A Brief History of the Society for the History of Discoveries on the Occasion of Its Sixtieth Anniversary

2020 ◽  
Vol 52 (2) ◽  
pp. 149-153
Author(s):  
Mirela Altić
1981 ◽  
Vol 87 ◽  
pp. 407-439 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stuart R. Schram

On 1 July 1981 the Chinese Communist Party celebrated the sixtieth anniversary of its foundation. To mark this occasion, the Party itself issued a statement summing up the experience of recent decades. It seems an appropriate time for outsiders as well to look back over the history of the past 60 years, in the hope of grasping long-term tendencies which may continue to influence events in the future.


2021 ◽  
Vol V (2) ◽  
pp. 143-190
Author(s):  
Alexey Kruglov

The paper demonstrates the significance of commemorative and anniversary philosophical medals that are seen as a special visual aid for problematic issues in the history of philosophy specification. The author puts forward the thesis that such medals can clarify the perception of philosophical doctrine and the context of philosophical doctrine consideration at a particular time. So, they greatly assist as an additional historical and philosophical source, but they can hardly be helpful with the interpretation of either various aspects of a philosophical doctrine or a particular statement of a particular philosopher. The rationale for the thesis presents the analysis of four philosophical medals: the medal commemorating the foundation of the alethophile society (1740), A. Abramsonʼs medal in honor of I. Kantʼs sixtieth anniversary (1784), A. Abramsonʼs medal for the death of I. Kant (1804), A.L. Heldʼs medals in honor of the sixtieth anniversary of G.W.F. Hegel (1830). If the first three medals contribute to a better understanding of the philosophical traits of the German Enlightenment, the reasons for appealing to Horace's words “sapere aude”, Kant's peculiarity as an Enlightenmentist, philosophical meaning of the Kantian Copernican Revolution and the transformation of the perception of the “Critique of Pure Reason” in the late 18th century, expectations regarding the fourth medal has proved misplaced. It cannot clarify the Hegelian phrase about reason as a rose on the cross of modernity and reconciliation with reality. In addition, in the course of clarifying the meaning of the four aforementioned medals, the author also turns to the commemorative medal of Chr. Wolff by J. Dassier (c. 1733), the medal for the return of Chr. Wolff to Halle by J.Chr. Koch (1740) and the medal for Kantʼs death by F.W. Loos (1804).


Author(s):  
Elaine M Jeffreys

This paper examines the diversity of China’s popular culture idols with reference to a commemorative website called ‘The Search for Modern China’, which was launched in late September 2009 to celebrate the sixtieth anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) under the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party on 1 October 1949. The website’s framing narrative suggests that the history of idol production and celebrity in the PRC can be viewed crudely as marked by disjuncture: the decline of heavy-handed Party-state involvement in the propagandistic manufacturing of socialist idols of production, followed by the grafted-on rise of western-style media-manufactured celebrities as idols of capitalist consumption. However, an analysis of the website’s pantheon of idols reveals that while some idols from the Maoist and early reform period have been relegated to the realm of fiction, revolutionary kitsch or are now simply passé, others remain very much alive in the popular imagination. A state-led project of promoting patriotic education has ensured the coexistence in commercial popular culture of revolutionary idols and contemporary celebrities, via memory sites associated with broadcast television, DVDs and the Internet, and the historical locations, museums and monuments of ‘red tourism.’


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 157-171
Author(s):  
Yulia S. Lyubovtseva ◽  
Alexei D. Gvishiani ◽  
Anatoly A. Soloviev ◽  
Olga O. Samokhina ◽  
Roman I. Krasnoperov

Abstract. The International Geophysical Year (IGY) was the most significant international scientific event in geophysical sciences in the history of mankind. This was the largest international experiment that brought together about 300 000 scientists from 67 countries. Well-planned activity of national and international committees was organized for the first time. The history of the IGY organization and complex international experiments in planetary geophysics conducted within its program are discussed in this article. Special attention is given to the estimation of the significance of this project for developing worldwide geophysical research.


2021 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 127-149
Author(s):  
Yoon K. Pak

AbstractThis History of Education Society Presidential Address comes at the society's sixtieth anniversary and provides a new conceptual framework that foregrounds recognizing a “racist-blind,” and not a color-blind, ideology in the intentional and unequal design our educational past and present. It highlights systemic racism brought on by the dual pandemic moments of COVID-19 and global racial unrest, with a call to action for educational historians to lead in promoting systemic, institutional changes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 188-192
Author(s):  
Nadezhda Ivanovna Shutova

The article is devoted to the anniversary of Tatyana Gilnyakhmetovna Minniyakhmetova, the prominent ethnologist and Candidate of Historical Sciences, Doctor of Philosophy, Excellence in Public Education of the RSFSR (Moscow, 1987). The author focuses on her formation stages as a researcher, her scientific, popularizing and organizational activities and her contribution to the study of Udmurt traditional culture. During the period of the scientific research T. Minniyakhmetova published eight single author and multi-author monographs and more than two hundred articles in Udmurt traditional culture. Her research works are in demand by the professional academic community and universities, and researchers of the Higher School, and by everyone who is interested in the culture and history of the Udmurt people. She has organized and conducted more than seventy folkloristic-ethnographic and folkloristic-dialectological expeditions, the geography of which in addition to the Trans-Kama region and Udmurt Republic which covers the neighbouring territories of the Volga and Ural area, as well as some regions of Siberia. T. Minniyakhmetova has collected the solid bank of information on ethnography, culture and life of the Udmurts as well as other ethnic groups of the Volga-Ural region. There is the large fund of photographic materials, video and audio recordings in her collection. The name of the Udmurt ethnologist is known not only in Russia, but also outside of the country. The Udmurt origin and her experiences of tendencies of European ethnology allow T. Minniyakhmetova to act both as a researcher who knows ethnic culture from the inside and in the context of the development of modern ethnic processes. Through her scientific and teaching activities, she contributes to the wide popularization of Udmurt ethnography and folklore in the European and global scientific community. According to the traditional concepts of the Udmurts, Tatiana Minniyakhmetova developed anthropological theories on ethnic self-consciousness, concepts of ritual and doubled ritual time, peculiarities of the orientation in space (spacial intimacy and spacial contradiction), real and symbolic boundaries, the concept of clean/pure and unclean/impure, the birth of life and the creation of souls, interactive methods of communication between the living and the dead, methodology of field researches.


Slavic Review ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Pastor

The nine years between 1979 and 1987 have been banner years for Hungarian publications on the history of the Hungarian Communist Revolution and its leader, Béla Kun. Occasioning the increased output were two anniversary dates: the sixtieth anniversary of the short-lived soviet republic in 1979 and the one-hundredth anniversary of the birth of its leader, Béla Kun, in 1986.Historical evaluations of Béla Kun's life started with a frenzy in 1979 when his political biography, written by György Borsányi, was published; they ended in a whimper with the publication of several Kun biographies in 1987. The controversial B61a Kun has been negatively judged not only by western historians and by Hungarian historians writing during the interwar years, but also by such prominent Russian revolutionaries as the Marxist Lev Trotskii and the anarchist Victor Serge. Both considered him an incompetent fool.


2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 823-825
Author(s):  
Hizri A. Amirkhanov

Shahmardan Nazimovich Amirov-leading researcher Of the Institute of archaeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, doctor of historical Sciences celebrates his sixtieth anniversary on January 1, 2020. The name of the hero of the day comes to mind to specialists of any level one of the first when problems of archeology and primitive history of the Near East and Caucasus are discussed. The roads of life and professional destiny of sh. N. Amirov ran unusually, in something tortuous, but the General course was unchanged and led to studies in science in the humanitarian sphere.


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