Although
Russian history studies are mostly focused on research of military, ideological, political and mobilization aspects of war, we always remember about the tragic and heroic destiny of Russian women soldiers and the aftermath of the war that had a heavy incidence on Russian women.
Not exact matches
* Americans don't read
Russian literature or
study history Dostoyevsky's «The Idiot» was about a man (representing Christ) who was locked away in an insane asylum in Switzerland.
Stephen Cohen is professor emeritus of
Russian studies,
history, and politics atNew York University and Princeton University.
The
study by Professor Jukka Korpela was published as a General Article in
Russian History (1/2014).
In the mid-1990s, a lake containing 1,300 cubic miles of water (as much as Lake Michigan) was detected 12,000 feet below the surface of the ice in East Antarctica, beneath where the
Russians had spent years drilling into the ice sheet to
study its
history.
I am an American who is very interested in
Russian history and the
Russian language, which I am currently
studying.
Russian women also started to speak better English, especially the younger generation, who
studied at school at times when Soviet Union was already
history.
A combination of state - sponsored distortions and the simplified answers required by standardized tests have re-imposed a deadening conformity on the
study of
history in
Russian schools.
I majored in Art
History and
Russian Studies.
Helen Rappaport
studied Russian at Leeds University and is a specialist in
Russian and nineteenth - century women's
history.
After living in Paris (1982 — 86), she
studied Russian literature, Eastern European
studies, political science, and art
history in Berlin and Amsterdam (1988 — 1996).
His interest ranges from folk embroidery, made on vintage fabrics taken from his mother's chest, to natural
history studies and specimens under glass; from drawings, seemingly childish and clumsy and made in response to familiar situations to elements of
Russian culture, scattered around the exhibition space and combined with memories of the local context.
She lived in Paris (1982 — 86), graduated from highschool in West - Berlin in 1988,
studied Russian literature, Eastern European
studies, political science, and art
history in Berlin and Amsterdam (1988 — 96) and in 2004 obtained her PhD from the Humboldt University in Berlin, with a thesis focusing on a paradigmatic shift in the way artists reflected the historical avant - garde and the notion of utopia in visual and media art projects of the 1980s and 1990s in (ex --RRB- Yugoslavia and Russia.
His recent book The Experimental Group: Ilya Kabakov, Moscow Conceptualism, Soviet Avant - Gardes received the Robert Motherwell Book Award for the most outstanding publication in the
history of modernism in the arts, as well as the Vucinich Prize for the most important scholarly contribution to the field of
Russian and Eastern European
studies.
FROM OUR BLOG / Nasher Museum student intern Serena Reiser writes, «The
history of
Russian art — and, in particular, the
history of unofficial Soviet art ---- often feels like a strange and lonely field of
study.»
«Fareed Zakaria GPS,» 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. on CNN: Saul Cornell, professor of American
history at Fordham University; Adam Lankford, associate professor in criminology & criminal justice at the University of Alabama; Stephen F. Cohen, professor emeritus of
Russian studies,
history, and politics, New York University and Princeton University; David Sanger of The New York Times; Steve Phillips, founder of Democracy in Color; Hilda Solis, supervisor, Los Angeles County, District 1 and former U.S. secretary of labor.