scholarly journals JAPANESE SWORD FROM THE COLLECTION OF THE LOCAL HISTORY MUSEUM OF KYAKHTA NAMED AFTER THE ACADEMICIAN V.A. OBRUCHEV

Author(s):  
E.N. Raitsanova ◽  
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (59) ◽  
pp. 503-508
Author(s):  
Fumiko NAKATANI ◽  
Natsuko SUGIE ◽  
Kazusa NONAMI ◽  
Yusuke KAWAKAMI ◽  
Futoshi INOUE

2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 71-78
Author(s):  
Bershadskaia Svetlana V. ◽  

By examining the personal journal of Marfa Solov’eva, one of the staff of Krasnoyarsk Local History Museum (Yenissei Province), the article aims to analyze some changes of everyday life at the beginning of the 1920s. Aged 33, Ms. Solov’eva found herself among the members of the Yenissei Province delegation sent to participate in the First All-Union Agriculture and Orchard Industry Exhibition in Moscow in 1923. She wrote down her personal experiences of travelling from Krasnoyarsk to Moscow. Given that anthropological shift has taken the lead in historical research, the materials of personal origin (like personal journals) provide an additional avenue to get firsthand information on how contemporaries interpreted the turning points in history. By focusing on the findings from the personal journal introduced for the first time the article investigates the transformations in early Soviet society at the grassroots level and from the point of view of a young representative of Siberian intelligentsia. The article demonstrates how day-to-day and leisure practices of those who took part in the trip were organized. Additionally, it considers the emotional sphere, which is missed to a greater extent by official sources. A mixture of interdisciplinary, systematic and sociocultural approaches and descriptive methods for interpreting sources has been adopted. Keywords: personal journal, everyday life, the intelligentsia, Siberia, the Yenissei province, the onset of NEP, the First All-Union Agriculture and Orchard Industry Exhibition in Moscow in 1923


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (20) ◽  
pp. 5830 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florin Nechita ◽  
Catalina-Ionela Rezeanu

The aim of this paper is to demonstrate how museums use Augmented Reality (AR) to enhance communication services with their audiences and attract new ones. Still, there is no definite answer to how young audiences perceive the educational effects of experiencing this augmented space of communication as an immersive medium. This study is based on a survey of 400 students after they visited an AR technology-enhanced exhibition held by a local history museum. Two stimulus–response marketing scale metrics, widely used to assess TV commercials, were adapted for AR experiences and validated. The mediation analysis revealed an intervening emotional mechanism, in which the multisensory AR experience has educational effects through entertainment and empathy. An improved stimulus–response empirical model is proposed, in which AR technologies, as environmental multisensory stimuli, produce cognitive responses through emotional immersion. The findings have significance in improving how museums encode their message using AR technologies as a secondary communication medium with young audiences. This study could help museum professionals and application developers to find AR implementation solutions as service tools to enhancing user experience by using a widely tested scale for evaluating TV commercials applied to measure AR experiences.


Author(s):  
Olga Shelegina ◽  

Review: Konstantinova, N. N. Local History Museum in Chita: a Story (1894–1970s). – Chita : Transbaikal State University : Ulan-Ude : Publ. House of the Republic of Buryatia, 2020. – 208 p. : pic.


Author(s):  
E. V. Kapinos ◽  
E. E. Khudnitskaya ◽  
A. V. Ulvert

The publication is the selection of the poems by the forgotten Siberian poetess Anna Konstantinovna Fefelova, who is under the pseudonym N. Arkadina or Nina Arkadina was published in the 1910–1920s in the newspapers and magazines “Voice of the Urals” (Chelyabinsk), “Siberian Dawn” (Barnaul), “Siberian Life” (Tomsk), “Siberian Student” (Tomsk), “Unity” (Petropavlovsk), “Our Dawn” (Omsk), “Krasnoyarsk Worker”. The selection was made for the publications stored in the archives and libraries of Siberia, and includes about 40 texts of various subjects. The foreword provides a brief reference about Fefelova’s biography, the poetess’ biography has not been studied in more detail yet, but research in this direction is being conducted in the Krasnoyarsk Regional Local History Museum. Arkadina’s landscape, meditation and populist lyrics collected here continue the traditions of Nekrasov and Russian classics of the 19th century.


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