2024-03-29T15:35:08Zhttps://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/oai/requestoai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111982019-04-12T14:38:38Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_23
Giullian, Jon C.
2013-05-23T15:52:26Z
2013-05-23T15:52:26Z
2013-05-23
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/11198
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9342-7123
This talk presents a snapshot of inclusivity and diversity in Slavic and Eurasian Studies. More specifically the talk presents a cross-section of gender inclusivity, academic diversity, and institutional representation of ASEEES convention participants over the past 40 years. The talk also touches, to some degree on religious inclusivity, and diversity of collections.
en_US
openAccess
Inclusivity
Diversity
Gender
Discipline
Institution
Aseees
Gender gap
Slavic consortium
Religious
Mormon
Collections
Statistics
Inclusivity and Diversity: Cross-section of ASEEES by Gender, Discipline, and Institution
Presentation
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111342019-04-12T14:42:05Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Giullian, Jon C.
2013-05-14T19:34:57Z
2013-05-14T19:34:57Z
2009
Giullian, Jon. "Slavic Folklore, the Library, and the Web: A Case-study of Subject-Specific Collaborative Information Literacy at the University of Kansas." Slavic & East European Information Resources, 10.2-3 (2009): 200-220. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15228880903191699
1522-8886
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/11134
10.1080/15228880903191699
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9342-7123
This case-study describes the on-going integration of Information Literacy (IL) into a large undergraduate general education course on Slavic folklore at the University of Kansas. The purpose of the case-study is to provide practical examples that Slavic librarians and other colleagues may find useful in the development of their own customized library instruction program.
en_US
openAccess
Library instruction
Information literacy
Slavic studies
Professional development
Librarian
Faculty
Collaboration
Slavic Folklore, the Library, and the Web: A Case-study of Subject-Specific Collaborative Information Literacy at the University of Kansas
Article
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/16612019-04-12T14:23:17Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_7165com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_7166col_1808_23
Husic, Geoff
2007-07-24T14:29:25Z
2007-07-24T14:29:25Z
2007-07-24T14:29:25Z
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/1661
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0617-7160
The verb presents a considerable challenge to students wishing to learn Standard Albanian. Besides the presence of a full conjugation for person and number, there are also 2 voices (Active and Medio-Passive) a variety of moods (Indicative, Subjunctive, Conditional, Imperative, Optative, and Admirative) and a larger number of simple and compound tenses. The morphology of the Albanian verb is also complex and followers a number of possible patterns, which frequently also involve modification of the verbal root vowel and the final consonant of the verb stem. In addition, many of the most commonly used verbs are formed irregularly.
This dictionary attempts to treat the Albanian verb in a convenient format for the learner. The morphological structure of the various possible patterns are outlined and then sample patterns are presented which cover most common regular and semi-regular verbs. Complete conjugations are given for those truly irregular verbs.
Several glossaries (Albanian-English, English-Albanian, and Verb Type) are given listing most common verbs. Hyperlinks in the text make it easy to navigate from verbs in the glossary to the appropriate sample pattern, making this resource convenient as an easy-reference tool.
en_US
openAccess
Albanian language
Albanian verbs
Conjugation
Albanian Verb Dictionary and Manual
Book
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111972019-04-12T14:13:44Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_23
Giullian, Jon C.
2013-05-23T15:06:59Z
2013-05-23T15:06:59Z
2013-05-23
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/11197
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9342-7123
This document contains the outline of my talk at the 2012 ASEEES National Convention and is accompanied by presentation slides. This talk presents some of the author's experiences in designing, creating, using, and evaluating online research guides (LibGuides). The talk considers audience, modularity or repurposeability, use assessment, and the effectiveness of Libguides as a research tool. The talk presents survey data about undergraduate students' use of LibGuides related to Slavic and Eurasian Studies at the University of Kansas. Best practices are also discussed.
en_US
openAccess
Libguides
Audience
Assessment
Best practices
Survey
Usage
Slavic
Research guide
Aseees
Online Research Guides: Audience, Assessment, and Advice
Presentation
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/62132019-04-12T14:29:10Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Husic, Geoff
2010-05-18T16:29:23Z
2010-05-18T16:29:23Z
2010-05-18T16:29:23Z
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6213
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0617-7160
Catalog of exhibit held in Watson Library, University of Kansas, May-June 2010.
en_US
openAccess
Vampires
Werewolves
Witches
Balkans
Slavic languages etymology
Book exhibit
Vampire by Any Other Name: Vampires, Werewolves and Witches of the Slavs, Balkan Peoples and Other Lands: A Linguistic and Cultural Adventure
Article
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111222019-04-12T14:39:20Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Giullian, Jon C.
2013-05-14T16:00:00Z
2013-05-14T16:00:00Z
2008
Giullian, Jon. "Reference Question Answered: Discussion of Russian funeral rites as depicted in V posikakh schast’ia (In Search of Happiness), Film, 2006." Slavic & East European Information Resources, 9.1 (2008): 5-11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15228880802104629
1522-8886
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/11122
10.1080/15228880802104629
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9342-7123
The author answers a reference question on the depiction of a funeral in the 2006 Russian documentary film V poiskakh schast’ia (In Search of Happiness), which takes place in the Jewish Autonomous Region in Siberia. Consultations and reference sources show that what was depicted was not Jewish but a typical Russian civil funeral procession. Helpful publications included historical and historical-ethnographic monographs and an ethnographic encyclopedia.
openAccess
Reference Question Answered: Discussion of Russian funeral rites as depicted in V posikakh schast’ia (In Search of Happiness), Film, 2006
Article
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/44872019-04-12T14:24:08Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Husic, Geoff
2009-04-20T18:18:20Z
2009-04-20T18:18:20Z
2009-04-20T18:18:20Z
Husic, Geoff(2009)'Russo-Serbian Orthography: Cataloging Conundrum and a Proposed Solution',Slavic & East European Information Resources,10:1,45 — 60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15228880802709187
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/4487
10.1080/15228880802709187
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0617-7160
The author discusses the problem of cataloging books written in Russo-Serbian script, a mixed Russian, Serbian, and Church Slavic script used for Serbian in the 19th century. He gives a brief overview of the historical-linguistic context, and then offers a solution which includes a proposal for a systematic transliteration (romanization) scheme.
en
openAccess
Russo-Serbian script
Serbian language
Cyrillic script
Book cataloging
Russo-Serbian Orthography: Cataloging Conundrum and a Proposed Solution
Article
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/107582019-04-12T14:39:32Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Husic, Geoff
2013-01-30T00:34:22Z
2013-01-30T00:34:22Z
2012-12
Slavic & East European Information Resources, 13: 230–234, 2012
doi:10.1080/15228886.2012.730849
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10758
10.1080/15228886.2012.730849
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15228886.2012.730849
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0617-7160
Romani is a language of northern Indic origin spoken natively by an estimated 2.5 million people, primarily in Eurasia but also in North America. The history of publication patterns in Romani has not been well documented. Extracting data about this history based on available information in large bibliographic databases such as OCLC WorldCat has been hampered by unfortunate misap- plication of certain language codes, making it all but impossible to filter search results efficiently using Romani language as a param- eter. The author discusses how he was able to correct much of this inaccurate data in OCLC WorldCat.
en
openAccess
Romani language
Cataloging
MARC language codes
Tracking the History of Romani Publications: Challenges Presented by Flawed Data
Article
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111232019-04-12T14:41:20Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Giullian, Jon C.
2013-05-14T16:08:09Z
2013-05-14T16:08:09Z
2008
Giullian, Jon. "Reference Question Answered: Bibliographic Sources for the Ukrainian Periodical Press in the 1840’s: Encyclopedias, Bibliographies, Guides, and Library Catalogs." Slavic & East European Information Resources, 9.3 (2008): 278-284. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15228880802347723
1522-8886
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/11123
10.1080/15228880802347723
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9342-7123
The author answers a reference question on the bibliographic sources for the Ukrainian periodical press from 1840-1850. Helpful publications include bibliographies, guides, and library catalogs that can be used to identify Ukrainian newspapers or journals of the period. These potentially make mention of revolutionary developments in Hungary (such as the “12 Points” paragraph of the “Demands of the Hungarian Nation” in March 1848, the subsequent “April Laws,” and Hungary’s declaration of independence in April 1949) and elsewhere in the Hapsburg Empire.
en_US
openAccess
Ukraine
Україна
Ukrainian
Український
Press
19th century
Hapsburg
April laws
Reference Question Answered: Bibliographic Sources for the Ukrainian Periodical Press in the 1840’s: Encyclopedias, Bibliographies, Guides, and Library Catalogs
Article
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111092019-04-12T14:40:08Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Giullian, Jon C.
2013-05-13T18:02:09Z
2013-05-13T18:02:09Z
2012
Giullian, Jon (2012). Memorial reminiscence. “Murlin Croucher: the Magician of Slavic Book Collecting.” ACRL Slavic and East European Section Newsletter, 28 (2012): 70-78
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/11109
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9342-7123
Memorial article in honor of Murlin Croucher, long time Slavic bibliographer at Indiana University. Includes reminiscence of the author and excerpts from letters written by Murlin Croucher.
en_US
openAccess
Croucher, Murlin
Slavic
Librarian
Bibliographer
Indiana university
Slavic studies: a guide to bibliographies, encyclopedias, and handbooks
Murlin Croucher: Magician of Slavic Book Collecting
Other
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111152019-04-12T14:29:00Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Giullian, Jon C.
2013-05-14T15:43:31Z
2013-05-14T15:43:31Z
2008
Giullian, Jon. Book Review. The 20th Century Libraries in the Baltic Sea Regions. Transactions of the National Library of Estonia (TNLE), v. 10. Edited by Piret Lotman and Tiina Vilberg. Tallinn: National Library of Estonia, 2004. Slavic & East European Information Resources, 9.1 (2008): 5-11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/J167v08n04_10
1522-8886
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/11115
10.1300/J167v08n04_10
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9342-7123
This article reviews a collection of essays about library collections of national heritage in the countries of the Baltic Sea region (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and St. Petersburg, Russia).
en_US
openAccess
Baltic
Libraries
Book review
Cultural heritage
National library of Russia
Estonia
Latvia
Lithuania
St. Petersburg
Volodin,Boris
Ruutsoo, Rein
Papaurelyte, Arida
Ainz, Anne
Lotman, Piret
Vilberg, Tiina
Book Review. The 20th Century Libraries in the Baltic Sea Regions. Transactions of the National Library of Estonia
Article
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111512019-04-12T14:34:06Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Giullian, Jon C.
2013-05-14T21:50:35Z
2013-05-14T21:50:35Z
2010
Giullian, Jon (2010). “Slavic Studies and the World: Embracing the Revolution of Open Access Publishing,” Globalization and the Management of Information Resources: Papers from the International Conference, Sofia, Bulgaria, 12-14 November 2008. Herbert K. Achleitner and Alexander Dimchev, eds., pp. 181-190. Sofia, Bulgaria: “St. Kliment Okhridskii” University of Sofia, 2010 [Compact Disc].
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/11151
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9342-7123
This study discusses patterns of open access publishing in Slavic studies. The purpose of this study is to gauge the level of open access publishing among Slavic studies scholars; to identify what types of documents are being made available; to observe which disciplines are most active in making their documents freely available; and to determine which venues are most active for documents related to Slavic studies.
en_US
openAccess
Libraries
Slavic Studies and the World: Embracing the Revolution of Open Access Publishing
Article
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/72792019-04-12T14:17:37Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Husic, Geoff
2011-03-31T19:00:33Z
2011-03-31T19:00:33Z
2011-01
Slavic and East European Information Resources. Volume 12, Issue 1 (January 2011), pages 37-51: DOI: 10.1080/15228886.2011.556076). This is a pre-review preprint.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/7279
10.1080/15228886.2011.556076
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0617-7160
A discussion of issues related to the cataloging of a language, Romani (or Romany), which is only in the 21st century beginning to achieve some degree of standardization. The discussion focuses on issues of Romani orthography, specifically a small number of unusual Unicode characters that may cause technical problems in certain automated cataloging environments, such as OCLC WorldCat, the OCLC cataloging client Connexion, and online library catalogs.
en_US
openAccess
Romanies
Gypsies
Romani language
Cataloging
Romani Language: Cataloging Ramifications for a Language in the Process of Standardization
Preprint
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111452019-04-12T14:34:05Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Giullian, Jon C.
2013-05-14T21:10:18Z
2013-05-14T21:10:18Z
2007
Giullian, Jon. “’Goodbye Doesn’t Mean Forever:’ Selection Strategies for the Transfer of Slavic to Off-Site Remote Storage.” Globalization, Digitization, Access, and Preservation of Cultural Heritage: Papers from the International Conference Sofia, Bulgaria 8-10 November 2006, Herbert K. Achleitner and Alexander Dimchev, eds., pp. 144-151. Sofia, Bulgaria: “St. Kliment Okhridskii” University of Sofia, 2007.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/11145
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9342-7123
The 21st century American research library faces a serious housing crisis. Today more than ever libraries must balance patrons’ needs for access with the responsibility of preserving and storing the deluge of published material. In response to the storage crisis, several of the nation’s top research libraries have constructed off-site, high-density shelving facilities. This paper first summarizes the discussion about the nature and function of these facilities. The paper goes on to document a case-study of how the Slavic collections at the University of Kansas Libraries addressed this issue. The case-study consists of four sections: 1) a brief description of the KU Annex, KO Libraries’ particular space issues, and the “Dewey” and “LC” reclassification project; 2) criteria for selection of Russian literary text for storage and implementation of those criteria; 3) problems and challenges encountered during the process; and 4) the importance of engaging faculty directly in the selection process. A summary of “lessons learned” concludes the case study.
openAccess
Library space
High-density
Shelving
Off-site
Remote
Storage
Preservation
Access
University of kansas libraries
Annex
Case-study
Slavic collection
Russian literature
Selection criteria
Faculty collaboration
Libarian collaboration
Open stacks
Browsing collection
"Goodbye Doesn’t Mean Forever:" Selection Strategies for the Transfer of Slavic to Off-Site Remote Storage
Article
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/149362019-04-12T14:38:00Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_7165com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_7166col_1808_23
Husic, Geoff
2014-08-21T22:35:48Z
2014-08-21T22:35:48Z
2014-08-21
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/14936
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0617-7160
A bibliography of books in the University of Kansas that pertain to Slavic Philology and Linguistics. Entries are organized by subject. Links to the Library Catalog are included to facilitate interlibrary loan requests.
en_US
openAccess
Slavic philology-- bibliographies
University of kansas libraries
Slavic Reference Virtual Bookshelf
Book
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111242019-04-12T14:34:05Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Giullian, Jon C.
2013-05-14T16:22:12Z
2013-05-14T16:22:12Z
2006
Giullian,Jon. "Where Library Meets Vendor: A Comparison of Six Vendors of Russian Books."Books, Bibliographies, and Pugs: A Festschrift to Honor Murlin Croucher Bloomington, IN: Slavica, 2006 1-5 (Indiana Slavic Studies, 16), pp. 87-112.
0073-6929
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/11124
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9342-7123
This work compares the online catalogs, monographic holdings, and book prices of six major vendors of academic Russian books. The purpose is twofold: (1) to determine which catalogs are the most robust and, thus, most useful to bibliographers in the book selection process; and (2) to discover which of the six vendors can provide the widest range of coverage at the lowest prices. The work also alludes to the challenges Slavic librar¬ians face in the acquisition of Russian books. The study begins with a discussion of the challenges encountered during the process of searching vendors’ online catalogs, followed by a description of the methodology used to compile the checklist of titles. Vendors’ holdings are then compared across several categories. Data include raw scores and percentages. The final component compares the duplication and cost of monographs among the six vendors. The six vendors used for comparison include: ATC Books International (ATC), East View Informa¬tion Services (EV), Esterum Russian Books Worldwide (Est), MIPP International (MIPP), Natasha Kozmenko Booksellers (NK), and Russian Press Service (RPS). They were selected because of their large inventories of academic Russian books and because their inventories are readily available online. The criteria for comparison consist of monographic works, including a few monographic series, on the life and works of Leo Tolstoy.
en_US
openAccess
Russia
Books
Vendors
ATC
East view
Evis
Esterum
Mipp
Kozmenko
Russian presse service
RPS
Tolstoy, Leo
Monographs
Firefox
Internet explorer
Price
Inventory
Where Library Meets Vendor: A Comparison of Six Vendors of Russian Books
Article
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/39352019-04-12T14:24:07Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Husic, Geoff
2008-06-15T23:40:27Z
2008-06-15T23:40:27Z
2008-06-15T23:40:27Z
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/3935
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0617-7160
A proposed transliteration scheme for Slavonic-Serbian and Russo-Serbian, for which no ALA-LC transliteration table currently exists.
en_US
openAccess
Russo-Serbian Cyrillic script
Slavonic-Serbian cyrillic script
Cyrillic romanization
Serbian language
Transliteration chart for Slavonic-Serbian and Russo-Serbian
Article
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/16912019-04-12T14:17:18Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Husic, Geoff
2007-10-03T21:52:09Z
2007-10-03T21:52:09Z
2000
"Is there/will there be a Bosnian Language: aspects of the language situation in post‑war Bosnia." South Slav Journal.. (London: Dositey Obradovich Circle) , Vol. 20, no. 3/4 (2000).
0141-6146
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/1691
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0617-7160
A discussion of the perception of Bosnian as a language distinct from Serbian and Croatian in Bosnia before and after the Yugoslav War, 1991-1995.
en_US
openAccess
Bosnian language
Serbo-croatian language
Is there/will there be a Bosnian Language: aspects of the language situation in post‑war Bosnia
Article
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111522019-04-12T14:29:06Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Giullian, Jon C.
2013-05-14T22:42:51Z
2013-05-14T22:42:51Z
2010
Giullian, Jon. Microfilm collection review. “World War II Cossack Newspapers and Periodicals at CRL.” FOCUS on Global Resources, v. 30, no. 4 (2011), pp. 8-9.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/11152
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9342-7123
This article summarizes the contents of the World War 2 Cossack Newspapers and Periodicals, a small collection of Cossack newspapers published mostly during World War II and microfilmed at the request of the Slavic and East European Microform Project (SEEMP) of the Center for Research Libraries (CRL).
en_US
openAccess
Center for Research Libraries
CRL
Cossack
Kazak
World War II
Nazi
Soviet
Bolshevik
Newspaper
Periodical
Microfilm
Seemp
WWII Cossack Newspapers and Periodicals at CRL
Article
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111362019-04-12T14:29:00Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Giullian, Jon C.
2013-05-14T19:47:21Z
2013-05-14T19:47:21Z
2005
Giullian, Jon C. Pre-publication Review. Virtual Slavica: Digital Libraries, Digital Archives. Edited by Michael Neubert. Binghampton, NY: Haworth Press, 2005.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/11136
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9342-7123
Reviews the book "Virtual Slavica: Digital Libraries, Digital Archives," the first major work to address the issue of technology and Cyrillic language resources, thus providing an important “snapshot of Slavic digital librarianship” for the profession. The volume consists of eleven individual articles by leading American and Russian Slavic librarians. These articles are united by the common theme of “information delivery to the 21st century user” of Slavic materials.
en_US
openAccess
Slavic digital libraries
Cyrillic language resources
Neubert, Michael
Backman, Ronald
Tatyana doorn-moisseenko
Perepechko, Alexander
Llona, Eileen
Sharkov, Dmitry
Hunt, Michael
Biggins, Michael
Peshio, Joseph
Pil’shchikov, Igor
Vigurskii, Konstantin
Bostian, Sandra
Schaffner, Brad
Canon, Angela
Jacobs, Jane W.
Das, Malabika
Remnek, Miranda
Hawkins, Kevin
Pre-publication review. Virtual Slavica: Digital Libraries, Digital Archives
Article
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/38612019-04-12T14:29:08Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Biggins, Michael
Husic, Geoff
2008-05-09T19:12:18Z
2008-05-09T19:12:18Z
2008-05-09T19:12:18Z
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/3861
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0617-7160
en_US
openAccess
University of kansas libraries, south slavic and balkan collections
History of the South Slavic & Balkan Collections (1962-1994)
Article
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111192019-04-12T14:28:25Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Giullian, Jon C.
2013-05-14T15:52:39Z
2013-05-14T15:52:39Z
2006
Giullian, Jon. Book Review. Pushkinskaia Entsiklopediia “Mikhailovskoe” (Pushkin Encyclopedia “Mikhailovskoe”). Edited by e. B. Egorova. Mikhailovskoe: Gos. Muzei-zapovednik A.S. Pushkina „Mikhailovskoe,” 2003. v. 1. Slavic & East European Information Resources, 7.4 (2006): 146-150. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/J167v07n04_12
1522-8886
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/11119
10.1300/J167v07n04_12
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9342-7123
This article reviews volume one of the encyclopedia, which sets out to be a systematic guide to information about the realities of A. S. Pushkin’s life in the Pskov region. The work is intended to help both reader and visitor recreate the connection between Pushkin’s creative work and the realities of his life and surroundings, which have been lost over time. It also serves as a detailed guidebook of the region associated with A.S. Pushkin.
en_US
openAccess
Pushkin
Mikhailovskoe
Пушкин
Михайловское
Museums
Музей
Pskov
Псков
Encyclopedia
Энциклопедия
Book Review. Pushkinskaia Entsiklopediia “Mikhailovskoe” (Pushkin Encyclopedia “Mikhailovskoe”)
Article