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Topic: Russian State University for the Humanities


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In the News (Fri 17 Feb 12)

  
  RUSSIAN STATE UNIVERSITY FOR THE HUMANITIES
The Russian State University for the Humanities (RSUH) is an educational institution, preparing specialists in all areas of knowledge in the Humanities.
The University is located in the Centre of Moscow on Miusskaya Ploshad near to the Novoslobodskaya metro station and to Tverskaya Street, one of the main thoroughfares of Moscow.
The main University complex is comprised of seven buildings, housing an administrative Centre, classroom facilities, equipped with everything necessary to successful teaching for Russian and foreign students alike, as well as a dining hall, two snack bars, sports and recreation hall, and a medical station where students may receive no-cost first aid.
www.ceebd.co.uk /ceeed/un/ru/ru039.htm   (1503 words)

  
 Welcome to RSUH   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
The Russian State University for the Humanities is an educational institution preparing specialists in all areas of knowledge in the Humanities.
RSUH currently comprises seven institutes, eleven faculties, nineteen scientific and educational centers, eight laboratories, and fifty departments.
RSUH embraces more than 5500 students, around 600 post-graduate students and those working for a doctor's degree; around 700 lecturers (including 214 doctors and 573 candidates of sciences) and around 400 invited specialists.
www-old.rsuh.ru /english   (793 words)

  
 ACLS Humanities Program in Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine: Meetings
Elena Smilianskaia (Russian State University for the Humanities, Moscow)
Natalia Avtonomova (Russian State University for the Humanities, Moscow)
Elena Zemskova (Russian State University for the Humanities, Moscow)
www.acls.org /hum-meetings/moscow04/Moscow-program.htm   (593 words)

  
 ACLS Humanities Program in Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine: Recipients
Yevheniya HOROT, Lesya Ukrainka Volyn' State University, Lutsk, Ukraine.
Russian Economic Policy in Turkestan and the Development of the Cotton-Growing Industry in the end of the 19th to the beginning of 20th centuries.
Russian chamber vocal music in the 1st half of the 19 century as a historical and cultural phenomenon.
www.acls.org /humanities-byruuk-recips.htm   (8687 words)

  
 Return visit to Russia reveals dramatic changes (11-10-94)
Longwell-Grice had hoped to live with Russian students in a dormitory but discovered that 99 percent of Russian students are commuters and that the living quarters are predominantly for foreigners..
Also, Russian college students are somewhat younger, ranging in age from 16 to 20." Longwell-Grice said he was surprised at the number of one-parent households in Russia, where the divorce rate is 50 percent.
In general, Russian students felt they were more liberal than their parents in such areas as politics, religion, attitudes towards sex and acceptance of people of other cultures and races.
www.udel.edu /PR/UpDate/95/11/15.html   (803 words)

  
 Moscow Summer Immersion   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
University professors from the Russian State University for the Humanities and St. Petersburg State University will be among the guest lecturers.
There is a new creative spirit in the country, and the energy of the younger generation is visible everywhere: in radical theatre productions and art exhibits, in new businesses and enterprises, and in the rebuilding of old cities and construction of new buildings.
This provides students with the opportunity to interact with native Russians, and to continue to practice their language skills outside the classroom, in a real-life setting.
www.dickinson.edu /external/global/programs/summer/MoscowSummerImmersion.htm   (601 words)

  
 SHAFR: March 2003 Newsletter: Needles in the Haystacks
From the floor, RSUH vice-rector Natalia Basovskaya whimsically noted that the lack of interior space in Soviet tanks implied a lack of concern for the comfort of the soldiers, itself an indication of Russian mentality.
RSUH graduate student Sergey Mruz invoked his aunt, a sniper in the war, and implored his generation to adopt a reverential stance toward the memory of the war.
Irwin Weil of Northwestern University and RSUH, a convener of the conference, maintained with passion that the unique moral horror of the Nazi campaign of “extermination” should be given a special primacy, since that was what unified those fighting to defeat it.
www.shafr.org /newsletter/2005/august/phelps.htm   (1143 words)

  
 Programs in International Educational Resources   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
With a strong interest in the history of Russian literature of the 19th and 20th centuries, she has devoted her scholarly work to the study of the artistic process in Chekhov and other Russian authors.
She is currently associated with the Russian State University for the Humanities (RGGU).
An expert on Russian theater, she is the author of Your Chekhov (Vash Chekhov), Chekhov in Russian Theatrical Criticism (A. Chekhov v russkoi teatral'noi kritike), The Chekhovs: A Family Biography (nominated for Russian National Bestseller in 2004), and over 100 scholarly articles on Russian playwrights and figures in the world of theater.
www.yale.edu /ycias/pier/bios.htm   (248 words)

  
 The Russian State University for the Humanities is an educational institution preparing specialists in all areas of
The Russian State University for the Humanities is an educational institution preparing specialists in all areas of
(Rector of Russian State University for the Humanities, Moscow) – Conclusions
In addition, both teaching and participating in scientific research, are 210 specialists from the institutes of the Russian Academy of Sciences and other Moscow institutions of higher learning, and eleven professors from various foreign universities.
www.regione.taa.it /giunta/conv/csseo/Afanasev.htm   (609 words)

  
 Journal • News • University Lecture Series
She graduated with honors from Rostov State University in Rostov-on-Don, Russia in 1978 where she received her graduate degree in 1979 and her first doctorate in history in 1982.
She attained her second doctorate in 1996 from the Russian State University for the Humanities in Moscow.
The University Lecture Series is sponsored by the Office of the Provost and Vice President of Academic Affairs, the University Student Union, Associated Students, Inc., Coke and James Hallowell, KJWL, Borders and Piccadilly Inn Hotels.
www.csufresno.edu /journal/vol7/05/news/uls.shtml   (589 words)

  
 ISCIP - Perspective
This is the first major effort to restore Russian history on the basis of logic and fact, rather than a priori constructs.
Trapeznikov, a historian by profession and an ardent Stalinist by calling, was placed at the head of the sciences department and the education organs of the CPSU Central Committee.
Russian historians face a complicated problem of learning new research skills and methodologies and basing their efforts on a culture of dialogue.
www.bu.edu /iscip/vol7/Afanasyev.html   (2510 words)

  
 Russian Cyberspace - Teksty   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Natalja Konradova was born in Moscow, graduated from Russian State University for Humanities in Moscow (1996) with a qualification in Theory of Culture.
At present, she is a professor in the Russian State University for the Humanities (history and theory of culture department).
She graduated in 1999 from department of philology, Moscow State University and is currently a PhD researcher in Media Lab, University of Industrial Arts and Design, Helsinki, Finland.
www.ruhr-uni-bochum.de /russ-cyb/library/seminars/Russian_Cyberspace/lecturers.htm   (871 words)

  
 SLIS IUB > News > Student Profile: Denis Shaburov
Scholars from Balkan and Eurasian countries are placed at universities in the United States to improve their skills and resources as educators as well as to create ongoing contacts and exchanges between their home and U.S. host institutions.
Shaburov entered the Russian State University for the Humanities in 1995 for five years of study.
At the Russian State University for the Humanities, there are only one or two large computer labs, located in a central building on campus rather than around the university.
www.slis.indiana.edu /news/story.php?story_id=735   (586 words)

  
 ISCIP - Perspective
Sometimes the direct involvement of Russian troops is camouflaged and presented to the world as a "peacekeeping mission" in an area where interethnic conflicts have arisen.
Recently, Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev declared at a conference of Russian ambassadors to the CIS and Baltic countries that the near abroad is the source of the main threats to Russia's vital interests.
Here too Russian economic interests are apparent, and business kingpins have learned to use the Russian government in order to affect the course of military operations in the region.
www.bu.edu /iscip/vol4/Afanasyev.html   (2745 words)

  
 University of Wyoming
Russian Professors Pursue Professional Development at UW Sept. 22, 2004 -- Two visiting faculty members from universities in Russia are spending the academic year at the University of Wyoming to gain professional development experience as part of the Junior Faculty Development Program (JFDP).
The JFDP fosters opportunities for young faculty members from newly independent states of the former Soviet Union and the Balkans to spend two semesters at host institutions in the United States, observing classes and working with faculty mentors in their field.
JFDP is funded by the U.S. Department of State's Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs and administered by the American Councils for International Education.
www.uwyo.edu /news/showrelease.asp?id=2278   (651 words)

  
 Centre College: Russian scholar to discuss everyday life in post-Soviet Russia
Vyacheslavovna is in the United States through the Global Partners Program, a collaborative initiative among 42 liberal arts colleges funded by the Andrew Mellon Foundation to strengthen international study.
Sarah Goodrum, assistant professor of sociology at Centre, says, "We're thrilled to be able to bring to Centre College a scholar of Russian cultural history who can speak about the changes in Russia over the past 15 to 20 years from both an academic perspective and a personal one.
Vyacheslavovna is an associate professor of cultural history at Russian State University for the Humanities in the department of history and theory of culture.
www.centre.edu /web/news/2004/russia04.html   (304 words)

  
 WENR, January/February 2004: Russia & The Commonwealth of Independent States
Leonid Nevzlin, a close associate of an embattled oil executive, cut ties with Russian State University for the Humanities after Education Minister Vladimir Filippov threatened to reorganize the university and install a rector of his choosing.
But the highly regarded state university, which in 1991 grew out of the former Moscow State Institute for History and Archives, ultimately would have been powerless against a ministry edict, so Nevzlin opted to quit rather than drag his supporters and the university down with him.
Approximately 66,000 young Russians have taken courses in Britain over the past five years; 13,500 were expected to study there in 2004, and a sizeable proportion of them were planning to work on their master’s in business administration.
www.wes.org /eWENR/04jan/RussiaCIS.htm   (741 words)

  
 Foreign Affairs - Russian Reform Is Dead - Yuri N. Afanasyev   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Yuri N. Afanasyev, a historian, is rector of the Russian State University for the Humanities in Moscow and former Co-chairman of the Interregional Deputies' Group in the U.S.S.R. Congress.
That legacy is the main reason for the sense of lost, or rather never acquired, Russian identity and the deformed perception of the surrounding world as a threat.
The main reason the Russian people have not escaped totalitarian systems, before or since 1917, has been the lack of a civil society.
www.foreignaffairs.org /19940301facomment5093/yuri-n-afanasyev/russian-reform-is-dead.html?mode=print   (579 words)

  
 ETOL: Research institutions-more info   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Sponsored by the State Archival Service of Russia (Rosarkhiv), the State Public Historical Library (GPIB), the Historico-Archival Institute of the Russian State University for the Humanities (IAI RGGU), and the St Petersburg Branch of the Archive of the Russian Academy of Sciences (PFA RAN).
A basic reference work for those using traditional state and CPSU records, medieval manuscripts, and personal papers, this volume also provides a starting place for those trying to locate manuscript maps, folk songs, motion pictures, genealogical data, technical documentation, and architectural drawings, among other sources.
The Russian edition has separate name, geographic, institutional, and author/compiler indexes, as well as an index-correlation table linking previous and present repository acronyms with current names of archives.
www.marxists.org /history/etol/research/abb.htm   (946 words)

  
 A&Stemplate2
Attendance at the lecture, titled “Russian Foreign Policy and the Middle East,” is free and open to the public.
She received a Ph.D. in history from Rostov State University in 1982 and a Ph.D. in politics from the Russian State University for Humanities in 1996.
Then, in September 1997, she joined the faculty at the Russian State University for the Humanities in the Department of History, Political Science, and Law.
www.as.wvu.edu /New_Folder/newsroom/newsreleases/2003/Jan/ludmilla.html   (230 words)

  
 Slavic: Faculty: Fleishman
The State University of Tartu and the Latvian State University, Ph.D. The Latvian State University, Russian and Slavic Philology (1961-1966, with honors)
He has also been a Visiting Professor at UC-Berkeley, Yale, Harvard, University of Texas at Austin, the Russian State University for the Humanities in Moscow, Charles University in Prague and the University of Latvia in his native Riga.
His major scholarly interests include 19th and 20th century Russian literature; Boris Pasternak; 2oth century Russian emigre and Soviet culture and literary life; Russian avant-garde poetry and art; Russian-Jewish, Russian-Baltic and Russian-Polish cultural relationships; poetics; and archival research.
www.stanford.edu /dept/slavic/faculty/fleishman.html   (381 words)

  
 Tolya Kharkhurin: Research
The working hypothesis was that, in addition to the virtue of speaking two languages, bilinguals who experience and participate in two cultures may benefit from the meta- and paralinguistic advantages of biculturalism leading to an increase in divergent thinking abilities.
US sample: 108 immigrants from the former Soviet Union who claimed to speak Russian and English, mean age=21.52 (4.54), and 47 Brooklyn College students who claimed to be native monolingual English speakers, mean age=23.45 (8.96).
Russian sample: 130 Moscow State University and Russian State University for the Humanities students, Russian native speakers who indicated that they also spoke English, mean age=19.74 (2.78).
academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu /psych/tovyharhur/research/bilingualism_creativity.html   (889 words)

  
 BalticStudyNet   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
The International M.A. in Russian Studies is a graduate program for students who already hold a B.A. degree or its equivalent and wish to continue their study of Russia or other successor states of the Soviet Union.
Those reading for an M.A. in Russian Studies at the EUSP are expected to achieve a solid interdisciplinary understanding of the region and to become first-class specialists in their field.
The School of International Relations was opened in 1994 and is one of the youngest teaching and research institutions within Russia's oldest university, St. Petersburg State University.
www2.hu-berlin.de /balticstudynet/russia.htm   (519 words)

  
 Global Partners Project - Center in Central Europe & Russia
Pivovarov was in residence in Grinnell for six weeks, where he co-taught the senior Russian seminar, gave a gallery talk at an exhibit of his work, and participated in various campus activities.
The goal of her visit was strengthening the connection between Carleton and Lomonosov State University.
Gavrichina is an associate professor in the history and theory of culture department at the Russian State University for the Humanities.
www.global-partners.org /cerus/ivpawards.html   (2394 words)

  
 The State Hermitage Museum: Hermitage News
I.G. Etoeva (State Hermitage) explained the history of the theatre to the assembled participants at the conference in a speech which opened the conference.
In her report entitled "Enacting a Picture: An Archaic Type of Theatrical Presentation," N.V. Braginskaya (Institute of Higher Studies in the Humanities, Moscow) shared several results of her investigations into the early forms of theatre which were closely bound up with fine arts.
E.P. Yakovleva (State Russian Museum) spoke about the works for theatre by N.K. Roerich which she has put into scholarly circulation over the past several years.
www.hermitagemuseum.org /html_En/11/2005/hm11_2_185.html   (319 words)

  
 Department of History - Carnegie Mellon University   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
She is also the author of Women at the Gates: Gender and Industry in Stalin's Russia, a study of Soviet women and industrialization in the 1930s, as well as numerous articles on Soviet social history.
She coordinates a faculty exchange between Carnegie Mellon and the Russian State University for the Humanities in Moscow.
She is currently working on a book, Terror and Democracy Under Stalin, a study of repression and mass participation in the factories and the unions in the 1930s in the Soviet Union.
www.hss.cmu.edu /history/faculty/wGoldman.html   (420 words)

  
 CONTEXT - This Week in Arts and Ideas from The Moscow Times
The program of exhibits is curated by Oksana Sarkisyan of the Russian State University for the Humanities, and runs throughout February.
These domestic happenings were not only significant for the Russian cultural scene, but ranked among the most innovative art events held anywhere at the time.
Vchera i Segodnya) is currently running at the Russian State University for the Humanities' museum center, located at 15 Ulitsa Chayanova.
context.themoscowtimes.com /stories/2005/02/04/103.html   (962 words)

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