scholarly journals Migrant and Autochthonous Traditions within Udmurt Folksong (on the Example of the Siberian Udmurt)

2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-110
Author(s):  
Nikolai Anisimov ◽  
Irina Pchelovodova ◽  
Ekaterina Sofronova

AbstractThis article* investigates, for the first time, the local musical tradition of the Udmurt of Chainsk district (Tomsk oblast). The overwhelming majority of migrants in this region arrived from the Sharkan district of the Udmurt Republic, in Siberia, at the beginning of the 20th century. For a long time they kept their original culture in an ethnically alien environment. However, at the beginning of the 21st century, their singing tradition started to fade under the influence of different factors (such as the disappearance of Udmurt rituals and festivals, as well as mixed marriages). The aim of this article is to compare the ‘Chainsk migrational’ singing tradition to the ‘Sharkan original’ musical tradition. The main collection of audio recordings covering the Chainsk district Udmurt musical tradition is conserved in the archives of the Udmurt Research Institute at the Russian Academy of sciences.1 It is comprised of fieldwork material gathered by researchers from the Institute in 1974 and 2006. We discovered new sources of audio and video recordings of the singing tradition in this territory, which allowed us to integrate more song samples. The analysis of both traditions reveals the basic genres of ritual singing, each of which has been examined from the point of view of the topic of the poetic text, the mood structures, and the metro-rhythmic and melodic peculiarities of their development.

Lituanistica ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 65 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Aurelijus Gieda

It has been emphasised on several occasions that Professor Eduard Wolter was a prominent figure and a broad-profile humanitarian in the history of Lithuanian humanities, who for many decades was actively interested in Lithuanian studies, among other things. The revolutionary changes in Russia divided Wolter’s academic career into two unequal parts: nearly forty years of academic work in Tsarist Russia and thirteen years in Kaunas. Bearing in mind the status of academic Lithuanian studies at the beginning of the twentieth century, his was an unprecedented case in Lithuania until 1940. We can claim that before 1940, no other Lithuanian humanitarian had such a long academic career of several decades devoted to Lithuanian studies. However, we still do not have an academic biography of Wolter, and Stasė Bušmienė’s work Eduardas Volteris, published almost 50 years ago, remains the most comprehensive publication in the field. Because of these circumstances, we must search for new problematic aspects, updated interpretations, and new material-based approaches. The article analyses the context of the revolutionary changes in Russia, the role of Augustinas Voldemaras in the history of the Wolters’ emigration, and Prof. Wolter’s recurrent concern about the academic possessions he had left in St. Petersburg when he was already in Lithuania. This article seeks new solutions: the emigration of the Wolter family to Lithuania is viewed as a potentially crucial knot in the professor’s biography. It allows understanding and linking two seemingly very different stages in his biography (Tsarist Russia and independent Lithuania). Lithuanian research interests and the related circle of like-minded people that had evolved in the course of many decades form a consistent deep-rooted epicentre of Prof. Wolter’s biography. The research method chosen imparts inner integrity to the biography of Prof. Wolter and an opportunity to look into the path of this scholar, who was also a member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, in the long term perspective. This text develops and substantiates the thesis that scholars’ emigration from Bolshevik Russia took place under dire circumstances: they had to leave not only their homes but also their libraries behind, their manuscripts and much of the material accumulated over many decades of academic work. Also, from the point of view of a collective biography, the context of the loss of the old University of St. Petersburg after the Bolshevik takeover in Russia is shown. While in Lithuania, Prof. Wolter made great efforts to recover the manuscripts, the library, and the collections he had left behind in St. Petersburg. This moment justifies the emigration of the Wolter family to Lithuania as a relevant key to the whole biography of Prof. Wolter. For the first time in historiography, the article gives a detailed analysis of Augustinas Voldemaras’ 53 letters to Alexandra Wolter (translated and published by Gediminas Rudis). The letters offer an interesting and characteristic description of the actual circumstances of the emigration of the Wolter family to Lithuania. This correspondence reveals a special connection between Voldemaras and the Wolter family. Voldemaras, who had lived in the Wolters’ house in St. Petersburg for over a decade, became a true family member, and their communication in the process of the emigration of the Wolter family was best described as close familial relations. In this way, the article sheds light on the role of Prof. Voldemaras in the relocation of the Wolter family to Lithuania, which did not find reflection either in Wolter’s biography or in general historiography.


Author(s):  
N.V. Kholmogorova ◽  
A.G. Mikhailova ◽  
N.B. Ovchankova

The results of the studies of fauna of bivalve molluscs of Udmurt Republic are summarized. The annotated check-list of species of bivalve molluscs of the waterbodies of Udmurtiya is presented. After examination of own collections and critical assessment of published data, 26 species of bivalves from 74 localities (14 rivers, 2 reservoirs, 8 pounds and 2 oxbow lakes) have been included into the final list. In studied region 11 species of bivalves are recorded for the first time. From the zoogeographical point of view most species belong to the European-Siberian faunistic group (46 %), also a considerable part of fauna are European species (26,9% of overall species composition), which are located in the region at the Eastern border of the range.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 339
Author(s):  
Plácido Lizancos

Introducción: Galicia es uno de los territorios del Estado Español que ha presentando tradicionalmente una de sus mayores tasas migratorias.Conseguir levantar una casa propia, moderna y funcional, que ofreciera unas condiciones de habitabilidad mejores a las de la vivienda tradicional ha sido uno de los motivos que han provocado las migraciones que en el último siglo se han registrado en Galicia, por lo que el proyecto arquitectónico suele formar parte del propio proyecto migratorio de las familias.Como no podía ser de otra manera, la casa que levantan las gentes emigradas presenta unas características que la diferencian de las de los otros ciudadanos. Siendo la ruptura respecto a la vivienda tradicional la característica que aparentemente la hace diferente, esto ha impactado en la opinión pública y en la profesional. En este artículo se recogen los resultados de una investigación que analiza el proceso de creación de la casa del emigrado, identificando de entre las partes de ese proceso aquellas que ocasionan el referido impacto y proponiendo maneras de gestionarlo.Método: el proyecto de investigación se ha planteado como una búsqueda estrictamente arquitectónica, sustentado en un sistemático trabajo de campo en el que se localizan y estudian in situ las referidas edificaciones. El abordaje del estudio de la casa contemporánea del emigrante es la primera vez -hasta donde llega nuestro conocimiento- que se realiza en Galicia aun siendo una materia a la que ya se han aproximado antropólogos, sociólogos y economistas que han dejado constancia de sus investigaciones en una amplísima bibliografía.Nuestro trabajo comprende el levantamiento gráfico de los edificios y la entrevista a sus usuarios. Con los materiales obtenidos se reproducen “en laboratorio” para su análisis las circunstancias de cada caso de estudio que es completado con la lectura atenta de la bibliografía existente.El ámbito territorial de nuestro trabajo se circunscribe a Galicia, si bien se ha reconocido que los emigrantes en general han levantado construcciones que le son propias en muchos otros lugares del mundo. El ámbito territorial definido presenta rasgos culturales, económicos y políticos homogéneos.  Resultados: Se ha conseguido entender el proceso que siguen las personas emigradas para alzar su casa, identificándose este con la autogestión. Se trata de un proceso no formal, ideado por las propias personas emigradas ya que les resulta adecuado pues les permite mantener el control de la obra aun viviendo a caballo entre dos países y eludir el crédito hipotecario comercial al que no podrían acceder debido a su destierro. Esto nos ha permitido entender uno de los aspectos físicos de la casa del emigrado que más impacto causa: su proceso de ejecución dilatado en el tiempo, detenido muchas veces en pasos intermedios, aparentando abandono.Discusión o Conclusión: Una vez identificado el proceso por el que se construye esta tipología se indaga en la forma en que éste es interpretado por las personas ajenas al asunto de la casa del emigrante.Como resultado final se proponen directrices que podrían ser incorporadas a las políticas públicas a los efectos de empoderar a los migrantes cuando alzan con sus propias manos y sus recursos la casa soñada y a la opinión pública en la gestión del vasto parque inmobiliario alzado por los emigrantes. Introduction: Galicia is one of the Spanish territories showing larger migratory taxes. Building your own house, modern and functional, provided with much better habitat conditions than the traditional house has been one of the reasons that fuelled this past century the Galician migratory movements. Therefore, a migratory project usually comes together with an architectonic one.The house that has been built by migrated people enjoys characteristics different from other people’s houses and from vernacular ones. All this stuff has shocked public and professional opinion.On this paper, we collect the outcomes of a research that analyses the emigrant’s house creation process. We identify within that process the dimensions that are responsible of such an impact and we propose how to manage it.Method: Research strategy has been based on an all-country field survey, looking for case studies. This is the very first time –as far as we know- that this house has been studied from the architectonic point of view although it has been on the sociologist, anthropologist and economist researchers that have produced diverse outcomes.We sketch up many buildings and interviewed users. With all this stuff, we reproduced a model “at the laboratory” to analyse the circumstances behind the buildings.The area of study is Galicia; even though we know migrants that have already built characteristic houses all over the world. The area we studied shows a cultural, economic and social homogeneous shape.Results: We have been able to identify and understand the process of self-management used by Galician migrants to implement their homes. It was an unformal process, designed by migrated people on their own as it suited to them and allowed them to build a house when living among two different countries and to escape from a commercial mortgage, stuff they couldn’t afford because of living away from their motherland. This has addressed us to understand why construction procedure delays for a very long time, even offering the idea that worksite has been left unfinished.Discussion or Conclusion: Once we identified the process followed to build this home, we look for the way it is understood by people out of the migratory world.As an outcome, we propose guidelines to be included on public policies to empower migrants when building a personal home by their own and to help public opinion on the management of the huge housing stock that was once built by migrants.


Author(s):  
Madan L. Puri ◽  
Dan A. Ralescu

The concept of random set, though vaguely known for a long time (possibly since Buffon's needle problem), did not develop until Robbins [25, 26] provided for the first time a solid mathematical formulation of this concept and investigated relationships between random sets and geometric probabilities. Later on (in a different context) this concept gave rise to a more general concept of set-valued function in topology, and applications were also found in several areas such as economics (see, for example, Aumann[3] and Debreu[10]) and control theory (see, for example, Hermes [13]), among others. Recently in two independent formulations, D. G. Kendall [17] and Matheron[21] provided a comprehensive mathematical theory of this concept influenced by the geometric probability point of view. Actually, much of the research in this area falls under the heading of stochastic geometry (see, for example, M. G. Kendall and P. A. P. Moran [18]). The D. G. Kendall and Matheron theories have been compared and ‘reconciled’ by Ripley [24]. In the past few years random sets have been investigated as extensions of random variables and random vectors, and in this framework the problems of deriving limit theorems have received a great deal of attention. This approach is benefiting greatly from probability results in Banach spaces.


2021 ◽  
pp. 68-81
Author(s):  
Lyudmila S. Dampilova ◽  

For the first time, the author presents results of her long-term work on comparative analysis of the archive materials included in the collection of shaman texts of the Buryats of Russia “Les materiaux pour L'etude du shamanisme Mongol.” The book was published by academician B. Rinchen in Wiesbaden in 1961. As shaman texts were published without accompanying records, the scientific research cries out for comparison of texts from B. Rinchen’s anthology with archival materials of the Institute of Oriental Manuscripts of the Russian Academy of Sciences (IOS RAS) and those of the Center of Oriental Manuscripts and Xylographs of the Institute for Mongolian, Buddhist, and Tibetan Studies of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences (COMX IMBTS SB RAS). Shaman materials are considered in the context of ethnocultural history of the Buryats. The author strives to reconstruct the archival data in order to identifying territorial and temporal context. The introduction of this unique material into scientific use seems significant. While working recurrently with shaman materials of the fond 62 of Ts. Zh. Zhamtsarano from the archive of the Institute of Oriental Manuscripts, a comparative analysis of archival materials and texts from the B. Rinchen’s book has been conducted. It has been identified that 19 songs from 56 texts contained in Rinchen’s book were copied from the fond 62 of Ts. Zhamtsarano. In the fond 753 of T. K. Alekseeva from the COMX IMBTS SB RAS 20 more texts have been found, that were included in the Rinchen’s book. The comparative analysis of shaman songs from the Alexeeva fond with Rinchen’s book reveals one major difference (minor variations notwithstanding): the description of rites clarify the text semantics. Repeated search and comparative analysis of materials has allowed the author to conclude that texts from the T. Alexeeva’s fond are not absent in the fond of Ts. Zhamtsarano from the archive of the IOS RAS. Thus, shaman materials published in B. Rinchen’s book can’t originate just from the C. Zhamtsarano fond, as has been formerly assumed. It is quite possible that the book mostly contains poetic songs from the fond of T. K. Alexeeva (90 of 134 pages). Thus textual comparative analysis of songs concludes that T. K. Alexeyva fond is of great scientific interest from ethnographic point of view. It is believed that future researchers may require its data for further research and publication of unique shaman materials with full supplementary records and names of collectors.


Author(s):  
V. I. Karpunin ◽  
T. S. Novashina

The article examines the most important categories, mechanisms, and instruments of the monetary policy of the Bank of Russia from the point of view of both its development and its implementation. The essence, origins and driving forces of the main contradiction of Russia's monetary policy are revealed. It is shown that monetary policy, along with the economic policy of the state, should act as a regulator of important meanings of human existence, such as the growth of real incomes of the population, directly affecting the redistribution of money – this market form of universal requirement for part of the national wealth. The author's position is presented, according to which inflation is not so much a macroeconomic indicator, as it is often customary to treat this phenomenon, as a fundamental process of a market economy that determines the redistribution of national wealth between economic entities through money. The authors identified and described the main problems and local contradictions in the development and implementation of a unified state monetary policy, presented a detailed description of these phenomena. The methodology of dialectical-systemic and logical analysis, which was used by the authors as a research tool, allowed for the first time to formulate the main contradiction of the unified state monetary policy. The presented formulation reflects the essential principles of the poles of contradiction – the contradiction between form and content. In order to solve the problems identified and existing for a long time, the authors justify the need to take priority organizational and legal measures, first of all, changing the statute, reforming functions, strengthening operational capabilities and staffing of the National Financial Council.


1952 ◽  
Vol s3-93 (22) ◽  
pp. 157-190
Author(s):  
JOHN R. BAKER

A long time elapsed after the discovery of cells before they came to be generally regarded as morphological units. As a first step it was necessary to show that the cell-walls of plants were double and that cells could therefore be separated. The earliest advances in this direction were made by Treviranus (1805) and Link (1807). The idea of a cell was very imperfect, however, so long as attention was concentrated on its wall. The first person who stated clearly that the cell-wall is not a necessary constituent was Leydig (1857). Subsequently the cell came to be regarded as a naked mass of protoplasm with a nucleus, and to this unit the name of protoplast was given. The true nature of the limiting membrane of the protoplast was discovered by Overton (1895). The plasmodesmata or connective strands that sometimes connect cells were probably first seen by Hartig, in sieve-plates (1837). They are best regarded from the point of view of their functions in particular cases. They do not provide evidence for the view that the whole of a multicellular organism is basically a protoplasmic unit. Two or more nuclei in a continuous mass of protoplasm appear to have been seen for the first time in 1802, by Bauer. That an organism may consist wholly of a syncytium was discovered in i860, in the Mycetozoa. The syncytial nature of the Siphonales was not revealed until 1879. The existence of syncytia constitutes an exception to the cell-theory. No wholly syncytial plant or animal reaches a high degree of organization. Natural polyploidy was discovered by Boveri (1887), who was also the first to produce it experimentally (1903). Although many organisms contain some polyploid constituents and others are polyploid throughout their somatic tissues, yet diploid and haploid protoplasts (haplocytes and diplocytes) are the primary components of plants and animals and are still retained as such by most organisms. The haplocyte is more evidently unitary than the diplocyte. Haplocytes and diplocytes are not composed of lesser homologous units, and with the necessary reservations required by the existence of syncytial and polyploid masses of protoplasm, they may therefore be said to be the fundamental morphological units of organisms.


2021 ◽  
pp. 60-70
Author(s):  
Maryam ISHMUKHAMEDOVA

This article deals with the works of the poets of the poetry school called Poets of the Yassawiya School, founded by Ahmad Yassavi. As its content has come via manuscript sources, the work derives its core from manuscripts kept at the Institute of Oriental Studies named after Abu Rayhan Beruni under the Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Uzbekistan. The poets of this school are introduced through examples illustrating comparisons in their works. The research analyses the usage of their work in manuscripts and shows the growth in their number. We have tried to analyze and logically group those manuscripts retained in the institute fund we mentioned. Next, we looked through the writing methods used in various works and made some comparative analyses. The research touched on projects related to poetic storytelling written by the poets and offered several solutions to solve some issues related to their belongingness to this school. It showed the need for serious source study and linguistic analysis. Reflecting on the current problems facing the researchers of Yassawi’s work, we can say that the works of his followers require serious study, that the creation of a catalog of manuscripts is an urgent task. Currently, insufficiencies in research done over Yassawi studies are vivid, this creates a great need to initiate the stud over the works of their followers. Moreover, it illustrates an immense need to study each manuscript, their writing method, and the structure where their projects exist. Here, we did comparative analyses of some poetic text of stories in manuscripts attributed to Ahmad Yassawi from a methodological point of view for compliance with the style of Yassawi before including the results of the research. In the study of the work of Yassawi, there have been no cases of writing poetic stories. We have to take this issue seriously and not rush to conclusions. With this regard, we compared the poems attributed to Yassawi to the works of his followers.


Author(s):  
Yimei Zhu ◽  
J. Tafto

The electron holes confined to the CuO2-plane are the charge carriers in high-temperature superconductors, and thus, the distribution of charge plays a key role in determining their superconducting properties. While it has been known for a long time that in principle, electron diffraction at low angles is very sensitive to charge transfer, we, for the first time, show that under a proper TEM imaging condition, it is possible to directly image charge in crystals with a large unit cell. We apply this new way of studying charge distribution to the technologically important Bi2Sr2Ca1Cu2O8+δ superconductors.Charged particles interact with the electrostatic potential, and thus, for small scattering angles, the incident particle sees a nuclei that is screened by the electron cloud. Hence, the scattering amplitude mainly is determined by the net charge of the ion. Comparing with the high Z neutral Bi atom, we note that the scattering amplitude of the hole or an electron is larger at small scattering angles. This is in stark contrast to the displacements which contribute negligibly to the electron diffraction pattern at small angles because of the short g-vectors.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-86
Author(s):  
Elisabeth Heyne

AbstractAlthough visual culture of the 21th century increasingly focuses on representation of death and dying, contemporary discourses still lack a language of death adequate to the event shown by pictures and visual images from an outside point of view. Following this observation, this article suggests a re-reading of 20th century author Elias Canetti. His lifelong notes have been edited and published posthumously for the first time in 2014. Thanks to this edition Canetti's short texts and aphorisms can be focused as a textual laboratory in which he tries to model a language of death on experimental practices of natural sciences. The miniature series of experiments address the problem of death, not representable in discourses of cultural studies, system theory or history of knowledge, and in doing so, Canetti creates liminal texts at the margins of western concepts of (human) life, science and established textual form.


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