato Poggioli, andrey sinyavsky, Victor Erlich, Ilya http://www.bohemiabooks.com.au/cats/catcllit.htm
Extractions: Essays English And American: Thackeray,Newman,Ruskin,Huxley,Thoreau And Others A most stimulating collection of essays by many important figures. Includes: The Study Of Poetry by Matthew Arnold, Sesame And Lilies by Ruskin, Science And Culture by Thomas Henry Huxley, Samuel Pepys by Robert Louis Stevenson, Walking by Thoreau, the Poetic Principal by Edgar Allan Poe and more. Connecticut: Grolier (Harvard Classics Ed). 8vo. Leatherette. 470pp.[ CL- 259 Re/Search #4/5: A Special Book Issue A special release of RE/SEARCH. This scarce edition is devoted to William.S.Burroughs, Brion Gysin (an influential and visionary poet and painter) and avant-garde/industrial musicians Throbbing Gristle. It includes an additional unpublished chapter of Burroughs' 'Cities Of The Red Night', photographs, interviews and excerpts from other works.
MPTDO | ODP Archive - Arts: Literature: Authors: S Singer, Isaac Bashevis (4); Siniavski, Andrei@ (6); sinyavsky, andrey@(6); Skelton, John (2); Slonczewski, Joan@ (1). Smiley, Jane (2 http://www.mptdo.com/Arts/Literature/Authors/S/
Extractions: p o about dmoz add URL update URL become an editor ... help the entire directory only in Authors/S Top Arts Literature Authors : S Description A B C ... R S T U V W ... Szymborska, Wislawa This category in other languages: All the Web AltaVista Google USENET Google ... Yahoo This category needs an editor
Selected Literatures And Authors Pages - Russian Literature Azolsky, Anatoly, ***, **, Simonov, Konstantin. ***, Gazdanov, Gaito, ***, sinyavsky,Andrei. From Server Literatura . andrey Bely's Glossalolia. Bely, Andrei. http://www.lib.vt.edu/subjects/slav/lit_authors_russian.html
Extractions: Russia - Culture - Literature . From The Slavic Research Center, Hokkaido University. Russian Literature Online . From www.studyrussian.com. Internet Biblioteka Alekseia Komarova Venäjän nykykirjallisuuden kirjasto - Kirjallisuus . From Suomi-Venäjä-Seura . [Russian Literature On-Line sites from the Finland-Russia Society]. Links to Russian and NIS Literature Resources . By Albert L. Osterheld. Lib.Ru: Biblioteka Maksima Moshkowa . By Maksim Moshkow . Lib.Ru:'s Sovremennaya russkaya proza page. Its poezia page. Publichnaia Elektronaia Biblioteka - Public Electronic Library. By Evgenii Peskin. Ardis Publishers . Their Links , including an extensive Literature section.
Adam B. Ulam Addenda the circumstances of the trial of two literary dissidents, sinyavsky and Daniel. Asa teacher and student, you become engrossed in Akhmatova and andrey Byelyi. http://www.aulam.org/addenda.htm
Extractions: I was leafing recently through a volume of Soviet samizdat. Now, samizdat corresponds to what in this country would be called "underground press," except its circulation and printing can and often does have unpleasant consequences for people caught doing it. Also, because I suppose Russia is less advanced industrially and in "consumerism" than the US, samizdat, unlike the underground press here, does not concentrate on only one area of human activity, does not carry playful advertisements, drawings, and photographs, and is by our current standards remarkably stodgy in its vocabulary. But it represents what in terms of the surrounding society is considered dissent, political protest; and it prints literary works which cannot be published because their political or artistic theme or what have you is not approved by the regime. No, this was not done through an administrative fiat. Gerlin's case was brought before her branch of the Teachers' Union. Here several speakers berated her for her scandalous anti-Soviet act; and finally the assembly of her colleagues and co-workers, by a vote of 37 to 5, excluded Gerlin from the Union, which, of course, meant the loss of her position and her future ability to practice her profession. The main theme of the accusatory speeches was her interceding on behalf of convicted criminals. Thus one lady teacher exclaimed: "How can you observe the law when dealing with [anti-Soviet] criminals; one would have to acquit them all!" a remark which recalls certain aspects of a rather recent American trial.
Kelly On Siegelbaum, Stalinism As A Way Of Life, NYRB 11.28.01 7 As sinyavsky puts it We have an ironic perspective on this allpervasive symbolin the diary of andrey Arzhilovsky, a peasant who had spent years in a labor http://www.yale.edu/annals/Reviews/review_texts/Kelly_on_Siegelbaum_NYRB_11.29.0
Extractions: Yale University Press, 460 pp., $35.00 "Great massacres may be commanded by tyrants, but they are imposed by peoples," H.R. Trevor-Roper wrote on the European witch hunts of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Afterwards, when the mood has changed, or when the social pressure, thanks to the blood-letting, no longer exists, the anonymous people slinks away, leaving public responsibility to the preachers, the theorists, and the rulers who demanded, justified, and ordered the act. This passage is cited by J. Arch Getty in The Road to Terror Add to that countless ruined lives, the use of torture to extract confessions, the brutality of the huge system of work camps, and a national trauma that lasted for decades. Enormous though Stalin's guilt was, the mass slaughter and the widespread repression of the Soviet 1930s cannot be explained away by the paranoia of a power-crazed despot. We now know that the Soviet party-state was not (as the "totalitarian" school of analysts once believed) a monolithic system ruling omnipotently over a passive, victimized society. Sheila Fitzpatrick, Stephen Kotkin, and others have demonstrated from previously inaccessible archives that Stalinism was not just a political system but a set of values and a way of life which many Soviet citizens actively embraced or passively assented to from a wide variety of motives. As Getty observes, at every step of the road to terror
Staff And Responsibilities Kazakhstan, Oleg sinyavsky, Soros FoundationKazakhstan, osin@hiv.soros.kz. PolonnetzVinnitsa Public Congress Stalis t, Ukraine andrey Protopopov Charitable Anti http://www.soros.org/harm-reduction/about_staff.htm
Extractions: Fax: (36-1) 327-3864 NAME / TITLE EMAIL Monica Ciupagea , Program Officer ciupagea@osi.hu Matthew Curtis , Program Coordinator mcurtis@sorosny.org Kasia Malinowska-Sempruch , Director kmalinowska@sorosny.org Anna Moshkova , Program Officer amoshkova@sorosny.org Sue Simon , Associate Director ssimon@sorosny.org Magdalena Sklarski , Training Coordinator msklarski@sorosny.org Jennifer Traska-Gibson , Program Coordinator jtraska@sorosny.org IHRD STAFF RESPONSIBILITIES COUNTRIES: REGIONAL POLICY EFFORTS: Albania - Sue /Jennifer Baltic Sea - Sue /Jen Armenia - Monica Central Asia - Kasia /Sue/Matt Azerbaijan - Anna Southeastern Europe Sue Belarus - Anna Caucuses - Anna Bosnia - TBD SPECIAL INITIATIVES: Bulgaria - Kasia /Jennifer Communications Sue /Matt Croatia - Monica East-East - Monica Czech Republic - Jennifer /Kasia Legal Review Project -
Latvia Logos Board: Mass Media: Newspapers Information agency sixpart website Daniel, Yuli Markovich Soviet poet and shortstorywriter who was convicted with fellow writer andrey D. sinyavsky of anti http://www.eunet.lv/www/showgroup.phtml?q=A1&pg=97