Circulating Items Inventory - Kazakhstan
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
West Kazakhstan Region Supports Small Businesses, Productivity Growth
-10° / -21°C WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 2018 No 23 (161) www.astanatimes.com President urges larger role for non- West Kazakhstan region governmental organisations in society supports small businesses, productivity growth enterprise produces various types By Zhanna Shayakhmetova of fuels including diesel fuel of environmental class K5. The ca- ASTANA – The West Kazakh- pacity of the enterprise is 850,000 stan region ranks third in the coun- tonnes per year. The enterprises in try with a 40-percent share of the the field of mechanical engineer- medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) ing, metalworking, construction, in the gross regional product. This and furniture production also make indicator was achieved by increas- a contribution to the industrial ing the number of operating SMEs output. Many of them are export- to 40,000 enterprises with more oriented companies. For example, than 115,000 people working in 95 percent of items produced at the this sector, the region’s Akim Ural Transformer Plant are export- (Governor) Altay Kulginov said oriented,” said Kulginov. in an exclusive interview with the As a result of the industrial pro- newspaper. duction development, labour pro- The oil and gas sector make a ductivity increased by 26 percent. significant contribution to the in- The production in the processing dustrial growth as the region pro- industry grew by 8 percent to 156 duces 45 percent of the natural billion tenge (US$471 million). gas in the country. Karachaganak “Agriculture, especially live- Petroleum Operating B.V. expands stock, has huge potential. The and develops the Karachaganak Kublei company launched the field, one of the world’s largest oil animal waste recycling project and and gas condensate fields. -
Constructive and Colouristic Peculiarities of the National Costume: the Phenomenon of the Kazakh Material Culture
Man In India, 97 (6) : 37-45 © Serials Publications CONSTRUCTIVE AND COLOURISTIC PECULIARITIES OF THE NATIONAL COSTUME: THE PHENOMENON OF THE KAZAKH MATERIAL CULTURE Sabyrkul Zhaylaubekovna Assanova*, Tamara Mikhaylovna Stepanskaya**, Ainur Esmukhambetovna Assanova*, Balnur Esmukhambetovna Assanova*** and Yelzhan Bulatovich Kushekbayev*** Abstract: With the help of the archetypal approach the authors of the article examine constructive peculiarities and colour palettes of the national Kazakh costume. They prove that the development of the traditional dress and decorative and applied arts goes through the following historical stages: an everyday item – a museum piece – the style of life (fashion) – the object to be transformed into modern design. The article is mainly concerned with the recreation of artistic values in new historical environment which is also the reproduction of a certain ethnic and cultural identity in modern days. In this respect, the Kazakh national costume is analysed as a piece of traditional art that is implemented in modern culture due to specific stylistic, expressive and constructive methods. This methodology calls for thorough knowledge of the Kazakh history, the development of the national costume, its construction and colour palette, the study of ancient technologies and the introduction of new ones which can enrich projective and constructive methods as they inherit cultural and historical experience. As a result, the authors conclude that the Kazakh national costume is a system of spiritual, aesthetic and -
BULLETIN of the INTERNATIONAL FOLK MUSIC COUNCIL
BULLETIN of the INTERNATIONAL FOLK MUSIC COUNCIL No. XXVIII July, 1966 Including the Report of the EXECUTIVE BOARD for the period July 1, 1964 to June 30, 1965 INTERNATIONAL FOLK MUSIC COUNCIL 21 BEDFORD SQUARE, LONDON, W.C.l ANNOUNCEMENTS CONTENTS APOLOGIES PAGE The Executive Secretary apologizes for the great delay in publi cation of this Bulletin. A nnouncements : The Journal of the IFMC for 1966 has also been delayed in A p o l o g i e s ..............................................................................1 publication, for reasons beyond our control. We are sorry for the Address C h a n g e ....................................................................1 inconvenience this may have caused to our members and subscribers. Executive Board M e e t i n g .................................................1 NEW ADDRESS OF THE IFMC HEADQUARTERS Eighteenth C onference .......................................................... 1 On May 1, 1966, the IFMC moved its headquarters to the building Financial C r i s i s ....................................................................1 of the Royal Anthropological Institute, at 21 Bedford Square, London, W.C.l, England. The telephone number is MUSeum 2980. This is expected to be the permanent address of the Council. R e p o r t o f th e E xecutiv e Board July 1, 1964-Ju n e 30, 1965- 2 EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETING S ta tem ent of A c c o u n t s .....................................................................6 The Executive Board of the IFMC held its thirty-third meeting in Berlin on July 14 to 17, 1965, by invitation of the International Institute for Comparative Music Studies and Documentation, N a tio n a l C ontributions .....................................................................7 directed by M. -
Writing on the Streets
WRITING ON THE STREETS Originally published at alchemy.ucsd. edu Alchemy: Winter 2015. 1. Table of Contents Letter from the editors 5 Writing on the streets Are you happy 7 Translated, from the Russian, by Rebekah Mae Olson. Oropesa 9 Translated, from the Spanish, by Jonathan Piskor. Poetry Excerpt from Larva seguido de cerca by Pilar Fraile Amador 11 Translated, from the Spanish, by Elizabeth Davis. Selection of poems from The Nature of Life by Shin Hae-Wook 15 White Thoughts on the Never-ending To a Dearly Missed Friend Translated, from the Korean, by Nancy Yeon Joo Kim. Fragment from Cantar de mio Cid 19 Translated, from the Spanish, by Jonathan Piskor. Fiction Stupid Princess by Lyudmila Petrushevskaya 21 Translated, from the Russian, by Izabela Zdun. A Selection from MICRO(science)FICTION by T(e)M 29 Translated, from the Spanish, by Pepe Rojo & Bryan Constantino. East District 30 Forced Evolution 31 Wikipedia 2530 32 Let’s Go to California Island 33 At Zacas and Business Card: Binational Commerce 34 Tijuana: Host of the 2044 Olympic Games and Copyright 35 Survival 36 Originally published at alchemy.ucsd. edu Alchemy: Winter 2015. 2. Originally published at alchemy.ucsd. edu Alchemy: Winter 2015. 3. Letter from the editors Translation was never limited to literature. An essential practice, its traces are all around us. In the latest issue of Alchemy, we celebrate how languages surround us — not only in texts we choose to read but in the kind of murals and graffiti encountered in cities worldwide. Two highlights of this, our seventh issue, are translations from the streets of Saint Petersburg, Russia, and Toledo, Spain. -
Updates and Corrections Chapter 4
Updates and Corrections Chapter 4 We’ve become aware of some updates to the game and Page 159 The images of “Bright & Clear” and “Sunny” are some inaccuracies that slipped though our checking swapped. The images below show them correctly. process. To ensure that you can rely on the information Bright & Clear Sunny in the book, we’ll keep a handy list of corrections here. 4 Chapter 2 2 Page 31 The Interest Rate is now 0.05%. The Maximum interest return is now capped at 9,999 Bells. Page 167 Bamboo shoots can be harvested from adult bamboo Page 51 Dodo Airlines allows you to send a maximum of two trees only once. letters to a friend each day. Page 186 The wrong icons were used for the bugs that appear Page 56 Clothing items were missing from Gulliver’s near water. The image here shows the correct icons. Snails can rewards list. See the image here for the full list. also appear on shrubs when it rains. List of Gulliver’s exotic souvenirs Near Water dala horse statue of liberty kaffiyeh Red Dragonfly Firefly hula doll stonehenge milkmaid hat Darner Dragonfly Damselfly katana tower of pisa pigtail lucky cat Clothing samurai wig Banded Dragonfly moai statue alpinist hat silk hat nutcracker ancient admin. hat sombrero Page 188 The legend for the Insect LEGEND pagoda candy-skull mask tam-o’-shanter Occurrences chart was incorrect. A ➜ 11PM-4AM (Midnight) pyramid coin headpiece tubeteika Each day begins at midnight, as B ➜ 4AM-8AM (Early Morning) the image here shows. south pole elder mask turban C ➜ 8AM-4PM (Daytime) D ➜ 4PM-5PM (Early Evening) sphinx geisha wig veil E ➜ 5PM-7PM (Evening) F ➜ 7PM-11PM (Night) Page 57 If Celeste has already given you the recipe for that month’s Zodiac furniture, she’ll give you another star related Pages 194-197 The sell prices listed for fossils are all four times recipe, some star fragments, zodiac fragments or a wand. -
Annual Report 2014
ANNUAL REPORT 2014 MUSIC OF KAZAKHSTAN OIL KAZTRANSOIL JSC TABLE OF CONTENTS MESSAGE FROM CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS //2 MESSAGE FROM CHAIRMAN OF THE MANAGEMENT BOARD //4 KEY FINANCIAL AND ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE INDICATORS //6 1. ABOUT THE COMPANY 4. CORPORATE GOVERNANCE 1.1. The Company’s history //12 4.1. General Meeting of Shareholders //45 1.2. The Company today //12 4.2. Board of Directors Report for 2014 //45 1.3. Key events in 2014 //14 4.2.1. Selection criteria of members of the Board of Directors //46 1.4. Business model //16 4.2.2. Composition of the Board of Directors //47 1.5. Organisational structure //18 4.2.3. Competence of the Board of Directors //50 1.6. Subsidiaries and jointly controlled entities //19 4.2.4. Responsibility of the Board of Directors //50 1.7. State regulation of the industry and tariffs //20 4.2.5. Information on meetings of the Board of Directors //50 1.8. Market review //21 4.2.6. Risk management and internal control //52 1.9. Development Strategy //22 4.2.7. Attendance at meetings of the Board of Directors //52 1.10. Information on securities //23 4.3. Information on activities of committees of the Board of Directors //52 4.3.1. Strategic Planning Committee //53 2. OPERATING ACTIVITIES 4.3.2. Nomination and Remuneration Committee //53 4.3.3. Internal Audit Committee //53 2.1. Oil transportation and water supply //26 4.4. Relationships with shareholders //54 2.2. Operation of main oil pipelines owned by third parties //26 4.4.1. -
May 1995, Volume 20, No. 3
Mibble EastNewsletter Volume 20 No.3 May, 1995 Joel Migdal to Speak May L0 at JSIS International Updates Dinner Joel S. Mgdal, the Robert F. Philip Professor of International Studies at the University of Washingtorq will be the featured speaker at the International Updates Dinner on Wednesday evening, May 10, 5:30-8:00. His topic will be THE STATE OF THE MIDDLE EAST PEACE TALKS. Professor Mgdal is an expert on the subject of Palestinians and their society. He has written three books on the subject: Palestinian Society and Politics, Peasants, Politics, and Revolution, and (with Baruch Kimmerling) Palesfinians: The Making of a People. For the past ten years Professor Migdal has been the Chair of the International Studies Progranq the largest ofthe 24 undergraduate and graduate progrurms in the fackson School of International Studies. During this time he also founded and has served as Director for the federally funded International Studies Resource Center at the I-IW. Professor Mgdal is both an excellent speaker and teacher and a gifted writer. He has received both the UW' Distinguished Teaching Award (1993) and the Governor's Writ'ers Award. Don't miss this opportunity to hear a faculty member of whom the IJW is justifiably proud speak on one of the topics that has been central to his academic interests. For this Update, the lecture will begin at 5:30 pm in Kane Hall, Room 220 (UW campus). We will adjourn to the Walker Ames Room (across the hall) at 6:30 and dinner will be served at7:00 pm. -
Culture and Customs of the Central Asian Republics
Culture and Customs of the Central Asian Republics Rafis Abazov Greenwood Press CULTURE AND CUSTOMS OF THE CENTRAL ASIAN REPUBLICS The Central Asian Republics. Cartography by Bookcomp, Inc. Culture and Customs of the Central Asian Republics 4 RAFIS ABAZOV Culture and Customs of Asia Hanchao Lu, Series Editor GREENWOOD PRESS Westport, Connecticut • London Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Abazov, Rafi s. Culture and customs of the Central Asian republics / Rafi s Abazov. p. cm. — (Culture and customs of Asia, ISSN 1097–0738) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0–313–33656–3 (alk. paper) 1. Asia, Central—History. 2. Asia, Central—Social life and customs. I. Title. DK859.5.A18 2007 958—dc22 2006029553 British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data is available. Copyright © 2007 by Rafi s Abazov All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, by any process or technique, without the express written consent of the publisher. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2006029553 ISBN: 0–313–33656–3 ISSN: 1097–0738 First published in 2007 Greenwood Press, 88 Post Road West, Westport, CT 06881 An imprint of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc. www.greenwood.com Printed in the United States of America The paper used in this book complies with the Permanent Paper Standard issued by the National Information Standards Organization (Z39.48–1984). 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Contents Series Foreword vii Preface xi Acknowledgments xv Notes on Transliteration xvii Chronology xxi 1 Introduction: Land, People, and History 1 2 Thought and Religion 59 3 Folklore and Literature 79 4 Media and Cinema 105 5 Performing Arts 133 6 Visual Arts 163 7 Architecture 191 8 Gender, Courtship, and Marriage 213 9 Festivals, Fun, and Leisure 233 Glossary 257 Selected Bibliography 263 Index 279 Series Foreword Geographically, Asia encompasses the vast area from Suez, the Bosporus, and the Ural Mountains eastward to the Bering Sea and from this line southward to the Indonesian archipelago, an expanse that covers about 30 percent of our earth. -
Kokzhar Fair: History and Modernity
Economics and Management ISSN: 2367-7600; 1312-594X Volume: XVІ, Issue: 2, Year: 2019, pp.200-211 KOKZHAR FAIR: HISTORY AND MODERNITY Sagimbayev Adilgali1, Sarkenayeva Ayazhan2 Received: 20.10.2019, Accepted: 30.10.2019 Abstract The history of the Great Silk Road is an actual experience of mutually beneficial trade and peaceful cultural communication of the peoples of different countries. The Great Silk Road played the role of a link between countries of different civilizations and socio-economic systems. This huge system of caravan routes has existed for more than one and a half thousand years. The Great Silk Road became a channel through which there was a constant exchange in the field of culture and art, knowledge and ideas, traditions and objects. It is known that not only the goods themselves, but also information about their production, were distributed along the Silk Road. The scientific article presents a philosophical and cultural analysis of the interrelationships of cultures on the Silk Road, which ran through the famous Kokzhar fair. Keywords: Silk Road, trade, architecture, culture, patriotism JEL codes: N75, O14, F53, P33 1. Introduction As a result of the functioning of the Great Silk Road, for the first time in history, there was a tendency for cultures to converge in the process of intensive and regular world economic relations. A gradual unification of cultural components took place along the entire route of the Great Silk Road. Many researchers note that in the trade cities of Asia even developed the general features of the planning of temples, although they belonged to their own denominations. -
Building Belonging in Muslim Moscow: Identity and Group Practices in the Post-Soviet Capital
Building Belonging in Muslim Moscow: Identity and Group Practices in the Post-Soviet Capital Charles Aprile Honors Thesis Submitted to the Department of Sociology and Anthropology in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements of the Degree of Bachelor of the Arts Thesis Advisor: Dr. Maya Nadkarni Swarthmore College ABSTRACT Due to the scale of migration that took place after 1991, Moscow is both an ideal and unique space in studies of race, ethnicity and group identity in the of Post-Soviet sphere. Moscow is unique in its history as the center of the multinational Soviet nation-state, as well as its renewed social and economic centrality to much of the former Soviet Union today. The city's layered and contradictory spaces bear testament to how the changing power relations of post-socialist transition affect the embeddedness of group identity in the city's daily life. Due to this layered past, Moscow has a pronounced lack of ethnic or racial residential segregation. This reality necessitates novel frameworks to explain how social belonging and exclusion are spatially inscribed into Moscow's urban fabric. This study uses historical context and ethnographic, interview and participant-observation among Muslim migrants to understand the mechanisms that reproduce, reify, complicate, and splinter Muslim group identities in the Russian capital. In "migrant markets," the findings of this research indicate how Muslims use the spaces to engage in workplace practices that serve to validate their varied cultural, collective and individual identities. At the same time, the stratified occupational structures in markets serve to reify Russian stereotypes against migrants and categorize them as "other." In observing religious activity in Moscow, this study found a serious disconnect between government-approved religious leaders and their supposed constituencies. -
Kalshabaeva B.K.ˡ, Beisegulova A.K.² MATERIAL CULTURE OF
IRSTI 03.61.00 Kalshabaeva B.K.ˡ, Beisegulova A.K.² ˡDoctor of historical sciences, professor, e-mail: [email protected] ²PhD doktoral candidate, e-mail: [email protected] Departament «Arheology, ethnology and muzeology», al-Farabi Kazakh National University, Kazakhstan, Almaty MATERIAL CULTURE OF THE KAZAKHS OF UZBEKISTAN The article is devoted to the material culture of the Kazakhs of Uzbekistan, who find themselves outside the ethnic homeland. Special attention is paid to the issues of preserving the originality of the traditional culture and the ethnographic peculiarities prevailing in the foreign environment. On the basis of the study of special literature and fieldwork materials, it was revealed that both the continuity of the traditional economy, material culture, and their changes under the influence of local conditions were preserved, which is manifested in the peculiarities of the dwelling, clothing, the traditional food system, etc. Тhe traditional clothes of the Kazakhs reflected national elements of local ethnic groups such as «chapan», which is tied with a belt scarf, a traditional headdress «skullcap», etc. as well as in the dwell- ing buildings of the Kazakhs, it was noticeable that all residential and household buildings were turned into the courtyard with windows and doors, open aivans, vineyards, and ‘tapchanes’ characteristic of the Uzbek peoples. Key words: Kazakhs of Uzbekistan, dwellings, traditional clothing, material culture, food. Қалшабаева Б.К.1, Бейсегулова А.К.2 1тарих ғылымдарының докторы, профессор, e-mail: [email protected] 2PhD докторанты, e-mail: [email protected] археология, этнология және музеология кафедрасы, әл-Фараби атындағы Қазақ ұлттық университеті, Қазақстан, Алматы қ. Өзбекстан қазақтарының материалдық мәдениеті Мақала өз Отанынан тыс жерде өмір сүріп жатқан Өзбекстандағы қазақ ирреденттерінің дәстүрлі материалдық мәдениетіне арналады. -
Current Directions in Ecomusicology
Current Directions in Ecomusicology This volume is the first sustained examination of the complex perspectives that comprise ecomusicology—the study of the intersections of music/sound, culture/society, and nature/environment. Twenty-two authors provide a range of theoretical, methodological, and empirical chapters representing disciplines such as anthropology, biology, ecology, environmental studies, ethnomusicology, history, literature, musicology, performance studies, and psychology. They bring their specialized training to bear on interdisciplin- ary topics, both individually and in collaboration. Emerging from the whole is a view of ecomusicology as a field, a place where many disciplines come together. The topics addressed in this volume—contemporary composers and traditional musics, acoustic ecology and politicized soundscapes, mate- rial sustainability and environmental crisis, familiar and unfamiliar sounds, local places and global warming, birds and mice, hearing and listening, bio- music and soundscape ecology, and more—engage with conversations in the various realms of music study as well as in environmental studies and cultural studies. As with any healthy ecosystem, the field of ecomusicol- ogy is dynamic, but this edited collection provides a snapshot of it in a formative period. Each chapter is short, designed to be accessible to the non- specialist, and includes extensive bibliographies; some chapters also provide further materials on a companion website. An introduction and interspersed editorial summaries help guide readers through four current directions— ecological, fieldwork, critical, and textual—in the field of ecomusicology. Aaron S. Allen is Associate Professor of Musicology at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, USA, where he is also director of the Envi- ronmental and Sustainability Studies Program.