Les Maîtres de l'ancienne peinture Serbe. Par Svetozar Radojčić. 11×8. Pp. 135 + 59 figures in the text and 62 plates, 6 being in colour. Belgrade, 1955; being No. T. CCXXXVI and Monograph No. 3 of the Archaeological Institute of the Serbian Academy of Sciences, Edited by V. R. Petković.

1956 ◽  
Vol 36 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 124-125
Author(s):  
E. C. Rouse
Author(s):  
Miroslav Jovanovic

The Archive of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts in Belgrade holds three letters that the young writer Milutin Bojic (1892-1917) sent to dramaturge and politician Milan Grol (1876-1952). Bojic wrote to Grol from the island of Corfu, where, together with the Serbian government and the army, he was spending his days in exile. Bojic had a great desire to continue his education and thus to contribute to the Serbian people and the state. These letters are very important historical sources about the life of a young poet who has famously described the suffering of Serbian Army in World War I in his Ode to a Blue Sea Tomb.


Robotica ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 463-464
Author(s):  
Miomir Vukobratovich

The Mihailo Pupin Institute is among the largest and most eminent research organizations in technical sciences in Yugoslavia. Founded in 1946 as the Telecommunications Institute of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, it was given its present name 13 years later. In the Institute's early days the personnel, about one hundred employees, just a few of them researchers, has grown to more than 850 employees, 300 of them researchers, working in a 15,000 sq. meters modern research center.


1988 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
pp. 35-36

The unofficial Committee for the Defence of Freedom of Thought and Expression, whose proposal is published below, was formed in Belgrade on 10 November 1984 on the initiative of Dobrica Cosic, one of the most popular Serbian novelists. The committee represent the whole spectrum of Belgrade opinion from Marxist philosophers of the Praxis group (Mihailo Marković, Ljubomir Tadić, Zagorka Golubović), ‘nationalists’ (Mića Popović, Matija Bećković), pre-war party veterans (Gojko Nikolis, Tanasije Mladenović), advocates of a pluralistic socialist democracy (Kosta Cavoski, Ivan Janković) to public figures affirming the rule of law. Twelve are members of the prestigious Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts and all of them are leading figures. The Committee has issued over 50 protests against human rights abuse involving not only Serbs but also Croats, Bosnian Moslems, Slovenes, ethnic Albanians in the province of Kosovo and members of the Hungarian minority in the Vojvodina. In October 1986 the Committee put forward an eleven-point plan for the establishment of the rule of law in Yugoslavia (see Index on Censorship, 2/87) and recommended the abolition of the tenure of monopoly power by any single political party. The next step came in November 1987 when the Committee released a petition for the introduction of political democracy in the SFRY (Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia). The text of the petition, addressed to the Federal Assembly and the Yugoslav public, follows. The translation comes from the London-based South Slav Journal.


Muzikologija ◽  
2018 ◽  
pp. 15-48
Author(s):  
Biljana Milanovic

In the text I deal with the period of establishment and the beginnings of the work of the Institute of Musicology of the Serbian Academy of Sciences, which is marked by the role of composer and music writer Petar Konjovic (1883- 1970), who founded and was the first director of the Institute (1947-1954). I examined and problematized Konjovic?s efforts to establish and manage the institution, which were inseparable from his role of Fellow of the Academy and Secretary of the Department of Fine Arts and Music of the Serbian Academy of Sciences (1948-1954), through the analysis of archival documentation. The basic assumption that I started from was related to the interdependence between (1) the establishment of an institutional order and (2) the disciplining of scientific research in the direction of the emergence of musicology and ethnomusicology in the local context. In particular, issues related to the Institute?s relationship with the wider organizational environment and research policy of the SAN, as well as the role and support of its significant individuals in the process of the institutionalization of music science were especially highlighted. The problem of acquiring legitimacy in clearly hierarchical relationships proved to be very complex, since the Institute represented, on the one hand, a scientific unit of the Academy of Arts, that is, the Department of Fine Arts and Music, which, on the other hand, was marked by the inheritance of marginalized status of artists in comparison to other entities within the SAN. The formation of scientific tasks and objectives and the questions related to their realization were shaped in such a context. I analyzed these problems within three subchapters. The first of them provides basic information on the reorganization of the Serbian Academy of Sciences within the framework of the cultural policy of the new regime and deals with the aspects of the formal establishment of the Institute (1947) and the contextualization of the first programmatic projections of its work. The second question relates to the diverse problems that accompanied the delay of the start of the Institute?s activities, while the final subchapteris dedicated to the period from hiring the first associates to the end of Konjovic?s directorship (1948-1954). Konjovic?s strategies pointed to his simultaneous stability and flexibility in the design of thematic areas and methodological approaches. The policy of the scientific-research work of the Institute of Musicology from Konjovic?s time can be outlined in several general aspects: reliance on pre-war experiences, without the destruction of inherited value canons, but with constant changes in the direction of widening the scope of processed material through research of hitherto neglected creative personalities, performing practices and institutions; melographed and studied folklore material from various rural and urban areas, including different national and ethnic communities; the establishment of completely new thematic areas in the local context that destabilize the concept of purely national science; the emphasis on interdisciplinarity and openness to communication and exchange of scientific and methodological experiences in the international context. Konjovic?s position at the Serbian Academy of Sciences, his experience in managing various institutions, persistence and strategically planned actions, his high criteria and consideration in the selection of associates, managing without ideological divergences from his position of the bourgeois pre-war intellectual, but also his patient waiting for certain decisions of the competent instances, were crucial for the constitution and survival of the Institute of Musicology, within which the platform of musicological and ethnomusicological disciplines in Serbia was established in just a few years.


Filomat ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 31 (15) ◽  
pp. 5019-5025
Author(s):  
Aleksandar Nikolic

This paper is devoted to mathematician Mirko Stojakovic, member of Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts on the occasion of 100 years since his birth, but also 30 years since his death. The life path and the main scientific contribution are depicted.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document