2024-03-28T20:08:31Zhttps://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/oai/requestoai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/70472019-04-12T14:35:36Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_738
Sound Repetition and Metaphorical Structure in the Igor’ Tale
Greenberg, Marc L.
Poetics
Slovo o polku igoreve
Medieval Russian
Epic
The paper discusses sound repetitions, paranomasia, and anagrams in the medieval Russian Igor' Tale. These devices support the metaphorical structure of the Tale.
2011-01-19T20:53:33Z
2011-01-19T20:53:33Z
1999
Article
Marc L. Greenberg. 1999. “Sound Repetition and Metaphorical Structure in the Igor’ Tale.” In the Realm of Slavic Philology: To Honor the Teaching and Scholarship of Dean S. Worth From His UCLA Students (John Dingley and Leon Ferder, eds.). Bloomington, IN: Slavica: 137–144.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/7047
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Bloomington: Slavic Publishers, Inc.
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/56052019-04-12T14:29:40Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
Circumflex Advancement in Prekmurje and Beyond
Pomik cirkumfleksa v prekmurščini in drugod
Greenberg, Marc L.
Slavic accentology
Word prosody
Accents
Accentuation
Comparative linguistics
Dialects
Slovenian language
Dialectology
Croatian language
Also available from the journal's digital repository, University of Washington: https://digital.lib.washington.edu/ojs/index.php/ssj/article/view/3884/3292
The article discusses the advancement of the inherited Proto-Slavic falling tone ("circumflex") in Slovene dialects with a focus on the eastern periphery of the Slovene dialect territory and the western periphery of the Croatian Kajkavian territory. It is found that restrictions on the advancement from the first syllable to the second syllable are found on both western and eastern peripheries of the Slovene territory. As a result a the author notes a hierarchy of environments in which the advancement is realized.
2009-11-18T14:21:12Z
2009-11-18T14:21:12Z
1992
Article
ircumflex Advancement in Prekmurje and Beyond. Slovene Studies 14/1 (1992): 69-91
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/5605
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Society for Slovene Studies
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/105052019-04-12T14:42:07Zcom_1808_7105com_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_234col_1808_7108col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_235
Natural Disasters: Triggers of Political Instability?
Omelicheva, Mariya Y.
This is an author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication following peer review. The publisher version is available on its site.
Do different types of natural disasters – droughts, earthquakes, floods, storms,
and others – trigger political instability? This study engages with this question. It
revisits an ongoing debate over the nature of association between disasters and
conflict and re-assesses this relationship using the model of conflict developed by
the Political Instability Task Force as well as its data, measures of political
instability, and methods of assessment. The study finds only marginal support for
the impact of certain types of disasters on the onsets of political instability. The
pre-existing country-specific conditions, including the resilience of a state’s
institutions to crisis, account for most of the variance in the dependent variable.
Once the characteristics of a state’s political regime are taken into account, the
effect of disasters weakens or disappears completely suggesting that natural
disasters become catalysts of political instability in only those states, which are
already prone to conflict.
2012-12-18T15:18:30Z
2013-05-30T12:10:03Z
2011
Article
Omelicheva, Mariya Y. Natural Disasters: Triggers of Political Instability? International
Interactions, 37(4): 441-465, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03050629.2011.622653
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10505
10.1080/03050629.2011.622653
en
openAccess
application/pdf
Taylor and Francis
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111342019-04-12T14:42:05Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Slavic Folklore, the Library, and the Web: A Case-study of Subject-Specific Collaborative Information Literacy at the University of Kansas
Giullian, Jon C.
Library instruction
Information literacy
Slavic studies
Professional development
Librarian
Faculty
Collaboration
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.
2013-05-14T19:34:57Z
2013-05-14T19:34:57Z
2009
Article
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
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Slavic & East European Information Resources
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/70482019-04-12T14:31:52Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_23col_1808_16450col_1808_739
The Scholarly Communication Problem: Why Open Access is Necessary – A Transatlantic Perspective –
Greenberg, Marc L.
Emmett, Ada
Open Access
Open access policies
This article was written to raise awareness among researchers in the Open Access movement and share KU’s experience as a leader in Open Access policy. First published in September 2010 in the national daily paper Delo (Ljubljana, Slovenia) [http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6646], the piece has appeared in translation in newspapers in Croatia, Romania, Serbia, and Ukraine, among others.
2011-01-20T19:22:41Z
2011-01-20T19:22:41Z
2011-01
Article
Marc L. Greenberg & Ada Emmett (2011). The Scholarly Communication Problem Why Open Access is Necessary– A Transatlantic Perspective –. Hall Center Communiqué Spring 2011: 20-25.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/7048
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8419-8779
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6327-950X
en_US
http://www2.ku.edu/~hallcenter/publications/pdf/Spring2011CMQ.pdf
openAccess
application/pdf
Hall Center for the Humanities, University of Kansas
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/86152019-04-12T14:35:52Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
Balkanizem v srednji Evropi? Realni in nerealni naklon v odvisnikih v prekmurščini
Greenberg, Marc L.
Subordination
Clause structure
Complementizers
Irrealis mood
Language contact
Slavic languages
Slovenian language
Complementation
Dialects
Pannonian dialect group
The paper treats the opposition between realis and irrealis marking in the Prekmurje Slovene complementizers ka ≠ da, comparing them with a parallel opposition in the languages of the Balkan Sprachbund (Albanian, Bulgarian, modern Greek, Macedonian, Romani, Romanian). Though synchronically parallel, the opposition in Prekmurje Slovene arose as a result of peripheral retention (partially preserved in the Carinthian dialect group) and not as a result of language contact with the Balkan Sprachbund. Thus Prekmurje Slovene (together with the Pannonian dialect group) developed, as in many other of its characteristics, in its own direction, condition by its peripheral position with respect to the the South Slavic branch
2011-12-13T16:43:12Z
2011-12-13T16:43:12Z
2011
Article
Marc L. Greenberg. “Balkanizem v srednji Evropi? Realni in nerealni naklon v odvisnikih v prekmurščini.” Az igaz tanár üzenete: Sporočilo iskrenega učitelja / Pável Ágoston születésének 125. évfordulója tiszteletére: s spoštovanjem ob 125. obletnici rojstva Avgusta Pavla (= Bibliotheca Slavica Savariensis, Tomus XII), edited by Karel Gadányi, Marko Jesenšek): 47–56. Szombathely: Berzsenyi Dániel Tanárképző Főiskola Szláv Filológiai Intézete.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/8615
sl
openAccess
application/pdf
Berzsenyi Dániel Tanárképző Főiskola Szláv Filológiai Intézete
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/66462019-04-12T14:24:29Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_23col_1808_16450col_1808_739
Problem znanstvenega komuniciranja. Zakaj potrebujemo gibanje Prosti dostop.
The Scholarly Communication Problem: Why Open Access is Necessary
Greenberg, Marc L.
Emmett, Ada
Open Access
The article aims to raise awareness of the Open Access movement and gives examples from the experience of the University of Kansas in fostering and advancing free and permanent public access to publicly funded scholarly communication.
2010-09-06T18:19:16Z
2010-09-06T18:19:16Z
2010-09-04
Article
Marc L. Greenberg and Ada Emmett. Problem znanstvenega komuniciranja. Zakaj potrebujemo Prosti dostop [The Problem of Scholarly Communication. Why We Need Open Access]. Delo / Sobotna priloga, pp. 30–31. Saturday, 4 Sept. 2010.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6646
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8419-8779
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6327-950X
sl
openAccess
application/pdf
application/pdf
Delo d.d.
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/105042019-04-12T14:42:06Zcom_1808_7105com_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_234col_1808_7108col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_235
Teaching with Lecture or Debate? Testing the Effectiveness of Traditional versus Active Learning Methods of Instruction
Omelicheva, Mariya Y.
Avdeyeva, Olga
This is an author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication following peer review. The publisher version is available on its site.
2012-12-17T21:41:59Z
2012-12-17T21:41:59Z
2008
Article
Omelicheva, Mariya Y. and Olga Avdeyeva. Teaching with Lecture or Debate? Testing the Effectiveness of Traditional versus Active Learning Methods of Instruction, PS: Political Science and Politics, (July): 603-7, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1049096508080815
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10504
10.1017/S1049096508080815
en
openAccess
application/pdf
Cambridge University Press
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/74672019-04-12T14:24:44Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_23col_1808_16450col_1808_739
Problema comunicării ştiinţifice: de ce este necesar accesul liber (Open Access)? O perspectivă transatlantică
The Scholarly Communication Problem: Why Open Access is Necessary A Transatlantic Perspective
Greenberg, Marc L.
Emmett, Ada
Open Access
Open access policies
http://www.revistavatra.ro/
This article was written to raise awareness among researchers in the Open Access movement and share KU’s experience as a leader in Open Access policy. First published in September 2010 in the national daily paper Delo (Ljubljana, Slovenia) [http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6646], the piece has appeared in translation in newspapers in Croatia, Serbia, and Ukraine, among others. The article here is in Romanian, translated from English by Sorin Paliga.
2011-05-11T16:15:33Z
2011-05-11T16:15:33Z
2011
Article
Marc L. Greenberg and Ada Emmett. 2011. Problema comunicării ştiinţifice: de ce este necesar accesul liber (Open Access)? O perspectivă transatlantică. Vatra. Serie nouă 478/1: 82–85.
1220-6334
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/7467
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8419-8779
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6327-950X
rum
openAccess
application/pdf
Vatra. Serie nouă (Târgu Mureş)
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/77862018-03-09T19:57:25Zcom_1808_979com_1808_11153col_1808_980col_1808_11154
The Politics of Camp: Queering Parades, Performance, and the Public in Belfast
Conrad, Kathryn
2011-07-13T20:49:21Z
2011-07-13T20:49:21Z
2009
Book chapter
Conrad, Kathryn. "The Politics of Camp: Queering Parades, Performance, and the Public in Belfast." In Deviant Acts: Essays on Queer Performance, ed. David Creggan (Dublin: Carysfort Press, 2009).
978-1-904505-42-6
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/7786
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Carysfort Press
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/105032019-04-12T14:43:23Zcom_1808_7105com_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_234col_1808_7108col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_235
Resolved: Academic Debate Should Be a Part of Political Science Curricula
Omelicheva, Mariya Y.
Critical thinking
Debate
Action research
This is an author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication following peer review. The publisher version is available on its site.
Should political science educators use debate for teaching their undergraduate students? This
paper argues for incorporation of academic debate into curriculum of undergraduate courses. It
demonstrates the process of arriving at a decision favorable of debate through exploration and
analysis of competitive reasons, arguments, and evidence for and against using academic
debate as a method of teaching and learning. Empirical evidence for assessing strengths and
limitations of academic debate was collected in the undergraduate political science classes by
means of educational action research. A corollary of the study is that potential problems of
debates should not deter educators from using this instructional technique. The knowledge of
debate’s weaknesses can assist in improving the effectiveness of this teaching strategy in
promoting students’ skills of critical thinking, and understanding of complex political issues.
Awareness of obstacles to academic debate can help to implement this method of instruction in
a way which is positive and non-threatening to students.
2012-12-17T21:33:33Z
2012-12-17T21:33:33Z
2007
Article
Omelicheva, Mariya Y. Resolved: Academic Debate Should Be a Part of Political Science
Curricula, Journal of Political Science Education 3:161-177, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15512160701338320
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10503
10.1080/15512160701338320
en
openAccess
application/pdf
Taylor and Francis
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/52682018-04-30T15:28:18Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_789com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_5266
Prekmurje Grammar as a Source of Slavic Comparative Material
Prekmurska slovnica kot vir slovanskega primerjalnega gradiva
Greenberg, Marc L.
Mura River dialect
Slovenian language
Language contact
Hungarian
Subordination
Complex constructions
Complementizers
Epistemology in grammar
Sound change
Linguistic geography
SLV: Prispevek, predstavljen kot referat na 16. bienalnem simpoziju o južnoslovanskih jezikih, zago-varja objavo Pavlove rokopisne prekmurske slovnice Vend nyelvtan, dokončane l. 1942. Čeprav je prvotni namen slovnice, tj. uveljavitev pokrajinskega knjižnega jezika, zastarel, rokopis ponuja in¬formacije o posebnem ustroju prekmurščine in je s tem tudi dragocen vir za tipološke, primerjalne in zgodovinske študije slovanskih jezikov.
ENG: The paper, which was prepared for and delivered at the 16th Biennial Balkan and South Slavic Conference in Banff, Canada, makes the case for the publication of the 1942 Prekmurje Slovene grammar in manuscript, Avgust Pavel’s Vend nyelvtan, not for the purpose of reviving a competing literary language, but as a useful source of information for typological, comparative and historical studies of the Slavic languages.
2009-06-24T05:47:53Z
2009-06-24T05:47:53Z
2009-01-01
Article
Greenberg, Marc L. 2009. Prekmurje Grammar as a Source of Slavic Comparative Material. Slovenski jezik – Slovene Linguistic Studies 7 (2009): 29–44.
Greenberg, Marc L. 2009. Prekmurje Grammar as a Source of Slavic Comparative Material. Slovenski jezik – Slovene Linguistic Studies 7 (2009): 29–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.17161/SLS.1808.5268
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/5268
10.17161/SLS.1808.5268
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Inštitut za slovenski jezik Frana Ramovša, Znanstvenoraziskovalni center, Slovenska akademija znanosti in umetnosti / Hall Center for the Humanities, University of Kansas
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/68752021-12-20T19:33:21Zcom_1808_984com_1808_7105com_1808_5894com_1808_8219com_1808_4471com_1808_11153com_1808_7115com_1808_21col_1808_985col_1808_7108col_1808_7025col_1808_8220col_1808_4472col_1808_11154col_1808_7131col_1808_23
What Can Open Access Do for Me? Personal Perspectives of KU Faculty
Peterson, A. Townsend
Greenberg, Marc L.
Torrance, Andrew W.
Goddard, Stephen
Four University of Kansas faculty presented as panelists during this event. Slides from their presentations are shared here.
2010-11-12T21:56:56Z
2010-11-12T21:56:56Z
2010-10-21
Presentation
Peterson, A. Townsend; Greenberg, Marc L.; Goddard, Stephen; and Torrance, Andrew. (2010) What Can Open Access Do for Me? Personal Perspectives of KU Faculty: Panel discussion during Open Access Week, sponsored by KU Libraries' Center for Digital Scholarship, October 21, 2010.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6875
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0243-2379
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8419-8779
openAccess
application/pdf
application/pdf
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/104982019-04-12T14:43:11Zcom_1808_7105com_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_234col_1808_7108col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_235
Values and Ethics of Global Civil Society Actors: Insights from a Survey and Content Analyses
Omelicheva, Mariya Y.
This is an author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication following peer review. The publisher version is available on its site.
This study examines values, ethics, and principles of conduct that underlie activities
of global civil society organizations. It uses an international web-based survey, and a content
analysis of the codes of conduct for exploring views of global civil society actors active on global
issues and participating in global civil society events. The findings of this analysis highlight many
similarities in the ways global civil society organizations of different forms and origins define
their goals, values, ethical standards, and responsibilities. The normative consensus discerned in
this research is limited in scope, however. It revolves around a particular, liberal, view of civil
society. The study discusses results of the survey and content analyses in light of the current
debates on the nature of global civil society and its relation to the system of states and the global
market.
2012-12-17T21:16:11Z
2012-12-17T21:16:11Z
2006
Article
Omelicheva, Mariya Y. Values and Ethics of Global Civil Society Actors: Insights from a Survey and
Content Analyses, Journal of Civil Society 2(3):233-249, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17448680601104303
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10498
10.1080/17448680601104303
en
openAccess
application/pdf
Taylor and Francis
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
Albanian Verb Dictionary and Manual
Husic, Geoff
Albanian language
Albanian verbs
Conjugation
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.
2007-07-24T14:29:25Z
2007-07-24T14:29:25Z
2007-07-24T14:29:25Z
Book
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/1661
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0617-7160
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/86842021-12-20T19:30:21Zcom_1808_984com_1808_7105com_1808_5894com_1808_8219com_1808_4471com_1808_11153com_1808_7115com_1808_21col_1808_985col_1808_7108col_1808_7025col_1808_8220col_1808_4472col_1808_11154col_1808_7131col_1808_23
Open Access 101: Access to Your Work and the Works You Need to Build on
Peterson, A. Townsend
Emmett, Ada
Greenberg, Marc L.
Snoj, Marko
Haricombe, Lorraine J.
Open Access
KU Scholarworks
Scholarly communication
Center for Digital Scholarship
Open Access week
Dspace
Copyright
Intellectual property
This event is an RSVP pizza lunch for graduate student to learn more about the benefits of open access for them and for academe in general. Presenters: Lorraine Haricombe, Dean of KU Libraries; A. Townsend Peterson, Distinguished Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology; Marc L. Greenberg, chair of KU's Slavic Languages & Literatures department; Marko Snoj, director of the Fran Ramovš Institute for Slovene Language of the Scientific Research Center of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts in Ljubljana, Slovenia; and Ada Emmett, Scholarly Communications program head, KU Libraries.
2012-01-17T15:08:04Z
2012-01-17T15:08:04Z
2011-10-27
Presentation
Peterson, A. Townsend; Greenberg, Mark L.; Snoj, Marko; Emmett, Ada; Haricombe, Lorraine. (2011) Open Access 101: Access to Your Work and the Works You Need to Build on. Presentation given at one of the events sponsored by the KU's Center for Digital Scholarship during Open Access Week. Oct. 27, 2011.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/8684
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0243-2379
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6327-950X
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8419-8779
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3739-7788
openAccess
application/pdf
application/pdf
application/pdf
application/pdf
video/mp4
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/11042019-04-12T14:19:00Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
Slavic *jazditi ‘to ride’ and its implications for the development of the category of (in)determinacy
Slovanski *jazditi ‘jezditi’ in njegove implikacije za razvoj kategorije (ne)določnosti
Greenberg, Marc L.
Dickey, Stephen M.
Slavic languages
verbs of motion
Serial verbs
Verb serialization
Indo-European
South Slavic languages
Manner verbs
Verbal aspect
Etymology
Balto-Slavic
Proto-Slavic
Common Slavic
This paper presents a fresh look at the etymology of the Slavic verb *jazditi
‘ride’ and discusses implications for the rise of the category of determinacy-indeterminacy in the verbs of motion in Slavic which follow from non-mainstream view of the etymology of this verb. The authors claim that the verb stem was formed as a serial verb containing both the inherited Indo-European elements ‘travel’ and ‘sit’. The formation suggests that the category of verbs traditionally labeled »indeterminate« are in fact manner of motion verbs.
2006-11-02T21:59:42Z
2006-11-02T21:59:42Z
2006
Article
Jezikovna predanost. Akademiku prof. dr. Jožetu Toporišiču ob 80-letnici, pp. 153-158
961-6320-38-6
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/1104
en_US
Zbirka Zora
44
openAccess
433690 bytes
application/pdf
application/pdf
Maribor: Slavistično društvo; Ljubljana: ZRC SAZU
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/104992019-04-12T14:43:12Zcom_1808_7105com_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_234col_1808_7108col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_235
Ethnic Dimension of Religious Extremism and Terrorism in Central Asia
Omelicheva, Mariya Y.
This is an author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication following peer review. The publisher version is available on its site.
2012-12-17T21:21:26Z
2012-12-17T21:21:26Z
2010
Article
Omelicheva, Mariya Y. Ethnic Dimension of Religious Extremism and Terrorism in Central Asia,
International Political Science Review, 2010 31(2): 167-186. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0192512110364738
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10499
10.1177/0192512110364738
en
openAccess
application/pdf
Taylor and Francis
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/62132019-04-12T14:29:10Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Vampire by Any Other Name: Vampires, Werewolves and Witches of the Slavs, Balkan Peoples and Other Lands: A Linguistic and Cultural Adventure
Husic, Geoff
Vampires
Werewolves
Witches
Balkans
Slavic languages etymology
Book exhibit
The suave, pale, bloodsucking vampire that is most familiar to us first burst onto the scene in the works of 19th century Western authors such John Polidori’s Vampyre (1819) or in the much better known Dracula (1897) by Bram Stoker. The folkloric vampire of the peoples of Eastern Europe differ quite a bit from this popular literary depiction. The Balkan and Carpathian beings featured in this exhibit form a complex of basically three major ghouls. These beings are common to the Slavs, and the non-Slavic Albanians, Romanians, Greeks, and Romanies (i.e. Gypsies). In some cases the names of these ghouls are synonymous, and in other cases there are fine distinctions between them or overlap in their characteristics.
Catalog of exhibit held in Watson Library, University of Kansas, May-June 2010.
2010-05-18T16:29:23Z
2010-05-18T16:29:23Z
2010-05-18T16:29:23Z
Article
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6213
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0617-7160
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/8152018-04-30T15:50:59Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_789com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_793
Henrik Birnbaum–Remembering a Great Teacher
Greenberg, Marc L.
Necrology
Slavic linguistics
Slavic philology
A brief overview of the life and work of the Slavist Henrik Birnbaum, (b. December 13, 1925, Breslau/Wrocław; d. April 26, 2002, Los Angeles).
2006-01-07T20:03:56Z
2006-01-07T20:03:56Z
2003-01-01
Article
Slovenski jezik / Slovene Linguistic Studies 4 http://dx.doi.org/10.17161/SLS.1808.815
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/815
10.17161/SLS.1808.815
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
application/pdf
ZRC SAZU / Hall Center for the Humanities
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/104672019-04-12T14:53:14Zcom_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
O jeziku slovanskih prebivalcev med Donavo in Jadranom v srednjem veku (pogled jezikoslovcev)
On the Language of the Medieval Slavic Population in the Area between the Danube and the Adriatic (from a Linguistic Perspective)
Snoj, Marko
Greenberg, Marc L.
Middle ages
Territory between the alps and the adriatic
Language and identity of the Slavic population
Slavic medieval history
The essay responds to historians and archaeologists using linguistic data to enrich or justify their explanations about populations in the past, focusing on the language of the Slavic population between the Danube and the Adriatic Sea at the turn of the first millennium AD and its differentiation from the languages of other groups of Slavs for the purpose of clarifying both the precepts and practice of historical and comparative linguistics as well as demonstrating the intricate argumentation needed to draw conclusions from the linguistic data. As such, the article attempts to contribute to a better understanding of linguistic reconstruction, relying not just on the comparative method, but on the application of other methods, including the insights of geo- and sociolinguistics.
The authors take a post-modernist perspective, meaning that as scholars they are and should be aware of their own historical viewpoint; thus, following Benedict Anderson’s view of the nation as an imagined community, historical linguists (and others) must avoid the pitfall of blithely projecting the imagined communities of the nineteenth, twentieth, or twenty-first centuries onto the past. While this means that a speech community and an ethnicity (the latter being a mental construct) are matters of a different order, it does not mean that they are unrelated. Rather, linguistic innovation, reflected in the rise of isoglosses, is an index of group formation. It remains for linguists, anthropologists, historians, and archaeologists to interpret this complex relationship.
Part of the confusion in using the results of historical linguistic interpretation comes from traditional professional jargon, which is used with heterogeneous meanings even inside the linguistic field, leaving open the possibility of (understandable, if regrettable) misapprehension outside of it. Thus, terms like “Proto-Slavic” and “Common Slavic,” which can refer variously to periodization with or without regard to internal dialect differentiation, might lead an external observer to assume that the language was uniform before the appearance of “national” languages.
The view from within the linguistic field has become more sophisticated with time. While the use of the comparative method of the nineteenth century is still a valid and central tool for linguistic reconstruction, additional tools add much more subtlety to linguistic reconstruction. In particular, advances in sociolinguistics help us to consider not just language change as a process, but one in which speakers shape language in relation to their group identity. An illustration of this is the example of “rhotacism” in South Slavic languages. The comparative method indicates a uniform conditioned change of ž > r throughout the South Slavic area by the 11th c. AD. By the 14th century, however, in most lexical categories in which the change occurred, it was reversed in South Slavic speech communities associated with the Byzantine confessional style and reinforced in those associated with the Roman rite. Such para-comparative techniques can also help linguists dig further into the past. So, for example, an early phono-semantic innovation *gъlčěti : *mъlčěti ‘make noise’ : ‘be silent’ > ‘speak’ : ‘be silent’ was carried from an emergent dialect of (pre-migration) Proto-Slavic and is now distributed in three disparate regions—central Russia, central Bulgaria, and north-eastern Slovenia.
Philology, too, has its contribution to make to understanding speech communities as communities of practice as oral traditions yield to written ones. We note, for example, a promising trend in the literature which investigates the process of written traditions that require the intervention of individuals and groups that over time negotiate the features of emergent literary languages, e.g., Trubars awareness of a coherent reading public for his liturgical translations and“Illyrianism” before the Illyrian movement, which precede the appearance of modern European national languages of the nineteenth century.
The second half covers the primarily phonological linguistic innovations in the relevant geographical space up to the end of the first millennium AD. From the Freising Folia and contemporary onomastic data we learn that this language had by then carried through these innovations:
(1) liquid metathesis, (2) the change d’ > j (3) the change t’ > k’ (or even ć), (4) contraction, (5) fronting of y > i (except after labials) and that the following processes were underway: (6) assimilation of tv > t, (7) rhotacism, as well as, possibly, (8) the forward shift of the Proto-Slavic circumflex; moreover, we find in this language an important archaism, i.e., (9) the retention of the consonant cluster dl. Though the majority of these processes are common to at least the Kajkavian and Čakavian dialect continuum, innovations (6), (8), as well as the archaism (9) are exclusive to Slovene. The differential features between Slavic idioms around the year 1000, which must be understood as parts of systems, were few in number – as one would expect—yet they were irreversible and thus decisive in that they determine a speech territory from which Slovene dialects, and not others, were to develop, as further philological evidence also affirms.
From this evidence the conclusion follows that the Freising Folia and contemporary onomastic evidence belong to the Slovene linguistic continuum, for which reason the term Old Slovene is warranted. The terminology is based on (1) the general practice of naming the oldest evidence of a particular idiom with the name of the present-day language that continues it, adding the qualifier “Old”; (2) the linguistically determined fact that only today’s Slovene dialects could develop from the idiom in question; and (3) the consensus of linguists that crystallized through debates in the second half of the 20th century, the principal ones being adduced in the article. Our knowledge of a past idiom in time and space is founded on a comparative linguistic analysis of extant texts and other linguist material, enriched by the results of geo and sociolinguistics, which permit a more nuanced interpretation of the facts. Since the appearance of linguistic innovations require a community in which such innovations carry prestige value, it follows from our analysis the synthesis that in the relevant time and space there was a community with its own identity that as such had differentiated itself from other, neighboring Slavic communities, i.e., Štokavian and Czech-Moravian-Slovak as well as, to a lesser extent, Kajkavian and Čakavian.
At the frontiers of these communities of identity in the following centuries isoglosses continued to bundle, representing ever more palpable disjunctures in the dialect continuum; these may be innovations of a progressive nature, static archaisms, or even regressive phenomena, such as the reversal of rhotacism. At the time of the cultivation of standard languages, the borders of these communities of identity were recognized as the linguistic borders.
2012-11-28T10:13:19Z
2012-11-28T10:13:19Z
2012
Article
Snoj, Marko and Marc L. Greenberg. 2012. O jeziku slovanskih prebivalcev med Donavo in Jadranom v srednjem veku (pogled jezikoslovcev) [On the Language of the Medieval Slavic Population in the Area between the Danube and the Adriatic (from a Linguistic Perspective)]. Zgodovinski časopis / Historical Review 66/3–4 (146): 276–305
0350-5774
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10467
sl
openAccess
application/pdf
Zveza zgodovinskih društev Slovenije, Ljubljana
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111222019-04-12T14:39:20Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Reference Question Answered: Discussion of Russian funeral rites as depicted in V posikakh schast’ia (In Search of Happiness), Film, 2006
Giullian, Jon C.
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.
2013-05-14T16:00:00Z
2013-05-14T16:00:00Z
2008
Article
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
openAccess
application/pdf
Slavic & East European Information Resources
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/44872019-04-12T14:24:08Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Russo-Serbian Orthography: Cataloging Conundrum and a Proposed Solution
Husic, Geoff
Russo-Serbian script
Serbian language
Cyrillic script
Book cataloging
This is a pre-print of the article published as: Husic, Geoff(2009)'Russo-Serbian Orthography: Cataloging Conundrum and a Proposed Solution',Slavic & East European Information Resources,10:1,45 — 60.
It is identical to the published article except that the samples in MARC tagged format are preserved correctly in the pre-print.
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.
2009-04-20T18:18:20Z
2009-04-20T18:18:20Z
2009-04-20T18:18:20Z
Article
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
en
openAccess
application/pdf
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/152822019-04-12T14:41:13Zcom_1808_7105com_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_234col_1808_7108col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_235
Competing perspectives on democracy and democratization: assessing alternative models of democracy promoted in Central Asian states
Omelicheva, Mariya Y.
This is the author's accepted manuscript.The original publication is available at http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09557571.2014.902036#.VD_GPRYXNWs.
This study examines alternative understandings of democracy and democracy promotion advanced by the US, EU, Russia and China in Central Asia using frame analysis. In the context of this study, ‘frames’ refer to the relatively cohesive sets of beliefs, categories and value judgements as well as specific ways in which these ideas are packaged for the targets of international democratization. The study assesses the implications of alternative representations of democracy promotion and competing models of governance for the prospects of democratization in Central Asia. It concludes that the substance of US and EU democracy promotion in Central Asia has neglected the cultural and political contexts of these states, while the Russian and Chinese models of governance and development have provided a better match to the interests of the ruling elites.
2014-10-16T13:32:56Z
2014-10-16T13:32:56Z
2014-08-12
Article
Omelicheva, Mariya Y. (2014). "Competing perspectives on democracy and democratization: assessing alternative models of democracy promoted in Central Asian states." Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 12 Aug. 2014. http://www.dx.doi.org/10.1080/09557571.2014.902036.
0955-7571
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/15282
10.1080/09557571.2014.902036
openAccess
application/pdf
Taylor & Francis
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/105062019-04-12T14:42:08Zcom_1808_7105com_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_234col_1808_7108col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_235
Russia's Foreign Policy Toward Iran: A Critical Geopolitics Perspective
Omelicheva, Mariya Y.
This is an author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication following peer review. The publisher version is available on its site.
Russia’s foreign policy stance on nuclear Iran has been a subject of debate. Why has Moscow oscillated
between resistance to sanctions and support for punitive measures against Iran in the meantime
supplying Tehran with new arms technologies, despite the protestations from the US? This study
engages with this question. It argues that the conventional approaches linking Russia’s foreign policy to
either geostrategic calculations or considerations of economic efficiency are insufficient because they do
not take into consideration the changing conceptions of geopolitics held by Russia. This study shows that
a pragmatic application of critical geopolitics, which calls for the examination of Russia’s foreign policy
through the lens of its own “geopolitics code” can substantially enhance our understanding of Moscow’s
foreign policy.
2012-12-18T15:22:52Z
2014-04-10T12:10:04Z
2012
Article
Omelicheva, Mariya Y. Russia’s Foreign Policy Toward Iran: A Critical Geopolitics Perspective,
forthcoming in Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies, 14(3): 331-344, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19448953.2012.720777
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10506
10.1080/19448953.2012.720777
en
openAccess
application/pdf
Taylor and Francis
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/107582019-04-12T14:39:32Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Tracking the History of Romani Publications: Challenges Presented by Flawed Data
Husic, Geoff
Romani language
Cataloging
MARC language codes
This is the preprint of the published version, identical except for the correction of one typo.
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.
2013-01-30T00:34:22Z
2013-01-30T00:34:22Z
2012-12
Article
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
en
openAccess
application/pdf
Taylor & Francis Group
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/108792019-04-12T14:37:07Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
PIE inheritance and word-formational innovation in Slavic motion verbs in i
Greenberg, Marc L.
verbs of motion
Slavic languages
Indo-European
Word-formation
The unprefixed imperfective verbs of motion with present tense in -i (such as Russian vodit’, vozit’, bežat’), most of which are considered indeterminate in the modern languages, developed over a lengthy period from Proto-Indo-European to the disintegration of Proto-Slavic. The final period of their development in Slavic shows striking innovation in the formal and semantic structures, including quasi-serialization in the compounding of verbal stems in such a way that the main lexical verb is modified by a manner component, e.g., *ja‑ ‘travel’ + -sd- ‘sit’ = jazd-i-ti ‘ride’. This innovative period in the development of motion verbs correlates with the period of migrations, which are seen as the end of the previous state of equilibrium in the Slavic speech community.
2013-03-03T23:10:52Z
2013-03-03T23:10:52Z
2010
Article
Greenberg, Marc L. “PIE inheritance and word-formational innovation in Slavic motion verbs in -i-” New Approaches to Slavic Verbs of Motion (= Studies in Language, Companion Series 115) ed. by Viktoria Driagina-Hasko and Renee Perelmutter: 111−121. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
978-90-272-05827
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10879
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
John Benjamins
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111232019-04-12T14:41:20Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Reference Question Answered: Bibliographic Sources for the Ukrainian Periodical Press in the 1840’s: Encyclopedias, Bibliographies, Guides, and Library Catalogs
Giullian, Jon C.
Ukraine
Україна
Ukrainian
Український
Press
19th century
Hapsburg
April laws
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.
2013-05-14T16:08:09Z
2013-05-14T16:08:09Z
2008
Article
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
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Slavic & East European Information Resources
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/77842019-04-12T14:53:10Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
Glasoslovni opis treh prekmurskih govorov in komentar k zgodovinskemu glasoslovju in oblikoglasju prekmurskega narečja
A Phonological Description of Three Prekmurje Village Dialects and Commentary on the Historical Phonology and Morphonology of the Prekmurje Dialect
Greenberg, Marc L.
Slovenian language
Dialects
Pannonian slavic
Phonology
Morphophonology
Accentology
Hungarian language
Language contact
The paper revises and summarizes the author’s 1990 UCLA dissertation, based on fieldwork and archival work conducted under the auspices of a Fulbright-Hays Dissertation Fellowship for 1988-89, in the Prekmurje region of Slovenia, then Yugoslavia. The revision was conducted with the aid of the University of Kansas General Research Fund, grant # 3686-0038. The paper presents a phonological sketch of three village dialects of Prekmurje (located in northeastern Slovenia and southwestern Hungary), representing the three traditional subdivisions of the diaIect: goričko, ravensko and dolinsko. Martinje (goričko, northern Prekmurje), Cankova (ravensko, southwestern Prekmurje) and Polana (dolinsko, southeastern Prekmurje) differ from each other phonologica11y in terms of relatively recent Prekmurje-internal innovations: (1) rounding of short and unstressed a (Martinje, Cankova) vs. rounding of long stressed a (Polana); (2) lenition of word-final -l > -o (Martinje, Cankova) vs. lenition of -l > -u (Polana); (3) the change j > d' before a stressed vowel or following a consonant (Martinje, Cankova); (4) complete rephonologization of quantitative with qualitative oppositions (Martinje); (5) the change t > k before *l (Cankova, Polana). - The second part of the paper treats some details of the phono!ogical and morphonological development of Prekmurje with respect to Common Slavic and Common Slovene, focusing on issues that are not discussed fully in the dialectological literature. A new proposal for the advancement of the circumflex is discussed as well as a phonological hierarchy given for the retraction of stress from internal syllables. A contrastive analysis of the relatively conservative vowel system of Cankova with the innovative system of Martinje attempts to elucidate the processes by which distinctive quality replaces quantity as a structural1y motivated set of changes.
Fulbright-Hays Dissertation Fellowship (1988-89); University of Kansas General Research Fund, grant # 3686-0038 (1992).
2011-07-13T16:51:32Z
2011-07-13T16:51:32Z
1993-10
Article
Greenberg, Marc L. 1993. Glasoslovni opis treh prekmurskih govorov in komentar k zgodovinskemu glasoslovju in oblikoglasju prekmurskega narečja. Slavistična revija 41/4: 465–487.
0350'6894
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/7784
sl
openAccess
application/pdf
Slavistično društvo Slovenije (Ljubljana)
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111092019-04-12T14:40:08Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Murlin Croucher: Magician of Slavic Book Collecting
Giullian, Jon C.
Croucher, Murlin
Slavic
Librarian
Bibliographer
Indiana university
Slavic studies: a guide to bibliographies, encyclopedias, and handbooks
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.
2013-05-13T18:02:09Z
2013-05-13T18:02:09Z
2012
Other
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
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Association of College and Research Libraries. Slavic and East European Section
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/105022019-04-12T14:42:08Zcom_1808_7105com_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_234col_1808_7108col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_235
Self and Peer Evaluation in Undergraduate Education: Are Promises Worth Risking the Perils?
Omelicheva, Mariya Y.
This is an author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication following peer review. The publisher version is available on its site.
This study canvasses reliability of students’ self and peer evaluation, a method of
assessment of university students that has recently gained renewed pedagogical
interest and broad recognition. Two experiments, imbedded in classroom curriculum,
examined the effects of the instrument of evaluation (with criteria vs. no criteria for
evaluation provided), the format of evaluation procedure (anonymous vs. nonanonymous),
and motivation of students (strong vs. weak) on the accuracy of students’
self and peer ratings. The results of the experiments revealed both a considerable
unreliability of peer ratings in some cases as well as a notable consistency of peer
evaluations in others. The instrument of evaluation with criteria provided had significant
positive effect on the accuracy of peer evaluations. This finding was robust across both
experiments reported in the paper. Students’ motivation also had impact on the
reliability of peer evaluations. Students strongly motivated to apply criteria for evaluation
produced more accurate peer evaluations compared to their peers provided with not
criteria or supported with the criteria but not motivated to apply them. The results on the
impact of the condition of anonymity were mixed.
2012-12-17T21:30:24Z
2012-12-17T21:30:24Z
2005
Article
Omelicheva, Mariya Y. Self- and Peer-Evaluation in Undergraduate Education: Structuring
Conditions That Maximize Its Promises and Minimize the Perils, Journal of Political Science
Education 1(1): 191-206, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15512160590961784
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10502
10.1080/15512160590961784
en
openAccess
application/pdf
Taylor and Francis
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/68892019-04-12T14:53:07Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
Nova opisna slovnica ziljščine
A New Descriptive Grammar of the Zilja (Gailtal) Dialect
Greenberg, Marc L.
Dialects
Slovenian language
Language contact
German language
Slavic languages
Word prosody
Slavic accentology
Verbal aspect
A review essay on Tijmen Pronk (2009) The Slovene Dialect of Egg and Potschach in the Gailtal, Austria (= Studies in Slavic and General Linguistics, vol. 36). Amsterdam, New York: Rodopi.
2010-11-23T14:45:43Z
2010-11-23T14:45:43Z
2010
Article
Greenberg, Marc L. 2010. Nova opisna slovnica ziljščine. Slavistična revija 58/4: 489-494.
0350-6894
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6889
sl
openAccess
application/pdf
Slavistično društvo Slovenije
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/68642021-12-20T19:35:21Zcom_1808_984com_1808_7105com_1808_5894com_1808_8219com_1808_4471com_1808_11153com_1808_7115com_1808_21com_1808_16449col_1808_985col_1808_7108col_1808_7025col_1808_8220col_1808_4472col_1808_11154col_1808_7131col_1808_23col_1808_16450
Open Access 101 for Future Scholars/Researchers
Peterson, A. Townsend
Greenberg, Marc L.
Emmett, Ada
Open Access
Open Access week
The video of this event is available through the "Other Version" link in this record. Handouts, presentation slides, an audio recording of the presentations, and photos from the event are available below.
2010-11-10T16:42:18Z
2010-11-10T16:42:18Z
2010-10-21
Other
Peterson, A. Townsend; Greenberg, Mark L.; Emmett, Ada. (2010) Open Access 101 for Future Scholars/Researchers. Presentation given at one of the events sponsored by the KU's Center for Digital Scholarship during Open Access Week. Oct. 21 2010.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6864
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0243-2379
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8419-8779
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6327-950X
http://youtu.be/m365vC4wkvE
openAccess
application/pdf
application/pdf
application/pdf
audio/mpeg
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/108822018-07-12T16:24:23Zcom_1808_7105com_1808_8219com_1808_4471com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7108col_1808_8220col_1808_4472col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Open Access and the Author-Pays Problem: Assuring Access for Readers and Authors in a Global Community of Scholars
Peterson, A. Townsend
Emmett, Ada
Greenberg, Marc L.
Scholarly publishing
Author processing charges
Open access publishing
APCS
2013-03-05T16:52:33Z
2013-03-05T16:52:33Z
2013-03
Article
Peterson, AT, Emmett, A, Greenberg, ML. (2013). Open Access and the Author-Pays Problem: Assuring Access for Readers and Authors in a Global Community of Scholars. Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication 1(3):eP1064. https://doi.org/10.7710/2162-3309.1064
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10882
10.7710/2162-3309.1064
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0243-2379
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6327-950X
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8419-8779
en_US
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
openAccess
application/pdf
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/56072019-04-12T14:24:19Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
Расцвет и падение лениции взрывных в словенском языке
The Rise and Fall of Lenition of Stops in Slovene / Rascvet i padenie lenicii vzryvnyx v slovenskom jazyke
Greenberg, Marc L.
Slovenian language
Phonology
Consonants
Lenition
Sound change
Comparative linguistics
South Slavic languages
The author describes the process of lenition of voiced stops b, d, g to fricatives in Slovene and their later replacement by stops under certain conditions.
2009-11-19T13:25:41Z
2009-11-19T13:25:41Z
2001
Article
Марк Л. Гринберг (= Marc L. Greenberg). 2001. “’Расцвет и падение’ лениции взрывных в словенском языке.” [The Rise and Fall of Lenition in Slovene]. Вопросы языкознания. 31–42. Moscow.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/5607
ru
openAccess
application/pdf
Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/52452019-04-12T14:29:57Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
Word Prosody in Slovene from a Typological Perspective
Greenberg, Marc L.
Word prosody
Pitch-accent
Vowel quantity
Slovenian language
Slovene language
Slavic languages
First publication in "STUF - Sprachtypologie und Universalienforschung. Language Typology and Universals Vol. 56 (2003) Issue 3". Akademie Verlag.
Permission for reproduction in KU Scholarworks kindly extended by Ms. Sylvia Hoffman (via e-mail 8 June 2009)
Akademie Verlag GmbH
Markgrafenstr. 12–14
10969 Berlin
Tel: +49 30 - 42 20 06-20
Fax: +49 30 - 42 20 06-57
Verlagsleitung: Dr. Sabine Cofalla
Geschäftsführung: Dr. Christine Autenrieth
HR B 78 489
USt.Id.-Nr. DE 812917618
Slovene is, along with Serbo-Croatian, an example of a pitch-accent language, one of only two remaining in the Slavic language family. Most of the literature on Slovene the data on the word-prosody features of this language are taken from the standardized system, a somewhat constructed entity based on the pitch-accent system of selected dialects. The present survey attempts to give a coherent structural description of the word-prosodic phenomena as they are manifested in the extraordinarily variegated Slovene dialects; these in turn are compared to the standardized system as well as, where relevant, to typological similar systems found in Croatian dialects. In addition, the key innovations that shaped the prosodic systems of Slovene dialects are discussed. Slovene emerges as a special set of types that share a tendency to concentrate prosodic distinctions -- pitch and quantity -- in the one stressed syllable of each accented word. Furthermore, these pitch and quantity distinctions in many dialects have become rephonologized as vowel-quantity distinctions. A few aberrant local dialets have gained new pitch distinctions or unstressed quantity distinctions.
2009-06-08T19:32:58Z
2009-06-08T19:32:58Z
2003
Article
Marc L. Greenberg. 2003. “Word Prosody in Slovene from a Typological Perspective.” Sprachtypologie und Universalienforschung 56/3. Focus on: Slovenian from a typological perspective. On the occasion of the International Congress of Slavicists in Ljubljana, 15–21 August 2003, ed. by JanezOrešnik & Donald F. Reindl: 234–251. Berlin: Akademie Verlag.
0942-2919
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/5245
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Akademie Verlag
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/77852018-03-09T19:56:59Zcom_1808_979com_1808_11153col_1808_980col_1808_11154
Keening the Nation: The Bean Chaointe, the Sean Bhean Bhocht, and Women's Lament in Irish Nationalist Literature
Conrad, Kathryn
2011-07-13T20:38:37Z
2011-07-13T20:38:37Z
2008
Book chapter
Conrad, Kathryn, "Keening the Nation: The Bean Chaointe, the Sean Bhean Bhocht, and Women's Lament in Irish Nationalist Literature." In Irish Literature: Feminist Perspectives, ed. Patricia Coughlan and Tina O'Toole (Dublin: Carysfort Press, 2008).
9781904505358
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/7785
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Carysfort Press
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111152019-04-12T14:29:00Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Book Review. The 20th Century Libraries in the Baltic Sea Regions. Transactions of the National Library of Estonia
Giullian, Jon C.
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
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).
2013-05-14T15:43:31Z
2013-05-14T15:43:31Z
2008
Article
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
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Slavic & East European Information Resource
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/8092018-04-30T15:52:09Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_789com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_791
Slovarček središkega govora (na osnovi zapisov Karla Ozvalda)
Glossary of the Microdialect of Središče ob Dravi (Based on the Descriptions of Karol Ozvald)
Greenberg, Marc L.
Dialectology
Lexicography
Slovene language
Slovenian language
Accentology
South Slavic languages
ENLGISH: The present contribution gives a glossary of all of the attested forms in four works by Karol Ozvald (3 of which remain unpublished), written between 1895 and 1904, describing the phonetics, morphology, and lexicon of the dialect of the microdialect of Središče (ob Dravi), a dialect of Prlekija (Pannonian dialect group). As such, this represents the first publication of a work giving detailed lexicographical and phonological information on a Prlekija microdialect. Brief synchronic and diachronic sketches of the phonology of the microdialect, as well as a description of the principles on which the glossary was compiled, are also given. These are based on earlier analyses of the dialect by the compiler of the glossary. The dialect is in most ways typical of the Pannonian group, and Prlekija in particular, in contrasting short and long-stressed vowels. Diphthongs are absent, as the dialect has undergone the monophthongization of relatively recent date, thus, for example, both bre^.g 'hill, embankment' (< *brĕ^gъ) and šte^. 'count!' 2nd sg. imperative (< *čьtĕjь) contain the same vowel phoneme. Consequently, the dialect is rich in vocalic contrasts, particular among the front vowels (long: /î, ê./, [ê], /ê,, â˚/, [â], /ô., û, r^˚/; short: /i˚", ä", a", u", r"˚/; unstressed: /i˚, e., ä, o, u˚, r˚/). With regard to accentual innovations, Središče has carried through a restricted variety of the forward shift of the Common Slavic falling tone, such that it is realized only if the second syllable is closed (e.g., golo^.b 'pigeon', väčęr 'evening' < *go"l<nasal-o>bь, *ve"čerъ); otherwise, the place of stress as well as the Common Slavic vowel quantity remain unchanged (e.g., me^so 'meat', o"ko 'eye' < *mêso, *o"ko).
SLOVENE: Pričujoči prispevek podaja slovarček vseh izpričanih oblik v štirih razpravah Karla Ozvalda (od katerih so tri neobjavljene), datiranih od 1895 do 1904, ki vsebujejo opis glasoslovja, oblikoslovja in besedišča govora Središča (ob Dravi) v Prlekiji (panonska skupina). Kot tak je prispevek prva objava kakega dela, ki vsebuje podrobne podatke o besedišču in fonologiji kakega prleškega govora. Prispevek prinaša tudi kratek sinhroni in diahroni oris fonologije središkega govora ter opis načel, po katerih je bil slovarček sestavljen. To dvoje temelji na analizah govora, ki jih je sestavljalec slovarčka predhodno opravil. Govor je v večini pogledov značilen predstavnik panonske skupine in še posebej prleškega narečja, zlasti kar zadeva nasprotje med kratkimi in dolgimi naglašenimi samoglasniki. Diftongov nima, ker je govor doživel precej pozno monoftongizacijo, tako da npr. brê.g (< *brĕgъ) in štê. 'štej!' (< *čьtĕjь) 2. os. ed. vsebujeta isti samoglasniški fonem. Zato pa ima veliko samoglasniških nasprotij, zlasti med sprednjimi samoglasniki (dolgi: /î, ê./, [ê], /ê,, â˚/, [â], /ô., ô, r^˚/; kratki: /i"˚, ä", a", u", r"˚/; nenaglašeni: /i˚, e., ä, o, u˚, r˚/). Pri naglasnih inovacijah je središki govor izvedel omejeno različico pomika praslovanskega cirkumfleksa, do katerega je prišlo samo v primerih, ko je bil drugi zlog zaprt (npr. golô.b, väčęr < *go"l<nasal-o>bь, *ve"čerъ); v drugih primerih pa sta mesto naglasa in praslovanska kolikost samoglasnika ostala nespremenjena (npr. mêso < *mêso, o"ko < *o"ko).
2006-01-07T16:26:04Z
2006-01-07T16:26:04Z
1999-01-01
Article
Slovenski jezik / Slovene Linguistic Studies 2 http://dx.doi.org/10.17161/SLS.1808.809
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/809
10.17161/SLS.1808.809
other
openAccess
application/pdf
application/pdf
ZRC SAZU / Hall Center for the Humanities
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/68962019-04-12T14:12:14Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_8676com_1808_8675com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_8683col_1808_16450col_1808_739
Hoffman’s Hawk. A University of Kansas Jayhawk Carved During the Russian Revolution of 1917 Reappears at KU in the Twenty-First Century
Greenberg, Marc L.
World Alliance Of Ymcas. War Prisoners��_�_̫ Aid
World War, 1914-1918 --prisoners And Prisons
Hoffman, Conrad, 1882-1958
Jayhawk
Soviet Union --history --revolution, 1917-1921
University of Kansas
The following people and institutions assisted with the preparation of this text: Keah Cunningham (EGARC), Becky Schulte (University Archives), Prof. Kenneth Steuer (Western Michigan University); The Kansas City Star. Their assistance is gratefully acknowledged.
The paper describes the history of a 1917 carving of a Jayhawk by a Russian prisoner of war in Germany, donated to the University of Kansas by Conrad Hoffman, Senior American YMCA WPA Secretary in Germany during World War I.
2010-11-25T16:02:44Z
2010-11-25T16:02:44Z
2010-11-25T16:02:44Z
Article
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6896
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
application/pdf
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/63502019-04-12T14:30:44Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21com_1808_16449col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_23col_1808_16450
Faculty Open Access Policies: Public Missions, Public Research, Public Good
Greenberg, Marc L.
Graves, Diane
Emmett, Ada
Presentation given at the American Association of University Professors Annual Conference on the State of Higher Education, June 9-13th 2010.
Open access (OA) to faculty scholarship is a high profile issue for universities today. OA has the potential, over time, to fundamentally change the model by which the research outcomes of university faculty are shared. There are obvious merits in shifting the economic model of scholarly communication and opening the door to research information to a wider and global audience. At the same time, discussions of open access are often laced with the concerns of the faculty. Will OA diminish the value of faculty work, create barriers to promotion and tenure, present additional burdens for faculty as they assert their rights with publishers or self-submit their work to an open repository?
There are also many issues in implementing OA policies for faculty groups and campus administrators to consider such as how (or if) the institution will monitor participation, the allocation of resources, and how OA may be used to reflect scholars’ (and their institutions’) commitment to the public access to the results of their scholarship.
This presentation will discuss faculty efforts on three campuses to plant the seeds for faculty-initiated open access policies, working with faculty colleagues and faculty governance bodies to pass such policies, and current implementation strategies. Implications ahead for developing significantly more robust and complementary methods of providing unfettered access to scholarship will also be discussed.
2010-06-16T17:49:34Z
2010-06-16T17:49:34Z
2010-06
Presentation
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6350
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8419-8779
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6327-950X
openAccess
application/vnd.ms-powerpoint
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111512019-04-12T14:34:06Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Slavic Studies and the World: Embracing the Revolution of Open Access Publishing
Giullian, Jon C.
Libraries
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.
2013-05-14T21:50:35Z
2013-05-14T21:50:35Z
2010
Article
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
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
application/pdf
Sofia, Bulgaria: “St. Kliment Okhridskii” University of Sofia
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/72792019-04-12T14:17:37Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Romani Language: Cataloging Ramifications for a Language in the Process of Standardization
Husic, Geoff
Romanies
Gypsies
Romani language
Cataloging
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.
2011-03-31T19:00:33Z
2011-03-31T19:00:33Z
2011-01
Preprint
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
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Taylor & Francis
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/56132019-04-12T14:24:18Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
The Slovene Sound System Through Time
Glasovna podoba slovenskega jezika skozi čas
Greenberg, Marc L.
Slovenian language
Dialects
Phonology
Comparative linguistics
The paper sketches selected changes discussed in Marc L. Greenberg’s A Historical Phonology of the Slovene Languages (Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag Carl Winter, 2000) in which innovative explanations shed new light on the complexity of the developments in the early stages of the emergence of the Slovene speech territory. The sketch of selected changes, which
depart in a number of ways from traditional explanations for Slovene sound changes, illustrates the dynamic nature of the development of the Slovene linguistic territory, which, after being settled by heterogeneous Proto-Slavic dialect speakers, emerged gradually by virtue of unifying changes that, in turn, had their roots in broader Proto-Slavic or South Slavic areal changes. The changes discussed illustrate the necessity of viewing sound changes as long-term and driven by competing factors including structural change, cognitive reinterpretation, and sociolinguistic
pressure.
2009-11-27T19:15:45Z
2009-11-27T19:15:45Z
2006
Article
Marc L. Greenberg. 2006. “The Slovene Sound System Through Time.” Slovensko jezikoslovje danes/Slovenian Linguistics Today. Posebna številka Slavistične revije 54: 535–543.
0350-6894
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/5613
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Slavistično društvo Slovenije
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111452019-04-12T14:34:05Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
"Goodbye Doesn’t Mean Forever:" Selection Strategies for the Transfer of Slavic to Off-Site Remote Storage
Giullian, Jon C.
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
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.
2013-05-14T21:10:18Z
2013-05-14T21:10:18Z
2007
Article
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
openAccess
application/pdf
application/pdf
“St. Kliment Okhridskii” University of Sofia
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/76162018-03-09T20:07:29Zcom_1808_979com_1808_11153col_1808_980col_1808_11154
Widening the Frame: The Politics of Representing Northern Irish Murals
Conrad, Kathryn
Northern Ireland
Murals
Politics
Photography
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The original publication is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230800588
2011-06-17T16:01:11Z
2011-06-17T16:01:11Z
2007
Book chapter
Conrad, Kathryn. "Widening the Frame: The Politics of Representing Northern Irish Murals." In Irish Postmodernisms and Popular Culture, ed. Wanda Balzano, Anne Mulhall, and Moynagh Sullivan. London: Palgrave, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230800588
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/7616
10.1057/9780230800588
openAccess
application/pdf
Palgrave
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/54692019-04-12T14:22:43Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_7165com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_7166col_1808_16450col_1808_737
A Short Reference Grammar of Standard Slovene
Greenberg, Marc L.
Grammar
Slovene language
South Slavic languages
Standard language
Discourse markers
Word prosody
The archived version is the author's pre-print of the grammar published on-line in the Slavic and East European Language Research Center (SEELRC) Reference Grammar Network. http://www.seelrc.org/projects/grammars.ptml
A reference grammar of the Slovene language designed for advanced-level language users and linguists to compare semantic categories across languages.
Humanities General Research
Fund, University of Kansas, Summer 2000 and U.S Department of Education
Grant, Title VI, administered by the Slavic and East European Language
Resource Center (SEELRC), University of North Carolina (Chapel
Hill) and Duke University.
2009-09-03T11:56:01Z
2009-09-03T11:56:01Z
2006
Book
Greenberg, Marc L. A. Short Slovene Reference Grammar. SEELRC Reference Grammar Network. Duke University / University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill: SEELRC, 2006.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/5469
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
SEELRC Reference Grammar Network
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/104972019-04-12T14:42:05Zcom_1808_7105com_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_234col_1808_7108col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_235
Combating Terrorism in Central Asia: Explaining Differences in States' Responses to Terror
Omelicheva, Mariya Y.
This is an author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication following peer review. The publisher version is available on its site.
This work examines differences in the level of violence of counterterrorism measures adopted by Central Asian states. Why do some Central Asian governments opt for wanton repression in the name of the struggle with terrorism, while others adopt less severe methods of control and prevention? To answer this question, the study draws on a synthesis of rationalist and constructivist explanations. Like rationalists, it posits that the magnitude of terrorism and states’ material capabilities affect the governments’ responses to terrorism. Following constructivists, the study stresses the impact of ideas about the nature of terrorist threat, and views on the appropriateness of the use of force on counterterrorism policies of Central Asian states.
2012-12-17T21:13:13Z
2012-12-17T21:13:13Z
2007
Article
Omelicheva, Mariya Y. Combating Terrorism in Central Asia: Explaining Differences in States’ Responses to Terror, Terrorism and Political Violence 19:369-394, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09546550701424075
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10497
10.1080/09546550701424075
en
openAccess
application/pdf
Taylor and Francis
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/102482020-07-31T08:01:01Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_739
The Illyrian Movement: A Croatian Vision of South Slavic Unity
Greenberg, Marc L.
Illyrian movement
Language planning
Romantic period
Nationalism
Nation-building
Yugoslav project
Austro-Hungarian empire
Gaj, Ljudevit
Slavic languages
Croatian language
Slovenian language
Serbian language
Pan-slavism
Language standardization
The article appears in a handbook that demonstrates the interconnection between language and ethnic identity, providing a systematic treatment of language and ethnic identity efforts, assessing their relative successes and failures, and placing the cases on a success-failure continuum. This essay focuses on the early nineteenth-century Illyrian Movement attempt in the framework of Pan-Slavism—an ideology intended to unite spiritually all Slavic speakers—to unify the South Slavs (Croats, Serbs, Bosnians, Montenegrins, Slovenes, Macedonians, and Bulgarians) by creating a common literary language for them. The Zagreb-based Movement, which lasted from 1835 to 1848, was driven at its beginning largely by the activity of its charismatic leader, Ljudevit Gaj, in response to rising Hungarian nationalism and assimilatory practice that had threatened to erase Croatian identity. Acting on a widespread impulse among central European Slavic intellectuals, the Illyrian Movement offered a more extensive solution to the problem than the Croatian patriots and neighboring Slavic groups were ready to accept. Though the Illyrian Movement was abandoned by the 1848 Revolution, the impulse to merge South Slavic nations resurfaced in the late-nineteenth and early twentieth-century Yugoslav Movement, which had its ideological roots in the Illyrian Movement.The Illyrian literary language as such was abandoned, though in Croatia the principles of its construction have persisted and even reemerged with vigor in the post-Yugoslav period; it has also left traces elsewhere throughout the South Slavic standard languages. The Movement failed to integrate the Slovene lands, whose inhabitants consolidated their national identity around the language of Carniola; nor did it draw in Serbia and Montenegro, which followed a different vision of language standardization. On the other hand, the Illyrian Movement laid the foundation for the rapprochement of Croatian and Serbian, whose standard forms are based on a common dialect, and led also to the political construct Yugoslavism. Consequently, as a Croatian national program, the Illyrian Movement may rank 10 on the success scale; as a program to unite all the South Slavs, perhaps 5.
2012-10-27T15:10:08Z
2012-10-27T15:10:08Z
2011
Article
Greenberg, Marc L. 2010. “The Illyrian Movement: A Croatian Vision of South Slavic Unity.” Handbook of Language and Ethnic Identity: The Success-Failure Continuum in Language Identity Efforts, vol. 2, ed. by Joshua A. Fishman and Ofelia García: 364–380. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
195392450
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10248
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Oxford University Press
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/7852019-04-12T14:19:02Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
Slovarček središkega govora (na osnovi zapisov Karla Ozvalda)
A Glossary of the Microdialect of Središče ob Dravi (Based on the Descriptions of Karol Ozvald)
Greenberg, Marc L.
Slovene language
Slovenian language
Dialects
Dialectology
Lexicography
Kajkavian
Accents
Accentology
Phonology
Phonetics
Historical-comparative linguistics
Slavic languages
South Slavic languages
Prlekija
This article contains a glossary of all of the attested forms in four works by the philologist Karol Ozvald (3 of which remain unpublished), written between 1895 and 1904, describing the phonetics, morphology, and lexicon of the dialect of Središče ob Dravi (Prlekija, Slovenia). Brief synchronic and diachronic sketches of the phonology of the dialect are given, as well as a description of the principles on which the glossary was compiled.
University of Kansas General Research Fund
2005-11-21T21:10:13Z
2005-11-21T21:10:13Z
1999
Article
Slovenski jezik / Slovene Linguistic Studies 2, pp. 128-175
14082616
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/785
other
openAccess
3860364 bytes
application/pdf
application/pdf
Ljubljana: Znanstvenoraziskovalni center Slovenske akademije znanosti in umetnosti, Inštitut za slovenski jezik Frana Ramovša; Lawrence: Hall Center for the Humanities, University of Kansas
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/9692019-04-12T14:52:35Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
The Role of Language in the Creation of Identity: Myths in Linguistics among the Peoples of the Former Yugoslavia
Greenberg, Marc L.
Yugoslavia
Language myths
Serbo-Croatian
Slovene language
Slovenia
The paper gives an overview for non-specialist readers of the connection between language and national identity and the mythologization of this connection through linguistic theories with regard to the formation of Yugoslavia and the post-Yugoslav states.
KU Office of International Studies and Programs
2006-05-23T15:51:12Z
2006-05-23T15:51:12Z
2006-05-23T15:51:12Z
Working Paper
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/969
en_US
1996 KU Faculty International Studies Seminar: “Reinvention of Tradition“
openAccess
304081 bytes
application/pdf
application/pdf
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/107592019-04-12T14:53:15Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
A Balkanism in Central Europe? Realis vs. Irrealis in Subordinate Clauses in Prekmurje Slovene
Greenberg, Marc L.
Subordination
Complementizers
Complementation
Dialectology
Slovenia
Slovene language
Balkan languages
Indo-European langauges
Language contact
The paper examines the distinction between realis- and irrealis-marking complementizers (ka vs. da in the Prekmurje (Pannonian) dialect of Slovene and compares the phenomenon to the same distinction observed in Balkan Sprachbund languages (Albanian, Bulgarian, Modem Greek, Macedonian, Romani, Romanian). Though the phenomenon is indeed synchronically parallel, historically the distinction in Prekmnrje Slovene arose as a result of retentions on the periphery (partially shared with the Carinthian dialects) and not as a result of (erstwhile) contact with languages of the Balkan Sprachbund.
2013-01-30T16:00:59Z
2013-01-30T16:00:59Z
2011
Article
Greenberg, Marc L. 2011. A Balkanism in Central Europe? Realis vs. Irrealis in Subordinate Clauses in Prekmurje Slovene. Dialektologie a geolingvistika v současné stŕední Evropě. Ed. by Zbyněk Holub and Roman Sukač: 8–18. Frýdek-Místek and Opava: Nakl. Kleinwächter and Slezská univerzita v Opavě.
978-80-7248-773-8
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10759
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Nakl. Kleinwächter and Slezská univerzita v Opavě
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/105002019-04-12T14:42:06Zcom_1808_7105com_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_234col_1808_7108col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_235
Between Commitement and Pragmatism: Assessing International Influence on Human Rights Practices in Georgia
Omelicheva, Mariya Y.
This is an author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication following peer review. The publisher version is available on its site.
What explains the discrepancy between the avowed commitment of the Georgian
government to human rights and praxis of human rights in the post-Rose Revolution
republic? This article engages with this question and attributes persistent breaches of
civil, political, and personal integrity rights in Georgia not only to its domestic
circumstances, but also to the international impact. The study develops a reference
group theory, a type of social theory that stresses the influence of social groups of
states on policies and behavior of their members. Reference groups endorse goals,
values, and standards of behavior for their members and serve as the “frames of
reference” that enable other states to assess the effectiveness and legitimacy of their
actions. The findings of this study indicate that Georgia’s reference groups, particularly
the United States, contributed to its backsliding on human rights by (1) supporting the
Georgian government in its goal of rebuilding the state prior to democratizing it and
strengthening respect for human rights; (2) redirecting financial and other assistance
from democracy promotion to state-building projects; and (3) providing the Georgian
government with flattering, yet, misleading feedback concerning the republic’s
accomplishments in the area of human rights.
2012-12-17T21:24:29Z
2012-12-17T21:24:29Z
2010
Article
Omelicheva, Mariya Y. Between Commitment and Pragmatism: Assessing International
Influence on Human Rights Practices in Georgia, Journal of Human Rights, 9(4): 445-466, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14754835.2010.522925
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10500
10.1080/14754835.2010.522925
en
openAccess
application/pdf
Taylor and Francis
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/56162019-04-12T14:24:24Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
Common Slavic: Progress or Crisis in its Reconstruction? Notes on Recent Archaeological Challenges to Historical Linguistics
Greenberg, Marc L.
Proto-Slavic language
Comparative linguistics
The author discusses responses to Henrik Birnbaum's annotated bibliographies Common Slavic: Problems and Progress in its Reconstruction
2009-11-28T22:20:11Z
2009-11-28T22:20:11Z
2002
Article
Marc L. Greenberg. 2002–03. “Common Slavic: Progress or Crisis in its Reconstruction? Notes on Recent Archaeological Challenges to Historical Linguistics.” International Journal of Slavic Linguistics and Poetics 44–45: 197–209.
0538-8228
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/5616
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Bloomington, IN: Slavica Publishers
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/8032018-04-30T15:53:44Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_789com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_791
Multiple Causation in the Spread and Reversal of a Sound Change: Rhotacism in South Slavic
Greenberg, Marc L.
South Slavic languages
Croatian language
Serbian language
Bosnian language
Rhoticity
Sound change
Sociolinguistics
Medieval period
Dialectology
Slovene language
Slovenian language
Historical linguistics
SLOVENE: Prispevek obravnava spremembo ž > r ("rotacizem") v južnoslovanskih jezikih, kot se najde npr. v sedanjiku glagola *može(tъ) > sln. mó.re, hrv./bos. nar. mo"re, v oziralnih veznikih (*kako ž(e) > sln. kakor), v različnih prislovnih tvorbah, npr. (*bože > bore), v nekaterih sln., hrv./bos. narečjih tudi v sedanjiku glagola (*gъnati :) *žene(tъ) > rene. Izvor te spremembe je različno obravnavan kot fonetična ali oblikoslovna (analogna) sprememba, vendar pa nobena od razlag ne pojasnjuje omejene uresničitve spremembe (tj., sprememba je omejena na majhno število leksemov in slovničnih kategorij) in zelo različnih arealov spremembe v vsakem posameznem primeru, v katerem je do nje prišlo. V pričujočem prispevku se dokazuje, da je izvor spremembe fonetičen in da izhaja iz težnje, ki podpira razločevalne lastnosti pri samoglasnikih (za razliko od severnoslovanskih razvojev), kar je teza, ki se navezuje na predvojno Isačenkovo razpravo. Vseeno pa se da širitev spremembe in njen umik delno razložiti z oblikoslovnimi dejavniki. Eden od dejavnikov je ta, da stalno okolje (npr. sedanjik morem, moreš ...) vspodbuja njeno širitev, v nasprotju s spremenljivimi okolji (-žene/-rene), ki so povzročila njen umik ali zaustavitev. Drugi dejavnik je širitev -r-ja kot produktivnega oziralnega veznika in časovnega znaka po modelu oblik *kъte/o-roz. veče-r. Zdi se, da je pri medmetu borme dodatno vlogo pri ohranjanju oblike z -r igrala tabuiranost. Umik spremembe v štokavščini je imel lahko stilistične vzroke, saj so bile oblike z -r v nasprotju z oblikami z ž(e) občutene kot izrazito zahodne, katoliške. Ta opažanja izhajajo iz dejstva, da oblike z -r izginevajo prav v tistih primerih, v katerih so bile produktivne v čakavščini, kajkavščini in slovenščini, tj. v oziralnih veznikih in časovnih prislovih. In ne nazadnje, najbolje so ohranjene oblike, ki predstavljajo semantične inovacije, npr. morati, jer, in to celo v štokavščini, kjer so oblike z -r leksikalizirane.
ENGLISH:
The paper treats the change ž > r ("rhotacism'') in the South Slavic languages, such as that, e.g., found in the present tense of the verb *mòže(tъ) > Sn mó.re, Cr/Bs dialect mo"re; complementizers, e.g., *kako ž(e) > Sn kakor; in various adverbial formations, e.g., *bože > bore; and, in some Sn and Cr/Bs dialects, the present tense of the verb (*gъnati:) *žene(tъ) > rene. The origin of the change has been treated variously as a phonetic or a morphological (analogical) change, though neither explanation can account for the limited realization of the change (i.e., it is restricted to a small number of lexical items and grammatical categories) and the vastly differing areals of the change for each item in which it occurs. The present paper argues that the origin of the change is phonetic and follows from a tendency to favor vocalic distinctive features (in contrast to N-Sl developments), a notion that goes back to a pre-War paper by Isačenko. Nevertheless, the spread of the change, and its reversal, can be partially explained by morphological factors. One factor is that uniform environments (e.g., the present tense morem, moreš...) favor its spread vs. alternating environments (-žene/-rene) which have reversed or inhibited it. Another factor is support for the spread of -r as a productive complementizer and temporal marker on the models of metanalyzed forms *kъte/o-r'which' and *veče-r 'evening', respectively. Taboo seems to play an additional role in preserving r-forms in the interjection borme 'my God!'. The reversal of the change in Štokavian may have been due to stylistic considerations, where r-forms were felt to be distinctly western, Catholic, in contrast to ž(e) forms. This observations follows from the fact that r-forms disappear in Štokavian in precisely the forms in which they were productive in Čakavian, Kajkavian and Slovene, namely, the complementizers and temporal adverbs. Finally, those forms which represent semantic innovations, such as morati 'must', jer 'for, because' are best preserved, even in Štokavian, where the r-forms are lexicalized as such.
2006-01-06T23:47:47Z
2006-01-06T23:47:47Z
1999-01-01
Article
http://dx.doi.org/10.17161/SLS.1808.803
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/803
10.17161/SLS.1808.803
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
application/pdf
ZRC SAZU / Hall Center for the Humanities
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111242019-04-12T14:34:05Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Where Library Meets Vendor: A Comparison of Six Vendors of Russian Books
Giullian, Jon C.
Russia
Books
Vendors
ATC
East view
Evis
Esterum
Mipp
Kozmenko
Russian presse service
RPS
Tolstoy, Leo
Monographs
Firefox
Internet explorer
Price
Inventory
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.
2013-05-14T16:22:12Z
2013-05-14T16:22:12Z
2006
Article
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
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Slavica
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/68632021-12-20T19:35:50Zcom_1808_7105com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7108col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Open Access Journals: What Are They and What Are They Good For?
Rosenblum, Brian
Greenberg, Marc L.
Day, Stuart A.
Open access journals
Scholarly publishing
Open access week
Three panelist presentations on the first day of Open Access Week.
2010-11-10T15:41:15Z
2010-11-10T15:41:15Z
2010-10-18
Presentation
Rosenblum, Brian; Greenberg, Marc. L; Day, Stuart (2010) Open Access Journals: What Are They and What Are They Good For? Presentation given at one of the events sponsored by the KU's Center for Digital Scholarship during Open Access Week. Oct. 18th 2010.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6863
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8419-8779
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2973-8901
openAccess
application/pdf
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/56142019-04-12T14:26:03Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
Glasovna podoba slovenskega jezika skozi čas
The Slovene Sound System Through Time
Greenberg, Marc L.
Slovenian language
Dialects
Phonology
Comparative linguistics
V razpravi avtor prikaže nekaj glasovnih sprememb, ki jih obravnava v svojem delu A
Historical Phonology of the Slovene Language (Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag Carl Winter,
2000), v katerem z novimi razlagami osvetljuje zapleten razvoj v zgodnjih fazah oblikovanja
slovenskega jezikovnega prostora. Zaris izbranih sprememb, ki se v mnogočem oddaljuje od tradicionalnih razlag slovenskih glasovnih sprememb, ponazarja dinamiko razvoja slovenskega jezikovnega prostora. Ta se je po naselitvi govorcev raznovrstnih praslovanskih narečij oblikoval postopoma s povezovalnimi spremembami, ki so imele osnovo v širših praslovanskih in južnoslovanskih spremembah. Obravnavane spremembe ponazarjajo potrebo po tem, da gledamo na glasovne spremembe kot na dolgoročni proces, ki ga vzpodbujajo nasprotujoči si dejavniki, med njimi strukturne spremembe, kognitivna preinterpretacija in sociolingvistični pritisk.
2009-11-27T19:16:43Z
2009-11-27T19:16:43Z
2006
Article
Marc L. Greenberg. 2006. “Glasovna podoba slovenskega jezika skozi čas.” Slovensko jezikoslovje danes/Slovenian Linguistics Today. Posebna številka Slavistične revije 54: 167–175.
0350-6894
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/5614
sl
openAccess
application/pdf
Slavistično društvo Slovenije
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/7602019-04-12T14:19:00Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
On the possible Uralic source for the gen. sg. a-stem desinence in Slavic
Greenberg, Marc L.
Uralic
Indo-European
Slavic
Finnic
Language contact
Historical-comparative linguistics
Proto-Slavic
Phonology
Case marking
Morphology
The paper was delivered at the 2000 conference "Aktual'nye problemy finno-ugorskoi filologii" in Yoshkar-Ola, Mari-El, Russian Federation.
The paper proposes that contact with Finnic languages led to reshaping of the genitive and possessive markers in Proto-Slavic.
2005-11-02T01:33:46Z
2005-11-02T01:33:46Z
2003
Article
Aktual'nye problemy finno-ugorskoi filologii. Materialy Mezhdunarodnoi nauchnoi konferentsii, posviashchennoi 70-letiiu professora I. S. Galkina. Ed. by Ju. V. Anduganov, et al. Pp. 44-50.
5948080803
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/760
en_US
openAccess
2541830 bytes
application/pdf
application/pdf
Ioshkar-Ola: Mariiskii gosudarstvennyi universitet
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/39352019-04-12T14:24:07Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Transliteration chart for Slavonic-Serbian and Russo-Serbian
Husic, Geoff
Russo-Serbian Cyrillic script
Slavonic-Serbian cyrillic script
Cyrillic romanization
Serbian language
A proposed transliteration scheme for Slavonic-Serbian and Russo-Serbian, for which no ALA-LC transliteration table currently exists.
2008-06-15T23:40:27Z
2008-06-15T23:40:27Z
2008-06-15T23:40:27Z
Article
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/3935
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0617-7160
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/96512019-04-12T14:53:14Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
“The American Model”: English Only or Engagement with a Multi-Polar World?
“Ameriški model”: samo angleščina ali tudi podrejanje multipolarnemu svetu?
Greenberg, Marc L.
Language policy
Higher education policy
Globalization
Language education
The paper discusses language policy in the US and the lack of it. Traditional neglect and erosion of foreign language study competes against new global realities, which paradoxically—in the context of global English—require Americans to increase their knowledge of critical world languages. Foreign-language education in the US is in a state of flux, with multiple actors competing for prevalence. For example, bilingual elementary education in areas where Spanish-speaking immigrants make up significant minorities or even majorities competes against popular anti-immigrant sentiment. Government initiatives to stimulate acquisition of nationally critical languages (Mandarin, Korean, Farsi, Russian, etc.) compete against traditional (dis)interest(s) in language instruction in the K–12 (elementary, i.e., kindergarten through 12 grade) and the higher education systems. These countervailing trends unfold when it is no longer obvious that the US will remain the only superpower.
The challenges to foreign-language learning in the U.S. are formidable. Americans generally assume that English suffices for communicative needs abroad, let alone at home. This prevailing view feeds the decision-making processes in education. In the quest to slash education budgets, “dispensable” subjects are sacrificed first: art, music, and foreign language instruction. In higher education foreign-language instruction is viewed as an arcane relic to be avoided or, if possible, excised altogether.
The University of Kansas (KU) serves as an example of the changes in language education in the US and demonstrates a possible way out of the gridlock. KU has received federal funding for critical languages for decades, but has also recognized the importance of critical and less-commonly-taught languages for a forward-looking education. This example demonstrates the tug-of-war that may or may not change the way American learn and think about foreign language as they reevaluate their position in a multi-polar, globalized world.
2012-05-23T00:14:43Z
2012-05-23T00:14:43Z
2011
Article
Greenberg, Marc L. 2011. “The American Model”: English Only or Engagement with a Multi-Polar World? Uporabno jezikoslovje 9/10: 230–237.
1318-2838
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/9651
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Inštitut za narodnostna vprašanja
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/104962019-04-12T14:43:22Zcom_1808_7105com_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_234col_1808_7108col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_235
Security Rights Violations in Context of Counterterrorism: Analysis of the Post-Soviet Nations
Omelicheva, Mariya Y.
Security rights violations
Counterterrorism
This is an author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication following peer review. The publisher version is available on its site.
This study purports to explain security rights violations of the suspected
terrorism. It develops a theoretical model and assesses its predictions on a
sample of post-Soviet states. The author uses original data on security rights
violations of individuals implicated in terrorism and their family members and
supporters collected by means of systematic content analysis of several types of
reports. Contrary to a widely-held belief that the magnitude of terrorism is the
main determinant of human rights practices in the context of ‘war on terror’, the
study finds no support for the impact of terrorist attacks on security rights
violations of the suspects of terrorism. Political conflict, on the other hand,
appears to be a stronger predictor of security rights violations in the post-Soviet
nations. Statistical results also lend support to the impact of international norms
and a number of other factors on human rights violations in the name of
combating terrorism. The author discusses implications of the findings for theory
and practices of human rights.
2012-12-17T21:10:15Z
2012-12-17T21:10:15Z
2010
Article
Omelicheva, Mariya Y. Security Rights Violations in the Context of Counterterrorism: Analysis of the
Post-Soviet Nations. The International Journal of Human Rights, 14(2): 166-188, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13642980802535492
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10496
10.1080/13642980802535492
en
openAccess
application/pdf
Taylor and Francis
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/56172019-04-12T14:24:28Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
Ágost Pável’s Prekmurje Slovene Grammar
Greenberg, Marc L.
Slovenian language
Dialects
Mura river region
Prekmurje
The author discusses the content of the unpublished standard grammar for the language of the Prekmurje (Mura River region). Completed in 1942, the grammar was written in Hungarian for use in regional schools. Today it is of value for the description of the dialect as well as for the history of language planning in Slovenia and Hungary.
2009-11-28T22:33:32Z
2009-11-28T22:33:32Z
1989
Article
Marc L. Greenberg. 1989. “Ágost Pável’s Prekmurje Slovene Grammar.” Slavistična revija 37: 353–364.
0350-6894
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/5617
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Ljubljana: Slavistično društvo Slovenije
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/68982019-04-12T14:52:55Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_23col_1808_16450col_1808_739
Проблем научне комуникације: због чега је отворени приступ неопходан. Трансатлантска перспектива
Problem naučne komunikacije: zbog čega je otvoreni pristup neophodan. Transatlantska perspektiva
The Scholarly Communication Problem: Why Open Access is Necessary
Greenberg, Marc L.
Emmett, Ada
Гринберг, Марк Л.
Емет, Ада
Open Access
Translated into Serbian by Biljana Živanović. Html version also available at: http://www.citaliste.com/casopis/br17l/cip_mark_grinberg.html
The article aims to raise awareness of the Open Access movement and gives examples from the experience of the University of Kansas in fostering and advancing free and permanent public access to publicly funded scholarly communication.
2010-12-13T19:10:55Z
2010-12-13T19:10:55Z
2010-11
Article
Grinberg, Mark L. and Ada Emet. 2010. Problem naučne komunikacije: zbog čega je otvoreni pristup neophodan. Transatlantska perspektiva (trans. by Biljana Živanović). Pančevačko čitalište god. IX, br. 17 (November): 58–60.
1451-3048
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6898
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8419-8779
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6327-950X
sr
openAccess
application/pdf
Gradska biblioteka Pančevo
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/7962018-04-30T15:59:09Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_789com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_790
Uvodna beseda / From the Editors
Snoj, Marko
Greenberg, Marc L.
Slovene language
Slovenian language
Linguistics
Programmatic essay by the founding editors, Marko Snoj (Ljubljana, Slovenia) and Marc L. Greenberg (Lawrence, KS, USA), for the inaugural issue of the periodical Slovenski jezik / Slovene Linguistic Studies.
2006-01-05T22:29:05Z
2006-01-05T22:29:05Z
1997-01-01
Article
Slovenski jezik / Slovene Linguistic Studies 1 http://dx.doi.org/10.17161/SLS.1808.796
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/796
10.17161/SLS.1808.796
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
application/pdf
ZRC SAZU / Hall Center for the Humanities
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/16912019-04-12T14:17:18Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Is there/will there be a Bosnian Language: aspects of the language situation in post‑war Bosnia
Husic, Geoff
Bosnian language
Serbo-croatian language
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.
2007-10-03T21:52:09Z
2007-10-03T21:52:09Z
2000
Article
"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
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Dositey Obradovich Circle
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/74762018-04-30T15:26:04Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_789com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_7475
Poslovilna beseda
Our Farewell
Snoj, Marko
Greenberg, Marc L.
Slovenian language
Slovene language
Open Access
The essay describes the founding and first period of operation of the journal Slovenski jezik / Slovene Linguistic Studies as the founding editors hand the journal to a new editorial team.
ZRC SAZU, Ljubljana and Hall Center for the Humanities, University of Kansas.
2011-05-18T14:14:23Z
2011-05-18T14:14:23Z
2011-01-01
Article
Marko Snoj and Marc L. Greenberg. 2011. Poslovilna beseda / Our Farewell. Slovenski jezik / Slovene Linguistic Studies 8: 3–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.17161/SLS.1808.7476
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/7476
10.17161/SLS.1808.7476
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
ZRC SAZU and Hall Center for the Humanities
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/12702019-04-12T14:31:28Zcom_1808_11153com_1808_776col_1808_11154col_1808_777
The Poet and the Prince: Revising Moliere and Tartuffe in the French Revolution
Leon, Mechele
This article analyzes the legendary relationship between Moliere and Louis XIV, as it was reinterpreted during the French Revolution, by studying revolutionary-era modifications to the text of Tartuffe. Published debates discussing the theater, press commentary, and police reports show how these complementary processes of revision manifest an effort by revolutionaries to void their cultural inheritance of Old Regime legitimacy. By analyzing attempts to expunge monarchal authority from the denouement of Tartuffe and replace it with the law, we see how tenaciously Old Regime political culture clung to the cultural artifacts the revolutionaries sought to reform.
2007-04-04T21:18:47Z
2007-04-04T21:18:47Z
2005
Article
Leon, M. The Poet and the Prince: Revising Moliere and Tartuffe in the French Revolution. FRENCH HISTORICAL STUDIES. Summer 2005. 28(3) : 447-467
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/1270
10.1215/00161071-28-3-447
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Duke University Press
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111522019-04-12T14:29:06Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
WWII Cossack Newspapers and Periodicals at CRL
Giullian, Jon C.
Center for Research Libraries
CRL
Cossack
Kazak
World War II
Nazi
Soviet
Bolshevik
Newspaper
Periodical
Microfilm
Seemp
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).
2013-05-14T22:42:51Z
2013-05-14T22:42:51Z
2010
Article
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
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
application/pdf
Center for Research Libraries (CRL)
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111362019-04-12T14:29:00Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Pre-publication review. Virtual Slavica: Digital Libraries, Digital Archives
Giullian, Jon C.
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
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.
2013-05-14T19:47:21Z
2013-05-14T19:47:21Z
2005
Article
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
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Haworth Press
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/52322019-04-12T14:29:44Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
Archaisms and Innovations in the Dialect of Središče (Southeastern Prlekija, Slovenia
Greenberg, Marc L.
Slovene language
Dialects
Styria
Dialectology
Word prosody
Kajkavian
Pannonian
Prlekija
Prlekia
Language contact
Slavic languages
A historical analysis of the phonological and morphophonological features of the dialect of Središče (Slovenia), based on a description by Karol Ozvald, written in the late nineteenth century.
2009-05-27T23:28:09Z
2009-05-27T23:28:09Z
1994
Article
Marc L. Greenberg. “Archaisms and Innovations in the Dialect of Središče (Southeastern Prlekija, Slovenia).” Proceedings of the 9th Biennial Conference on Balkan and South Slavic Linguistics, Literature and Folklore (= Indiana Slavic Studies 7): 91–102.
0073-6929
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/5232
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/43982018-04-30T15:42:30Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_789com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_1671
The Prehistory and Areal Distribution of Slavic *gъlčěti ‘Speak’
Prazgodovina in zemljepisna razvrstitev psl. *gъlčěti ‘govoriti’
Schallert, Joseph
Greenberg, Marc L.
Bulgarian language
Bul
Slovene language
SVN
Historical dialectology
Historical lexicology
Migration
Danube
Verba dicendi
Indo-European
Includes dialect maps.
SVN: Razprava podrobno obravnava zemljepisno razvrstitev in pomenski razvoj leksema *gъlčěti v južnoslovanskih narečjih, tj. na področjih z migracijsko poselitvijo. Zastavlja tudi vprašanje o prvotni povezavi med jezikovnimi skupnostmi, v katerih se je leksem razvil v glavni izraz za pojem ‘govoriti’, in sicer v južnoslovanskem pa tudi v širšem slovanskem kontekstu. Posebna pozornost se posveča bolgarščini in vzhodni slovenščini, ki izpričujeta ta razvoj.
ENG: The paper examines in some detail the diatopic distribution and semantic development of *gъlčěti in South Slavic, i.e., the Slavic dialect areas settled by migration, and raises the question of the nature of the relationship among those dialects that have developed *gъlčěti as the primary neutral verb meaning ‘speak’ both in its South Slavic and broader Slavic contexts. Special attention is given to Bulgarian and Eastern Slovene dialects, which share this development.
2009-03-05T11:24:52Z
2009-03-05T11:24:52Z
2007-01-01
Article
Slovenski jezik / Slovene Linguistic Studies, 6 :9-76
Slovenski jezik / Slovene Linguistic Studies, 6 :9-76 http://dx.doi.org/10.17161/SLS.1808.4398
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/4398
10.17161/SLS.1808.4398
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Inštitut za slovenski jezik Frana Ramovša ZRC SAZU; Hall Center for the Humanities, University of Kansas
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/63492019-04-12T14:37:15Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_4308
Recordings of Slavic-language translations of Jaroslav Hašek's Osudy dobrého vojáka Švejka
Greenberg, Marc L.
Slavic languages
Sample texts
Sample parallel texts of the first few paragraphs of various Slavic-language translations of The Good Soldier Schweik by Jaroslav Hashek.
2010-06-15T18:24:29Z
2010-06-15T18:24:29Z
2010-06-15T18:24:29Z
Recording, oral
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6349
openAccess
audio/x-wav
audio/x-wav
audio/x-wav
audio/x-wav
audio/x-wav
audio/x-wav
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/73792019-04-12T14:24:40Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_23col_1808_16450col_1808_739
Проблема наукової активності: чому відкритий доступ є необхідним. Трансатлантичний погляд
Greenberg, Marc L.
Emmett, Ada
Грінберг, Марк Л.
Емметт, Ада
Yaroshenko, Tetyana
Ярошенко, Тетяна
Chukanova, Svitlana
Open Access
Open access policies
Introduction by Tetyana Yaroshenko.
This article was written to raise awareness among researchers in the Open Access movement and share KU’s experience as a leader in Open Access policy. First published in September 2010 in the national daily paper Delo (Ljubljana, Slovenia) [http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6646]
2011-04-09T20:57:24Z
2011-04-09T20:57:24Z
2010
Article
Марк Л. Грінберг та Ада Емметт. 2010. Проблема наукової активності: чому відкритий доступ є необхідним. Трансатлантичний погляд (Ukrainian translation by Svitlana Chukanova). Бібліотечний форум України 4 (30): 30–33.
1811-377X
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/7379
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8419-8779
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6327-950X
uk
openAccess
application/pdf
Бібліотечний форум України
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/152832019-04-12T14:41:13Zcom_1808_7105com_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_234col_1808_7108col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_235
Fab! or Drab?: Increasing the Effectiveness of Teaching and Learning in Summer Classes
Omelicheva, Mariya Y.
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The original publication is available at http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/15512169.2012.695971#.VD_JWRYXNWs.
This article reviews the pitfalls and benefits of teaching and learning in summer school and identifies the lack of student interest as the key factor affecting the effectiveness of learning in the summer. The primary goal of this research is to investigate the impact of active learning strategies on generating student interest and improving their learning in summer school. This article presents results of the study embedded into the classroom curriculum of a summer course. The study consisted of a series of active learning interventions, surveys of students, and observations of their academic performance. The scores of students enrolled in the summer class were compared to academic results of those students who took a similar course during the regular terms. The evidence examined in the study demonstrates that active learning strategies can increase students' situational interest in the summer school setting and can improve the quality of their learning.
2014-10-16T13:42:32Z
2014-10-16T13:42:32Z
2012-08-08
Article
Omelicheva, Mariya Y. (2012). "Fab! or Drab?: Increasing the Effectiveness of Teaching and Learning in Summer Classes." Journal of Political Science Education, 8(3):258-270. http://www.dx.doi.org/10.1080/15512169.2012.695971
1551-2169
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/15283
10.1080/15512169.2012.695971
openAccess
application/pdf
Taylor & Francis
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/56152019-04-12T14:53:18Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
Is Slavic četa an Indo-European Archaism?
Greenberg, Marc L.
Proto-Slavic language
Proto-Indo-European language
Etymology
Language contact
Uralic
Finno-Ugric
Nostratic hypothesis
Comparative linguistics
The Slavic word četa, which is found in modern Slavic languages with the meanings 'pair', 'band', 'troop', is shown to originate in PIE *kwet-, the root that underlies the PIE word for 'four'; the Slavic meaning 'pair' suggests that the root may go back to an earlier pre-PIE meaning 'two', cf. Hungarian két, Finnish kaksi.
2009-11-28T21:57:17Z
2009-11-28T21:57:17Z
2001
Article
Marc L. Greenberg. 2001. “Is Slavic četa an Indo-European Archaism?” International Journal of Slavic Linguistics and Poetics 43: 35–39.
0538-8228
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/5615
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Bloomington, IN: Slavica Publishers
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/7422019-04-12T14:28:52Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_739
Jezik, identiteta in miselne meje (Poučevanje o jeziku in »vzhodni Evropi« na ameriški univerzi)
Language, identity and borders of the mind: Teaching about language and “Eastern Europe” at an American University
Greenberg, Marc L.
Eastern Europe
Slavic languages
Slovenian language
European Union
Sociolinguistics
Multilingualism
The paper is a published version of a keynote address delivered at the 16th Slovenian Slavistic Congress in Lendava, Slovenia, 6-8 October 2005. It discusses the process of building up a knowledge base for American university students about the notion of "Eastern Europe," contrasting an American viewpoint, for which national language policy is largely irrelevant and a European viewpoint, for which national language policy is a centrally important issue. The author considers the effect of the Enlightenment on language death and language maintenance.
2005-10-14T19:17:11Z
2005-10-14T19:17:11Z
2005
Article
Zbornik slavističnega društva Slovenije 16: Vloga meje (ed. Miran Hladnik): 13–20
9619101545
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/742
other
openAccess
206229 bytes
application/pdf
application/pdf
Slavistično društvo Slovenije
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/56112019-04-12T14:24:19Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
Dialect Variation Along the Mura
Narječno razlikovanju uz rijeku Muri
Greenberg, Marc L.
Croatian language
Slovenian language
Accents
Dialects
Linguistic geography
Language contact
Phonology
The paper gives the vocalic systems and some prosodic features of some lesser-known speech varieties in villages around the Mura river in eastern prleški, western međimurski, and southern prekmurski, i.e., at the point of convergence of the three dialects. In addition to presenting new material collected by the author, the paper discusses the innovations that have occurred as a result of contact, as well as background on divergences and convergences among these areas in the more remote past. The paper affirms the transition between međimurski and prleški and the disjuncture between these two and prekmurski. Observations about interaction between the dialects in recent times include the spread of ei, ou diphthongization southward from prekmurski across the Mura, the failure of plain u (replacing the fronted reflex of Proto-Slavic *u) to penetrate from međimurski
north of the river, and the parallel development of the last step in the tendency to replace quantity oppositions with quality in the stressed syllable which entails also the emergence of new diphthongs ie, uo replacing formerly short-stressed mid-vowels.
The paper is also available on the Portal znanstvenih časopisa Republike Hrvatske (Hrčak) at the URL http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/26312
2009-11-25T20:11:32Z
2009-11-25T20:11:32Z
2006
Article
Dialect Variation Along the Mura. Croatica et Slavica Iadertina, 1/1 (2006): 107—124
1845-6839
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/5611
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Sveučilište u Zadru
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/11032022-12-23T09:00:41Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
Phonetic evidence for the development of the “acute” tone in Slavic
Greenberg, Marc L.
Slavic languages
South Slavic languages
Indo-European
Word prosody
Appeared in Tones and Theories: Proceedings of the International Workshop on Balto-Slavic Accentology (pp. 75-87), ed. Mate Kapović and Ranko Matasović. Zagreb: Institut za hrvatski jezik i jezikoslovlje, 2007. ISBN 978-953-6637-36-2.
The paper attempts to give a phonetic reconstruction of the processes surrounding the loss of the glottal stop as the reflex of the inherited Proto-Slavic acute. With support from typological evidence and phonetic analysis, it is claimed that the variation in modern Slavic reflexes of the acute results from differing outcomes of the disappearance of the glottal stop: metathesis, straightforward loss, and laryngealization.
2020-11-02T12:39:30Z
2020-11-02T12:39:30Z
2020-11-02T12:39:30Z
Published article
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/1103
en_US
openAccess
1387641 bytes
application/pdf
application/pdf
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/56202018-03-09T20:04:07Zcom_1808_979com_1808_11153col_1808_980col_1808_11154
Surveillance, Gender, and the Virtual Body in the Information Age
Conrad, Kathryn
Submitted in application of KU's Open Access policy.
In our contemporary 'information age', information and the body stand in a new, peculiar, and ambiguous relationship to one
another. Information is plumbed from the body but treated as separate from it, facilitating, as Irma van der Ploeg has suggested,
the creation of a separate virtual 'body-as-information' that has affected the very ontology of the body. This 'informatization of the
body' has been both spurred and enabled by surveillance techniques that create, depend upon, and manipulate virtual bodies for a
variety of predictive purposes, including social control and marketing. While, as some feminist critics have suggested, there
appears to be potential for information technologies to liberate us from oppressive ideological models, surveillance techniques,
themselves so intimately tied to information systems, put normative pressure on non-normative bodies and practices, such as those
of queer and genderqueer subjects. Ultimately, predictive surveillance is based in an innately conservative epistemology, and the
intertwining of information systems with surveillance undermines any liberatory effect of the former.
2009-12-02T20:19:17Z
2009-12-02T20:19:17Z
2009
Article
Conrad, Kathryn. 2009. Surveillance, Gender and the Virtual Body in the Information Age. Surveillance & Society 6(4): 380-387.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/5620
en
openAccess
application/pdf
Surveillance Studies Network
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/105012019-04-12T14:42:07Zcom_1808_7105com_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_234col_1808_7108col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_235
Reference Group Perspective on State Behaviour: A Case Study of Estonia's Counterterrorism Policies
Omelicheva, Mariya Y.
This is an author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication following peer review. The publisher version is available on its site.
For over a decade Estonia has been untouched by terrorist violence. However, notwithstanding the lack
of a viable terrorist threat, the Estonian government adopted extensive counterterrorism measures. What
explains the scope of Estonia’s counterterrorism measures? The main proposition of this article is that the
content of states’ counterterrorism policies is shaped by the types of responses adopted by their
reference groups. The evidence examined in the study demonstrates that Estonia’s primary reference
groups, NATO and the EU, have influenced the republic’s counterterrorism programme. An unattractive
target to terrorists, Estonia adopted broad counterterrorism responses to defend indivisible Euro-Atlantic
security and to protect democratic values that terrorists attempt to destroy.
2012-12-17T21:27:16Z
2012-12-17T21:27:16Z
2009
Article
Omelicheva, Mariya Y. Reference Group Perspective on State Behavior: A Case Study of
Estonia’s Counterterrorism Policies, Europe Asia Studies, 61(3): 483-504, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09668130902753317
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10501
10.1080/09668130902753317
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Taylor and Francis
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/16722018-04-30T15:46:34Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_789com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_1671
Uredniška beseda
A Word from the Editors
Snoj, Marko
Greenberg, Marc L.
SLV
Slovene language
Slovene linguistics
Slovenian language
Introductory essay on the occasion of the 10th anniversary of publication of the journal Slovenski jezik/Slovene Linguistic Studies.
2007-08-28T14:56:13Z
2007-08-28T14:56:13Z
2007-01-01
Article
Slovenski jezik/Slovene Linguistic Studies 6 http://dx.doi.org/10.17161/SLS.1808.1672
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/1672
10.17161/SLS.1808.1672
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Fran Ramovš Institute for Slovene Language, Scientific Research Center, Slovene Academy of Arts & Sciences; Hall Center for the Humanities, University of Kansas
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/38612019-04-12T14:29:08Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
History of the South Slavic & Balkan Collections (1962-1994)
Biggins, Michael
Husic, Geoff
University of kansas libraries, south slavic and balkan collections
2008-05-09T19:12:18Z
2008-05-09T19:12:18Z
2008-05-09T19:12:18Z
Article
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/3861
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0617-7160
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/105092019-04-12T14:53:08Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_16449com_1808_735col_1808_7025col_1808_11154col_1808_16450col_1808_737
[Review of] Gvozdanović, Jadranka. Celtic and Slavic and the Great Migrations: Reconstructing Linguistic History. Empirie und Theorie der Sprachwissenschaft, vol. 1. Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag Winter, 2009
Greenberg, Marc L.
Language contact
Slavic languages
Celtic languages
Substratum
Indo-European
2012-12-29T17:19:41Z
2012-12-29T17:19:41Z
2010
Article
Greenberg, Marc L. 2010. [Review of] Gvozdanović, Jadranka. Celtic and Slavic and the Great Migrations: Reconstructing Linguistic History. Empirie und Theorie der Sprachwissenschaft, vol. 1. Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag Winter, 2009. The Russian Review 69/4: 708–709.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/10509
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
The Russian Review (Wiley-Blackwell)
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/61732019-04-12T14:44:56Zcom_1808_979com_1808_11153col_1808_980col_1808_11154
‘Nothing to Hide … Nothing to Fear’: Discriminatory Surveillance and Queer Visibility in Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Conrad, Kathryn
Queer
Homosexuality
Surveillance
Normalization
Northern Ireland
Great Britain
United Kingdom
Policing
Public
Cottaging
This chapter will ‘queer’ surveillance, interrogate the assumptions on which it is based and consider the uses to which it is put, by examining surveillance and policing practices in both the United Kingdom generally and, more specifically, in Northern Ireland, particularly as they have been directed at queer people. In the human crises engendered by surveillance, I will suggest, we also see a crisis in the meanings and value of the public, privacy, visibility and normalisation, issues that have long resonated with queer theory and queer studies.
2010-04-27T19:43:48Z
2010-04-27T19:43:48Z
2009-12
Article
Conrad, Kathryn. "‘Nothing to Hide … Nothing to Fear’: Discriminatory Surveillance and Queer Visibility in Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Ashgate Research Companion to Queer Theory, ed. Noreen Giffney and Michael O’Rourke. Surrey, UK: Ashgate Publishing Ltd, 2009.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/6173
en
http://www.ashgate.com/isbn/9780754671350
openAccess
application/pdf
Ashgate
oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/111192019-04-12T14:28:25Zcom_1808_5894com_1808_11153com_1808_21col_1808_7025col_1808_11102col_1808_11154col_1808_23
Book Review. Pushkinskaia Entsiklopediia “Mikhailovskoe” (Pushkin Encyclopedia “Mikhailovskoe”)
Giullian, Jon C.
Pushkin
Mikhailovskoe
Пушкин
Михайловское
Museums
Музей
Pskov
Псков
Encyclopedia
Энциклопедия
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.
2013-05-14T15:52:39Z
2013-05-14T15:52:39Z
2006
Article
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
en_US
openAccess
application/pdf
Slavic & East European Information Resources