Search results for 'Serguei AlexOushakine' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Serguei AlexOushakine (2009). Introduction: Wither the Intelligentsia: The End of the Moral Elite in Eastern Europe. Studies in East European Thought 61 (4).score: 120.0
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  2. Serguei AlexOushakine (2007). Vitality Rediscovered: Theorizing Post-Soviet Ethnicity in Russian Social Sciences. Studies in East European Thought 59 (3).score: 120.0
    Based on materials collected during a fieldwork in Barnaul (Siberia, Russia) in 2001–2004, the article explores two provincial academic discourses that are focused on issues of Russian national identity. Ethnohistories of trauma address Russia’s current problems through the constant re-writing of the country’s past in order to demonstrate the non-Russian character of its national and state institutions. In the second discourse, ethno-vitalism, the struggle over constructing and interpreting the nation’s memory of the past is replaced with a similar struggle over (...)
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  3. João Pedro Fróis (2011). Introductory Note to “Contemporary Psychology and Art: Toward a Debate” by Lev S. Vygotsky. Journal of Aesthetic Education 45 (1):107-117.score: 3.0
    The importance of an author can be evaluated by the extent to which his theoretical contribution transforms a certain area of knowledge: major researchers create new vistas. This certainly applies to Lev Vygotsky (1896–1934), one of the most brilliant authors of contemporary psychology. His work, owing to its originality, is of epistemological interest to several areas of knowledge. In fact, Vygotsky was at the center of a historical time of change in twentieth-century Russia, in which Mikhail Bakhtin, Roman Jakobson, (...) Eisenstein, Alexander Luria, and Yuri Lotman took part. Their theoretical proposals had repercussions in several areas of knowledge: in literature, semiotics, film, and .. (shrink)
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  4. Serguei Alex Oushakine (2007). Vitality Rediscovered: Theorizing Post-Soviet Ethnicity in Russian Social Sciences. Studies in East European Thought 59 (3):171 - 193.score: 3.0
    Based on materials collected during a fieldwork in Barnaul (Siberia, Russia) in 2001–2004, the article explores two provincial academic discourses that are focused on issues of Russian national identity. Ethnohistories of trauma address Russia’s current problems through the constant re-writing of the country’s past in order to demonstrate the non-Russian character of its national and state institutions. In the second discourse, ethno-vitalism, the struggle over constructing and interpreting the nation’s memory of the past is replaced with a similar struggle over (...)
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  5. Serguei Fokine (2008). The Singing Consciousness. Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 42:69-76.score: 3.0
    Consciousness has been and will continue to be one of the central problems of philosophy. In written works the fact that the consciousness can sing is presented as one of the most interesting and enigmatic properties of consciousness. That consciousness can sing, and in fact does so, and to prove that this is the case is relatively easy. It is enough to say that “one is singing within oneself”, not loudly and only one or various simple sounds in a way (...)
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  6. Kai Gregor & Sergueï Spetschinsky (eds.) (2010). Concerning Peace: New Perspectives on Utopia. Cambridge Scholars.score: 3.0
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