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A Case of Youth Activism in Matica Slovenská
65 ETHNOLOGIA ACTUALIS Vol. 15, No. 1/2015 MARTIN PRIE ČKO Between Patriotism and Far-Right Extremism: A Case of Youth Activism in Matica slovenská Between Patriotism and Far-Right Extremism: A Case of Youth Activism in Matica slovenská MARTIN PRIE ČKO Department of Ethnology and World Studies, University of SS. Cyril and Methodius in Trnava [email protected] ABSTRACT This case study discusses a youth branch of Matica slovenská, a pro-Slovak culture organization. It is based on in-depth research of the structure of the organization and it focuses on basic characteristics of functioning of this social movement such as funding, membership base, political orientation, civic engagement, patriotic activities and also the causes of negative media presentation. Presented material pointed to a thin boundary between the perception of positive manifestations of patriotism and at the same time negative (even extremist) connotations of such manifestations in Slovak society. This duplicate perception of patriotic activities is reflected not only in polarization of opinion in society but also on the level of political, media and public communication. Thus, the article is a small probe from the scene of youth activism with an ambition to point out to such a diverse perception of patriotic organizations/activities in present-day Slovak society. KEY WORDS : Matica slovenská, youth, activism, state-supported organisation, patriotism, Far-Right Introduction Young Matica (MM – Mladá Matica) represents a subsidiary branch of Slovak Matica (MS – Matica slovenská), which is a traditional cultural and enlightenment organisation with DOI: 10.1515/eas-2015-0009 © University of SS. Cyril and Methodius in Trnava. -
Understanding the Roots of Collectivism and Individualism in Russia Through an Exploration of Selected Russian Literature - and - Spiritual Exercises Through Art
Understanding the Roots of Collectivism and Individualism in Russia through an Exploration of Selected Russian Literature - and - Spiritual Exercises through Art. Understanding Reverse Perspective in Old Russian Iconography by Ihar Maslenikau B.A., Minsk, 1991 Extended Essays Submitted in Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in the Graduate Liberal Studies Program Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences © Ihar Maslenikau 2015 SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY Fall 2015 Approval Name: Ihar Maslenikau Degree: Master of Arts Title: Understanding the Roots of Collectivism and Individualism in Russia through an Exploration of Selected Russian Literature - and - Spiritual Exercises through Art. Understanding of Reverse Perspective in Old Russian Iconography Examining Committee: Chair: Gary McCarron Associate Professor, Dept. of Communication Graduate Chair, Graduate Liberal Studies Program Jerry Zaslove Senior Supervisor Professor Emeritus Humanities and English Heesoon Bai Supervisor Professor Faculty of Education Paul Crowe External Examiner Associate Professor Humanities and Asia-Canada Program Date Defended/Approved: November 25, 2015 ii Abstract The first essay is a sustained reflection on and response to the question of why the notion of collectivism and collective coexistence has been so deeply entrenched in the Russian society and in the Russian psyche and is still pervasive in today's Russia, a quarter of a century after the fall of communism. It examines the development of ideas of collectivism and individualism in Russian society, focusing on the cultural aspects based on the examples of selected works from Russian literature. It also searches for the answers in the philosophical works of Vladimir Solovyov, Nicolas Berdyaev and Vladimir Lossky. -
Exploring the Perception of Nationalism in the United States and Saudi Arabia Reem Mohammed Alhethail Eastern Washington University
Eastern Washington University EWU Digital Commons EWU Masters Thesis Collection Student Research and Creative Works 2015 Exploring the perception of nationalism in the United States and Saudi Arabia Reem Mohammed Alhethail Eastern Washington University Follow this and additional works at: http://dc.ewu.edu/theses Part of the Islamic World and Near East History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Alhethail, Reem Mohammed, "Exploring the perception of nationalism in the United States and Saudi Arabia" (2015). EWU Masters Thesis Collection. 330. http://dc.ewu.edu/theses/330 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Research and Creative Works at EWU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in EWU Masters Thesis Collection by an authorized administrator of EWU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. EXPLORING THE PERCEPTION OF NATIONALISM IN THE UNITED STATES AND SAUDI ARABIA A Thesis Presented To Eastern Washington University Cheney, WA In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree Master of Arts in History By Reem Mohammed Alhethail Fall 2015 ii THESIS OF REEM MOHAMMED ALHETHAIL APPROVED BY DATE ROBERT SAUDERS, GRADUATE STUDY COMMITTEE DATE MICHAEL CONLIN, GRADUATE STUDY COMMITTEE DATE CHADRON HAZELBAKER, GRADUATE STUDY COMMITTEE iii MASTER’S THESIS In presenting this thesis in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a master’s degree at Eastern Washington University, I agree that (your library) shall make copies freely available for inspection. I further agree that copying of this project in whole or in part is allowable only for scholarly purposes. -
UNSR Maina Kiai Newsletter
The Assembly and Association Briefing Newsletter of the UN Special Rapporteur on the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of association Vol. 3, No. 3 (Issue 20) - Published April 27, 2016 A statue of Oliver Cromwell in front of Parliament during the Special Rapporteur’s visit to London on April 18, 2016. Greenpeace activists placed a gas mask on the statue - along with several others throughout London - to protest air pollution (for more on the gas mask protest story, click here) p2 p3 Kiai argues that India’s p6 Full coverage of the Special foreign funding restrictions Egypt: End crackdown on Rapporteur’s official follow-up contrary to activists and NGOs visit to the United Kingdom international law Palais des Nations, CH-1211 Geneva 10, Switzerland • Fax : + 41 22 917 9006 • Email : [email protected] http://www.freeassembly.net • https://www.facebook.com/mainakiai.sr • https://twitter.com/MainaKiai_UNSR • https://www.flickr.com/photos/mainakiai • http://ohchr.org Closing space for civil society in the United Kingdom, Special Rapporteur warns LONDON – The UN Special Rapporteur on the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of association, Maina Kiai, warned against a series of measures resulting in the “closing of Statement space for civil society in the UK”, at the end of a four-day visit to the country on April 21. Click to read the Special In a detailed statement (available here), the Special Rapporteur highlighted that the UK Rapporteur’s full statement takes its role as one of the global leaders in human rights seriously and added that “many at the conclusion of his people around the world look to the UK as a model for democracy and human rights” and UK visit emphasized that “the UK truly should consider its civil society a national treasure.” He noted a number of his 2013 recommendations had been implemented and commended the Government for its continued willingness to constructively engage on human rights in general and on peaceful assembly and association rights in particular. -
Russia and Asia: the Emerging Security Agenda
Russia and Asia The Emerging Security Agenda Stockholm International Peace Research Institute SIPRI is an independent international institute for research into problems of peace and conflict, especially those of arms control and disarmament. It was established in 1966 to commemorate Sweden’s 150 years of unbroken peace. The Institute is financed mainly by the Swedish Parliament. The staff and the Governing Board are international. The Institute also has an Advisory Committee as an international consultative body. The Governing Board is not responsible for the views expressed in the publications of the Institute. Governing Board Professor Daniel Tarschys, Chairman (Sweden) Dr Oscar Arias Sánchez (Costa Rica) Dr Willem F. van Eekelen (Netherlands) Sir Marrack Goulding (United Kingdom) Dr Catherine Kelleher (United States) Dr Lothar Rühl (Germany) Professor Ronald G. Sutherland (Canada) Dr Abdullah Toukan (Jordan) The Director Director Dr Adam Daniel Rotfeld (Poland) Stockholm International Peace Research Institute Signalistg. 9, S-1769 70 Solna, Sweden Cable: SIPRI Telephone: 46 8/655 97 00 Telefax: 46 8/655 97 33 E-mail: [email protected] Internet URL: http://www.sipri.se Russia and Asia The Emerging Security Agenda Edited by Gennady Chufrin OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 1999 OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS Great Clarendon Street, Oxford OX2 6DP Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide in Oxford New York Athens -
Cultural Geographies
Cultural Geographies http://cgj.sagepub.com Wild horses in a ‘European wilderness’: imagining sustainable development in the post-Communist countryside Katrina Z. S. Schwartz Cultural Geographies 2005; 12; 292 DOI: 10.1191/1474474005eu331oa The online version of this article can be found at: http://cgj.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/12/3/292 Published by: http://www.sagepublications.com Additional services and information for Cultural Geographies can be found at: Email Alerts: http://cgj.sagepub.com/cgi/alerts Subscriptions: http://cgj.sagepub.com/subscriptions Reprints: http://www.sagepub.com/journalsReprints.nav Permissions: http://www.sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav Downloaded from http://cgj.sagepub.com at SWETS WISE ONLINE CONTENT on June 4, 2009 cultural geographies 2005 12: 292Á/320 Wild horses in a ‘European wilderness’: imagining sustainable development in the post-Communist countryside Katrina Z. S. Schwartz Department of Political Science, University of Florida When the Soviet Union and its satellite regimes collapsed, they bequeathed to successor states an unexpected dual legacy: an outsized, backward agrarian sector on the one hand and a wealth of undeveloped nature, rich in biological diversity, on the other. Popular perceptions of the region centre on nightmarish images of environmental devastation, but environmentalists on both sides of the former ‘Iron Curtain’ are increasingly recognizing the unintended benefits to nature of Communist underdevelopment. Eight of the post-Communist states have now consummated their long-awaited ‘return to Europe’, but as they begin a new era as European Union members, they confront a critical developmental challenge. Faced with declining agricultural prospects and growing Western interest in Eastern nature, what to do with a large and underemployed rural population and an ever- expanding area of marginal farmland? This article contributes to a growing literature on the political ecology of post-Communist transformation in the ‘Second World’ through a case study from Latvia. -
Building the Nation: the Success and Crisis of Korean Civil Religion
religions Article Building the Nation: The Success and Crisis of Korean Civil Religion Andrew Eungi Kim 1 and Daniel Connolly 2,* 1 Division of International Studies, Korea University, Anam-ro, Seongbuk-gu, Seoul 02841, Korea; [email protected] 2 Division of International Studies, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, Seoul 02450, Korea * Correspondence: [email protected] Abstract: Civil religion refers to a country’s beliefs, symbols, and rituals that bolster national unity and strengthen its citizens’ sense of identity and belonging. However, the literature on civil religion is divided between those who attribute it to bottom-up cultural spontaneity and those who see it as an ideological top-down construction. Moreover, there has been a relative lack of scholarly attention to Korean civil religion. This paper addresses both issues by arguing that a strong civil religion indeed exists in the country and that it has been an important part of the “nation-building” process since the founding of the Republic of Korea in 1948. The paper highlights how a succession of authoritarian regimes (1948–1987) successfully mobilized a strong civil religion for political purposes. The resulting civil religion targeted economic growth as the national goal to overcome all social ills, focused on the country’s ethnic and cultural homogeneity to boost national confidence and pride, exalted its traditional religions, especially Confucianism, as repositories of Korean traditional culture, and rendered sacred meanings to national symbols such as the flag and national anthem. Even after democratization, Korean civil religion remains largely ideological, as the Korean government is heavily involved in framing, planning, sponsoring, and promoting the country’s civil religion. -
Intimacy and Warmth In
ACTA KOR ANA VOL. 17, NO. 2, DECEMBER 2014: 523–536 THE REPUBLIC OF KOREA AND CURATING DISPLAYS OF KOREANNESS: GUEST EDITOR’S INTRODUCTION BY CEDARBOUGH T. SAEJI The four thematically-linked articles in this journal were developed from papers that were originally presented as part of a conference panel from the 7th Kyujanggak International Symposium on Korean Studies held at Seoul National University in August, 2014. We had discussed their publication and proposed the theme issue to Acta Koreana prior to the conference. Thanks to peer reviewers who were willing to meet short deadlines and all the efforts of the journal’s editorial staff, we have managed to get our four accepted papers ready for publication in time for this December 15, 2014 issue of Acta Koreana. Laurel Kendall, who may not need an introduction at all, has left her mark in Korean Studies, through numerous books and articles on topics related to Korean gender, shamanism, modern weddings, and material culture. She is a curator of Asian Ethnographic Collections at the American Museum of Natural History, and a Senior Research Fellow at the Weatherhead East Asian Institute at Columbia. Recently she has begun research on the people and processes involved in making things with early forays into the carving of changsŭng and a co-authored book that addresses shamanic paintings in press. In addition, Dr. Kendall is planning additional research on Korean crafts. Elmer Veldkamp is a professor at University College Roosevelt (Utrecht University), and a research associate for the Korea collections at the National Museum of World Cultures in Leiden, The Netherlands. -
Friendship Policies in Russian Religious Philosophy
Friendship Policies in Russian Religious Philosophy Vladimir Bystrov Doctor of Philosophy, Professor, Saint Petersburg University Address: Universitetskaya nabereznaya, 7/9, Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation 199034 E-mail: [email protected] Sergei Dudnik Doctor of Philosophy, Professor, Saint Petersburg University Address: Universitetskaya nabereznaya, 7/9, Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation 199034 E-mail: [email protected] Vladimir Kamnev Doctor of Philosophy, Professor, Saint Petersburg University Address: Universitetskaya nabereznaya, 7/9, Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation 199034 E-mail: [email protected] In antiquity, the phenomenon of friendship became the object of steadfast attention from philosophy. In Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle connects the political existence of man with friendship since he believes the city (polis) can be built in analogy with friendly unions. Cicero also saw a social prototype in friendship. A gradual change in such a representation resulted in a romantic concept of friendship that is understood as the subjective, sensual bringing together of individuals, but is only accessible to few. Kant and Hegel also adhered to the romantic concept. Russian religious philosophy, on the one hand, is formed under the influence of German romanticism and the understanding of friendship peculiar to it, but, on the other hand, it returns immediately to the concept of friendship as a social construct. Kho- myakov believes that friendship is first of all established between the power and the people, and this friendly union distinguishes Russian culture from the West European culture. How- ever Russian religious-philosophical thought is distinguished by the aspiration to understand the phenomenon of friendship not in itself, but in its connection with the concepts of enmity and brotherhood. -
Gender and Politics in Palestine: Discourse Analysis of the Palestinian Authority & Islamists
University of Miami International and Comparative Law Review Volume 11 Issue 2 Volume 11 (2003) Special Issue: Islam Article 2 10-1-2003 Gender And Politics In Palestine: Discourse Analysis Of The Palestinian Authority & Islamists Nahda Y. Sh'hada Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.law.miami.edu/umiclr Part of the Comparative and Foreign Law Commons, and the International Law Commons Recommended Citation Nahda Y. Sh'hada, Gender And Politics In Palestine: Discourse Analysis Of The Palestinian Authority & Islamists, 11 U. Miami Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 3 (2003) Available at: https://repository.law.miami.edu/umiclr/vol11/iss2/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at University of Miami School of Law Institutional Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in University of Miami International and Comparative Law Review by an authorized editor of University of Miami School of Law Institutional Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Gender and Politics in Palestine: Discourse Analysis of the Palestinian Authority & Islamists NabdaY. Sh'hada* I. Introduction to the Thesis II. The Conceptual Framework III. The Model Parliament Experience IV. The Discourse(s) of the Islamists and the PA V. Conclusions I. Introduction to the Thesis I wrote this paper based on my personal experience, first as a trainer and then as chairperson of the Palestinian Model Parliament for Women and Legislation (MP) in Gaza. The MP was established in 1997 with the aim of proposing Palestinian laws and legislation based on equality and human rights.' The specific objective of the MP's campaign in Gaza was correcting the discriminatory nature of family law. -
Essays in the Russian Autocracy
ESSAYS IN THE RUSSIAN AUTOCRACY Vladimir Moss © Vladimir Moss: 2010. All Rights Reserved. CONTENTS INTRODUCTION ...................................................................................................4 1. THE RISE OF THE RUSSIAN AUTOCRACY ................................................5 The Appeal to Riurik..............................................................................................5 St. Vladimir the Saint............................................................................................7 Church and State in Kievan Rus’..........................................................................8 The Breakup of Kievan Rus’ ................................................................................14 Autocracy restored: St. Andrew of Bogolyubovo.................................................16 2.THE RISE OF MUSCOVY................................................................................22 St. Alexander Nevsky ..........................................................................................22 St. Peter of Moscow .............................................................................................23 St. Alexis of Moscow ...........................................................................................24 St. Sergius of Radonezh.......................................................................................27 3. MOSCOW: THE THIRD ROME .....................................................................30 4.THE HERESY OF THE JUDAIZERS ..............................................................37 -
We Are Sobornost’
KRAKOW MEETINGS MAY 28–31 2017 KRAKOW KRAKOW CONFERENCES BENEDICTINE ON RUSSIAN ABBEY PHILOSOPHY IN TYNIEC VIII ALEXEI KHOMIAKOV: WE ARE SOBORNOST’ BOOK OF A B ST RA C TS International Conference Krakow Meetings 2017 May 28–31, 2017 Benedictine Abbey in Tyniec Krakow, Poland ALEXEI KHOMIAKOV: WE ARE SOBORNOST’ BOOK OF A B ST RA C TS ORGANIZERS Pontifical University of John Paul II in Krakow Instituto de Filosofia Edith Stein in Granada International Center for the Study of the Christian Orient in Granada Committee on Philosophical Sciences of the Polish Academy of Sciences HONORARY PATRONAGE Committee on Philosophical Sciences of the Polish Academy of Sciences ACADEMIC BOARD Teresa Obolevitch | Krakow Artur Mrówczyński-Van Allen | Granada Paweł Rojek | Krakow ADVISORY BOARD Prof. Gennadii Aliaiev | Poltava) Prof. Konstantin Antonov | Moscow) Prof. Rev. Pavel Khondzinskii | Moscow) Prof. Marcelo López Cambronero | Granada) Prof. Daniela Steila | Turin CONFERENCE SECRETARY Olga Tabatadze | Granada ALEXEI KHOMIAKOV: WE ARE SOBORNOST’. INTEGRAL LIFE IN SLAVOPHILE THOUGHT AS AN ANSWER TO MODERN FRAG- MENTATION. THE CHURCH, EMPIRE AND THE MODERN STATE The second decade of the 21st century, which has been especially rich in events of great impor- tance to the Church, gives us a privileged position from which to try to outline a contemporary view of issues that are key to modern man—and, therefore, fundamental to theology, philosophy, and literature. The specific nature of Russian religious philosophy allows us to build a more complete interpretation of the contemporary world by avoiding the increasingly obvious tricks of modern positivist thought, and to explore the theological and philosophical intuitions of Russian thinkers, which with the passing of time seem to be ever more current and on the mark.