scholarly journals The values of the past in the historical and cultural media discourse: understanding the centenary of the October Revolution

Author(s):  
Viktor A. Sidorov ◽  
Slovenica ◽  
2018 ◽  
pp. 10-30
Author(s):  
Petra Testen Koren

The Russian chapel under Vršič celebrated centenary in 2016. It became a symbol for many people. Firstly, it was a symbol of Russiafor prisoners of war. Then it represented contact with “home” for all those who, after the October Revolution, found their home abroad, in Slovenia. The Chapel was a silent friend of travelers and mountaineers for many years, and today it also represents a symbol of friendship between Russia and Slovenia. Every year at the end of July, on the St. Vladimir’s day, people gather in memory of the past and present, for awarning. The text provides a brief insight into the last 100 years of the Russian chapel.


1934 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 491-494

The victory of the October Revolution and the overthrow of the power of the exploiters created the decisive conditions for a correct and radical resolution of the national question. "Prison of Nations" was the name of tsarist Russia, and in this prison Tatarstan was also in trouble. The economic and cultural inequality of nationalities, the economic and cultural backwardness, the "idiocy of village life," multiplied by national oppression-that's what characterized the situation of the Tatar proletariat and the working peasantry in the past.


2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Egor M. Isaev

Abstract This article discusses the representation of the era of the October Revolution and the Civil War in contemporary Russian popular cinema. It describes the modern tools used by the state to create new images of the past and to reconstruct history in Russian popular culture. It also considers how Russian society has reacted to this official discourse.


2014 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-50
Author(s):  
Adnan Ajsic

Similar to many modern languages Bosnian continues to borrow lexical material from English. Although this is by no means a new trend, the linguo-political situation in Bosnia-Herzegovina has dramatically changed in the past twenty years and with it the dynamics and patterns of lexical borrowing. Based on a special synchronic corpus compiled from opinion pieces and editorials from the contemporary Bosnian press, this study analyzes the collocational patterns of the most frequently occurring English loanwords and compares them to their original collocational patterns extracted from a comparable English-language corpus. The findings confirm a divergence in collocational patterning between the donor and borrowing languages (Kurtböke & Potter 2000), but also suggest the existence of a “washback” effect whereby some of the new collocational patterns from the borrowing language enter the donor language through media discourse. The new collocational patterns are shown to derive from the postwar constitutional arrangement in Bosnia-Herzegovina.


2013 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-220 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lian Liu ◽  
Marie D. Stevenson

This study examines stance in cross-cultural media discourse by comparing disaster news reports on the Sichuan earthquake of May 2008 in a Chinese, an Australian Chinese, and an Australian newspaper. The stance taken in the news reports is examined using the Attitude sub-system of Martin and White’s (2005) Appraisal framework. The analysis revealed that stance patterns in the reports from the three newspapers varied systematically, and that the reports from the three newspapers could be placed on a continuum, with the Chinese-Australian news reports taking an intermediate stance, though leaning more towards the Chinese stance. For instance, whereas the Australian reports focused primarily on evaluating the actual earthquake situation, both the Chinese and the Australian Chinese reports focused more on assessing the participants and their behavior during the aftermath of the earthquake. Findings are linked to features of the Chinese and Australian sociocultural contexts, and the implications of the study are discussed for understanding the discourse of migrant ‘sub-cultures’ in relation to the discourse of the cultures to which they are connected.


2009 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 196-229
Author(s):  

AbstractMany painful ideological problems existing in contemporary Russia are determined by the inadequacy of perception of the country's revolutionary past. This misperception stems from both the consequences of the decades-long mythologization of the October Revolution and its leaders and from the more recent attempts to get rid of the dependence on Bolshevik propaganda. Contemporary historic memory in Russia is beset with one major contradiction: the desire to part with the myth, and the inability to do so. Although, traditionally, images of the past are usually adapted in order to suit the needs of modernity, this task has become much easier in contemporary society with its powerful mass media fitted with visual networks. Historic memory, previously shaped by legends, folklore, rites and rituals, now comes under relentless fire from the dilettantes pretending to have discovered some "true" vision of the past, and illustrating this vision by incongruous video footage. As a result, images of the past inevitably lose their former edifying role and become a means of inculcation by propagating political and moral stereotypes advantageous to the authorities. The wave of discussions on the Russian Revolution, which rose in connection with its current anniversary, was yet another indication that today's ideologists, with their inept denunciations, are only aggravating the trauma inflicted on social conscience.


Author(s):  
Н. Гвозданная ◽  
N. Gvozdannaya

Over the past decades the number of studies devoted to the use of storytelling technologies in various spheres of human activity has significantly increased. The article reveals the concept of the term “storytelling” and consideres its role in the corporate media discourse.


2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 113-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
Krzysztof Wasilewski

This article presents an analysis of the process of sacralization of history in the media discourse. Certain events and figures from the past are incorporated into the sphere of sacrum which excludes any discussion and maintains the domination of one narration of history. The process of sacralization may take places directly or indirectly. The first relies on direct inclusion to the discourse of certain words, which are associated with religion. The indirect sacralization takes place when episodes from the past are changed into universal stories of fight between the good and the evil. The analysis is performed on printed media discourses concerning three events from Poland’s contemporary history: the 1920 Warsaw Battle of Warsaw, the 1944 Warsaw Uprising and the postwar armed underground.


FACETS ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 989-1005
Author(s):  
Brett Favaro ◽  
Edward Hind-Ozan

Socio-economic barriers to participation in science are harmful to the enterprise. One barrier is the phenomenon of scientists paying for expenses related to the conduct of research that are not reimbursed (which we termed “Scispends” for social media discourse). We conducted an online survey that asked self-selecting respondents to report the amount of money they spent on nonreimbursed expenses, including both costs incurred in the past 12 months and one-time startup costs associated with their current position. We received 857 responses that met criteria for inclusion and reported descriptive statistics summarizing nonreimbursed expenses across career stages. We found the median total of nonreimbursed expenses for the past 12 months was $1680 and the median one-time expenses were $2700, and that as a proportion of income these expenses were highest for those earliest in their careers. We found 13% of respondents spent more on unreimbursed expenses than they earned in a year. All cost categories were skewed, with most respondents reporting little or no expense, whereas a minority experienced high expenses. These results should be interpreted with caution due to survey’s exploratory design, but they suggest that formal surveys should be conducted by scientific societies, funding agencies, and academic institutions to properly assess the causes of nonreimbursed expenses and determine how this barrier can be minimized.


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