UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Formation of Russian Musicology from Sacchetti to Asafyev, 1885-1931 Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2zm111m2 Author Panteleeva, Olga Publication Date 2015 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California Formation of Russian Musicology from Sacchetti to Asafyev, 1885-1931 By Olga Panteleeva A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Music in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Richard Taruskin, Chair Professor Marina Frolova-Walker Professor Mary Ann Smart Professor Jeroen Dewulf Spring 2015 Formation of Russian Musicology from Sacchetti to Asafyev, 1885-1931 Copyright 2015 by Olga Panteleeva Abstract Formation of Russian Musicology from Sacchetti to Asafyev, 1885-1931 by Olga Panteleeva Doctor of Philosophy in Music University of California, Berkeley Professor Richard Taruskin, Chair This study explores Russian thought about music in thirty-five years leading up to the establishment in 1921 of the music research department at the Institute for Art History in St Petersburg, generally considered the key event in the institutionalization of musicology as a scholarly discipline, and for a decade after that. Drawing on sources that include newspapers and articles across half a century and hitherto little-known archival materials, such as transcripts of meetings, official resolutions, and personal correspondence, I show how Russian musicology grew up in dialogue with the broader intellectual developments of the period. The temporal framework of this study bridges the “revolutionary divide,” dismantling the persistent notion of 1917 as the zero hour in the history of Russian and Soviet culture. Where existing studies have tended to conceptualize writing about music in the early Soviet era either as the voluntary acceptance of ideological directives from the State or as the total ideological crackdown on free scholarly thought, my findings reveal a volatile two-way relationship between the State and individual scholars, in which musicologists themselves exhibited a nuanced range of attitudes toward the centralized ideology and could be active agents of the sweeping ideological change. Chapters 1 and 5 deal with institutions and the thorny quest to legitimize musicology as an academic profession; Chapters 2, 3, and 4 focus on the vibrant discourse on the study of music that appeared in the press. In its earliest stage, the institutionalization of musicology was slowed by the relentless focus of the music conservatories on the social legitimization of the profession of a musician, which left no space for the advocacy of the professional scholar. During this same early period, musicological thought was being forged in the debates in the popular press over the competing claims of positivism and idealism. Where positivism upheld the idea that music scholarship should concern itself with the scientific search for universal laws governing both the historical development of music and its inner workings, the idealist camp favored the understanding of music as an ineffable art, out of reach of the rational mind. In Chapter 1 I analyze Nikolai Findeisen’s criticism of the conservatory professor Liveriy Sacchetti, an expert in European music historiography and aesthetics, and Findeisen’s nationalist vision for musicology, which was gaining momentum in the two pre-revolutionary decades. Chapter 2 presents a longitudinal study of the Russian reception of Eduard Hanslick’s influential treatise On the Musically Beautiful, which reveals two ideological shifts, first to positivism, then away from it. Chapter 3 concerns itself with an example of this positivist influx and the strong idealist opposition it elicited in certain avant-garde artistic circles of the 1910s: Emiliy Medtner’s 1 criticism of Nadezhda Bryusova’s work, rife with anti-modernism, racial anxiety, and fear of the prescriptive ambitions of science. Chapter 4 looks at the same ideological clash from a different perspective. Members of the Scriabin Society, offended by the critical stance the music critic Leonid Sabaneyev took in his monograph on the recently deceased composer, attempted to besmirch his reputation by casting him as a clueless rationalist who could not approach the true meaning of Scriabin’s music. Chapter 5 examines the increasing ideological pressure that The People's Commissariat for Education (Narkompros) put on the musicologists at the Russian Institute of Art History in the late 1920s, steeped in the infamous rhetoric of “formalism” that later informed the public denunciations of Prokofiev and Shostakovich. My focus on the personal communications between Boris Asafyev and Alexey Finagin reveals that adapting one’s convictions to the changing ideological climate often came at the cost of personal relationships. 2 To my teachers i Table of Contents Acknowledgements iii Introduction 1 Chapter 1 Liberio’s Labour Lost, or Why a German Disliked an Italian 18 for Being Not Russian Enough Chapter 2 The reception of Hanslick's On the Musically Beautiful 38 and the Shift to Positivism Chapter 3 Positivism and the Danger of Science: 74 Nadezhda Bryusova vs. Emiliy Medtner Chapter 4 Sabaneyev's Scriabin and Conflicting Epistemologies 94 of the Russian Silver Age Chapter 5 Of Friendship and Formalism: 114 Musicologists and Soviet Power in the 1920s Conclusion 145 Bibliography 151 ii Acknowledgements This project would not have come to fruition without the support of many institutions and individuals, to whom I extend my heartfelt gratitude. I deeply appreciate the financial support that made my dissertation research and writing possible: a departmental fellowship and summer grants from the Music Department of the University of California, Berkeley, the travel and summer grants from the Graduate Division at UC Berkeley, the generous travel grants from the UC Berkeley Institute of Eastern European and Eurasian Studies, and an Allan Sharlin Memorial Award from the UC Berkeley Institute of International Studies, which funded the last year of dissertation writing. I am thankful to the staff of Russian libraries and archives for their guidance and good will: to Galina Viktorovna Kopïtova and Irina Aleksandrovna Sinitsa at the Manuscript Department of the Russian Institute of Art History, to Maria Mikhailovna Perekalina at the Central State Historical Archive of St. Petersburg, to Svetlana Alekseyevna Litvinova at the Central State Archive of Literature and Art of St. Petersburg, and to the staff at the Manuscript Department of the National Library of Russia. I am forever indebted to the University of California, Berkeley and its intellectual environment, which transformed me as a scholar, a teacher, and a member of society. To my professors at Berkeley and beyond I owe more than I ever will be able to repay: to Davitt Moroney, a mentor who always kept his door open and who taught me the importance of writing, teaching, and living in a socially responsible way; to Mary Ann Smart, for bringing clarity to my thinking and writing, and for being a paragon of professionalism and a role model; to Jeroen Dewulf, whose encouragement during his course on German literature and during my preparation for the orals made more of a difference than he might have known; to Marina Frolova-Walker for her hands-on advising and incisive feedback, which left no stones unturned, and her caring support, both equally essential; and above all, to Richard Taruskin, whose scholarship inspired me long before I even dreamed of being his student, who has encouraged me to be true to myself ever since we sat down on a bench at The Hermitage and he told me to never mind them, and without whose professional and personal help I would have never reached this point. A cordial thank you to Melissa Hacker and Lisa Robinson for doing wonders to accommodate all my individual circumstances, and for guiding me through the program steadily and graciously. I am immensely grateful to my teachers Olga Manulkina, who set me on the scholarly path eleven years ago and has been helping me walk it ever since; Arkady Klimovitsky, who set the standard of integrity to live up to; and Karl Kügle, for making me apply to Berkeley and for believing in me even when I did not fully believe in myself. Warmest thanks and a hug to my friends, who have been my family during my time at Berkeley and have helped in countless ways: Rebekah Ahrendt, Nell Cloutier, Sean Curran, Barbara Dietlinger, Emily Frey, Ofer Gazit, Ian Goldstein, Melanie Gudesblatt, Jess Herdman, Margaret Jones, Beezer de Martelly, Jonathan Meci, Adeline Mueller, Tiffany Ng, Kirsten Paige, Ulrike Petersen, Bill Quillen, Sumitra Ranganathan, Emily Richmond Pollock, Ilya Rostovtsev, Danni Simon, Saraswathi Shukla, Chelsea Spangler, Rachana Vajjhala, Rachel Vandagriff, Jen Wang, Jiselle Warner, and Robert Yamasato; and those who kept me happy in other places: Lidia Ader, Katya Chernyakova, Olga Khomitsevich, Ruxandra Marinescu, and Stanislav Oporkov. Thank you to the Gusev family, without whose unwavering support and hospitality I would not iii have been able to carry out archival research for this dissertation, and to Elena Orlova for having my back when no one else could. Most heartfelt thanks to Vadim Keylin, Laura Protano-Biggs, and Anicia Timberlake, for their indispensable feedback, for proofreading my
Recommended publications
  • Sociology in Continental Europe After WWII1
    Sociology in Continental Europe after WWII1 Matthias Duller & Christian Fleck Continental particularities Sociology was invented in Europe. For several reasons, however, it did not bloom there for the first one-and-a-half centuries. The inventor of sociology, Auguste Comte, was an independent scholar with no affiliation to any institution. Likewise, other European founding fathers, such as Alexis Tocqueville, Herbert Spencer, Karl Marx, and Friedrich Engels, were not professors, nor were they paid for their scholarly service by the state. Looking at the history of sociology in continental Europe, we do not come upon a striking role model of a “professional sociologist.” What is normally called the classical period ranges from pre-Comtean authors down to the generation after Comte (born 1798): Among the most prominent figures, from Ludwig Gumplowicz (1838), Vilfredo Pareto (1848), Tomáš Masaryk (1850), Maksim Kovalevsky (1851), Ferdinand Tönnies (1855), Georg Simmel (1858), Émile Durkheim (1858), Max Weber (1864), Marcel Mauss (1872), Roberto Michels (1876), Maurice Halbwachs (1977) to Florian Znaniecki (1882), only the Frenchmen and the exiled Pole occupied positions whose descriptions covered sociology and nothing other than sociology. All the others earned their living by practicing different professions or teaching other disciplines. For a very long time sociology failed to appear as a distinct entity in Continental Europe’s academic world. Simply put, one could not study it (even in Durkheim’s France a specialized undergraduate programme, licence de sociologie, started not earlier than 1958, before that students got an multidisciplinary training in the Facultés de Lettres or specialized institutions as the Vth Section of the École pratique des hautes études or the College des France).
    [Show full text]
  • Clute International Academic Virtual Conferences Spring 2021 Author Name Paper # Title (Click Title to View Paper)
    May 3-4, 2021 Clute International Academic Virtual Conferences Spring 2021 Author Name Paper # Title (Click title to view paper) Akin, Imani 116 Strategic Partnering: Developing The Dissertation Towards Elimination Of Students’ Misconceptions In Science: Case Of Drama And Alamina, Jane I. 113 Concept Mapping Strategies On Chemical Bonding In Nigeria Alvarado, Jessica 106 Strategies For Engagement And Motivation In The Online Classroom Beauchamp, Charles 122 The Federal Reserve's Zombie Firms Bodamer, Kristina 106 Strategies For Engagement And Motivation In The Online Classroom Bowes, David 120 U.S. Congressional Election Uncertainty And Stock Market Volatility Burton, Erika 116 Strategic Partnering: Developing The Dissertation Conrad, Cynthia E. 115 Digital Identity In Canada For Public Services: Implications For The United States Teaching About Fountainheads Of Sociology: The Case Of Marx, Weber, Durkheim, Du Cromartie, J. Vern 124 Bois, Wells-Barnett, Addams, And Martineau As Pioneers Teaching About Fountainheads Of Ethnic Studies: The Case Of W. E. B. Du Bois And Cromartie, J. Vern 125 Carter G. Woodson As Ethnicians Davidovitch, Nitza 130 E-Learning In Times Of Crisis – An Incidental Or Facilitative Event? Cybersecurity: Increasing Under-Represented Students To The Major Through DeBello, Joan E. 134 Engagement Mentoring And Research Cybersecurity: Increasing Under-Represented Students To The Major Through Dragos, Denise 134 Engagement Mentoring And Research Towards Elimination Of Students’ Misconceptions In Science: Case Of Drama
    [Show full text]
  • The Christened Chinaman a Novel
    ANDREI BELY THE CHRISTENED CHINAMAN TRANSLATED, ANNOTATED AND INTRODUCED BY THOMAS R . BEYER, JR. Hermitage Publishers 1991 Andrei Bely The Christened Chinaman A novel Translated from Russian by Thomas R. Beyer, Jr. Copyright @ 1991 by Thomas R. Beyer, Jr. All rights reserved Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Bely, Andrey, 1880-1934. [Kreshchenyi kitaets. English] The christened Chinaman I Andrei Bely; translated, annotated, and introduced by Thomas R. Beyer, Jr. p. em. Translation of: Kreshchenyi kitaets. ISBN 1-55779-042-6 : $12.00 I. Title. PG3453.B84K713 1991 91-32723 891.73'3--dc20 CIP A sketch by Sergei Chekhonin "Woman with flower" (1914) is used for front cover Published by HERMITAGE PUBLISHERS P.O. Box 410 Tenafly, N.j. 07670, U.S.A. CONTENTS Translator's Introduction 1 The Text and the Translation IX THE CHRISTENED ClllNAMAN The Study 1 Papochka 1 3 This and That's Own 25 Granny, Auntie, Uncle 40 Roulade 53 Mamochka 69 Mikhails 77 Ahura-Mazda 88 Papa Hit the Nail on the Head 97 The Scythian 106 Phooeyness 109 Spring 127 Fellow Traveler 133 Om 147 Red Anise 152 Notes 161 TRANSLATOR'S INTRODUCTION The Christened Chinaman (KpeU�eHblli'l KHTa9L4),or iginally entitled The Transgression of Nikolai Letaev: (I: Epopee), appeared in 1921 to mixed reviews. A. Veksler called it "one of the most artistically vibrant and complete works of Russian literature, if not the most vibrant work of A. Bely."1 Viktor Shklovsky, the well known Formalist critic, wrote: "I don't think that he himself [Bely] knows what in the world an 'Epopee' is."2 Critics have also variedwidely in their evaluations of the stylistic innovations of the work.
    [Show full text]
  • Early Professional Socialization of University Students in Russia
    Available online at www.sciencedirect.com ScienceDirect Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 200 ( 2015 ) 442 – 448 THE XXVI ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL ACADEMIC CONFERENCE, LANGUAGE AND CULTURE, 27–30 October 2015 Early Professional Socialization of University Students in Russia Marina N. Kicherovaᵃ, Galina Z. Efimovaᵃ, Tamara V. Khveskoᵃ,* ᵃTyumen State University, 10, Semakov Street, Tyumen, 625003, Russia Abstract The article considers peculiarities of future sociologists’ personality formation during the first steps of training in higher educational settings. Special attention is paid to the verbal influence directed to conceptual changes in university students reflected in their behavior. The interdisciplinary approach discussed helps to solve the problem of verbal influence on the students’ attitudes towards future profession and their career strategies. According to the study findings based on quantitative and qualitative research methods, social determinants of professional self-identification have been revealed. It was shown that early professional socialization affects the formation of future professionals’ values and civil position. © 20152015 The The Authors. Authors. Published Published by Elsevierby Elsevier Ltd. LtdThis. is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (Peerhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/-review under responsibility of National Research). Tomsk State University. Peer-review under responsibility of National Research Tomsk State University. Keywords: Professional socialization; higher education; career choice; self-identification 1. Introduction The development of modern society on the way to that of information is characterized by dynamism and an accelerating pace of social changes that lead to increasing demands for competitive professionals with a high level of competence and able to adapt to changing conditions of social reality.
    [Show full text]
  • Redalyc.LA IDEA DE BIZANCIO EN LA TRADICIÓN INTELECTUAL
    Byzantion Nea Hellás ISSN: 0716-2138 [email protected] Universidad de Chile Chile Ubierna, Pablo LA IDEA DE BIZANCIO EN LA TRADICIÓN INTELECTUAL RUSA Y SOVIÉTICA, 1840- 1970. Byzantion Nea Hellás, núm. 25, 2006 Universidad de Chile Santiago, Chile Disponible en: http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=363844245010 Cómo citar el artículo Número completo Sistema de Información Científica Más información del artículo Red de Revistas Científicas de América Latina, el Caribe, España y Portugal Página de la revista en redalyc.org Proyecto académico sin fines de lucro, desarrollado bajo la iniciativa de acceso abierto Byzantion Nea Hellás 25, 2006: 183 - 203 LA IDEA DE BIZANCIO EN LA TRADICIÓN INTELECTUAL RUSA Y SOVIÉTICA, 1840-1970 *. Pablo Ubierna CONICET- Universidad de Buenos Aires Resumen: Este artículo trata de la imagen de Bizancio en el pensamiento ruso de los siglos XIX y XX (tanto en historia como en filosofía y teología). Un cierto conocimiento sobre Bizancio y la imagen de ese imperio que se construye a partir de ese conocimiento fue fundamental no sólo para los historiadores profesionales que trabajaban sobre historia rusa primitiva sino también para aquellos filósofos y teólogos que estudiaban el lugar de la tradición ortodoxa en la herencia cultural rusa y la forma de relacionarla con el mundo moderno. Palabras Claves: historiografía bizantina - historia intelectual rusa - imperialismo y orientalismo THE IDEA OF BYZANTIUM IN RUSSIAN AND SOVIET INTELLECTUAL TRADITION, 1840-1970. Abstract: This article deals with the image of Byzantium in russian scholarship (both history, philosophy and theology) from the early XIXth century to mid-XXth century.
    [Show full text]
  • Commonwealth
    COMMONWEALTH COMMONWEALTH Michael Hardt Antonio Negri THE BELKNAP PRESS OF HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS Cambridge, Massachusetts 2009 Copyright © 2009 by Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Hardt, Michael, 1960– Commonwealth / Michael Hardt, Antonio Negri. p. cm. Sequel to “Empire” and “Multitude.” Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-674-03511-9 (cloth : alk. paper) 1. International or ga ni za tion. 2. International cooperation. 3. Globalization. I. Negri, Antonio, 1933– II. Title. JZ1318.H368 2009 321.02—dc22 2009012652 CONTENTS Preface: The Becoming-Prince of the Multitude vii PART 1 Republic (and the Multitude of the Poor) 1.1 Republic of Property 3 1.2 Productive Bodies 22 1.3 The Multitude of the Poor 39 De Corpore 1: Biopolitics as Event 56 PART 2 Modernity (and the Landscapes of Altermodernity) 2.1 Antimodernity as Resistance 67 2.2 Ambivalences of Modernity 83 2.3 Altermodernity 101 De Homine 1: Biopolitical Reason 119 PART 3 Capital (and the Struggles over Common Wealth) 3.1 Metamorphoses of the Composition of Capital 131 3.2 Class Struggle from Crisis to Exodus 150 3.3 Kairos of the Multitude 165 De Singularitate 1: Of Love Possessed 179 INTERMEZZO: A FORCE TO COMBAT EVIL 189 vi CONTENTS PART 4 Empire Returns 4.1 Brief History of a Failed Coup d’État 203 4.2 After U.S. Hegemony 219 4.3 Genealogy of Rebellion 234 De Corpore 2: Metropolis 249 PART 5 Beyond Capital? 5.1 Terms of the Economic Transition 263 5.2 What Remains of Capitalism 280 5.3 Pre-shocks along the Fault Lines 296 De Homine 2: Cross the Threshold! 312 PART 6 Revolution 6.1 Revolutionary Parallelism 325 6.2 Insurrectional Intersections 345 6.3 Governing the Revolution 361 De Singularitate 2: Instituting Happiness 376 Notes 387 Acknowledgments 427 Index 428 PR EFA C E : T H E B ECO M ING- PR I N C E OF THE MULTITUDE People only ever have the degree of freedom that their audacity wins from fear.
    [Show full text]
  • Comparative Law Gets Entitled: the 1900 Paris Congress in Contexts
    Comparative Law Gets Entitled: The 1900 Paris Congress in Contexts By Mireille Fournier B.C.L./LL.B., McGill University, 2016 A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF LAWS In the Faculty of Law © Mireille Fournier, 2018 University of Victoria All rights reserved. This thesis may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by photocopy or other means, without the permission of the author. Suvervisory committee Comparative Law Gets Entitled: The 1900 Paris Congress in Contexts By Mireille Fournier B.C.L./LL.B., McGill University, 2016 Supervisory Committee Dean Jeremy Webber, Supervisor Faculty of Law Dr. Thomas J. Saunders, Member Department of History ii Abstract Abstract This thesis examines the intellectual context of the first international congress of comparative law held in Paris, at the occasion of the 1900 World Fair. In particular, it articulates some of the unstated assumptions that made it possible for the conversation of this congress to unfold as it did. Using methods of conceptual history and discursive analysis, the author shows how this constitutive conversation for the discipline of comparative law drew from many discourses including conversations about the prestige of French legal science, claims to disciplinarity and the corresponding search for a scientific method, the desire to master the processes of legal unification arising from international trade, a concern with ensuring the place of France in the hierarchy of nations in a period of national malaise, and a mission befalling France to civilize the rest of the world. In showing how these different conversations shaped the discourse of the first congress of comparative law, the thesis outlines the ways in which they also participated in (re)shaping deeply entrenched conceptions of legal knowledge and legal scholarship.
    [Show full text]
  • Social)-3317-02.Qxd 10/19/2005 4:04 PM Page 7
    02-Scott (social)-3317-02.qxd 10/19/2005 4:04 PM Page 7 2 Genealogy of the Social This chapter traces the origins of social theory from the Renaissance. It argues that it was then, and especially during the Enlightenment, that an idea of the ‘social’ factor in human life was for the first time systematically developed. It examines the early years of • British social theory • French social theory • German social theory The chapter aims to demonstrate the convergence of intellectual concerns around a number of themes that have continued to structure social theory until the present. This emerging framework is considered through a discussion of the first global sociologists: • Auguste Comte • Herbert Spencer Search the internet using Google, Yahoo, or any of the other search engines and you will discover that sociology was founded by Auguste Comte in the middle of the nineteenth century.1 This is the same answer that professional sociologists will often give to non-sociologists when asked about the founding of their disci- pline. The claim is that Comte discovered ‘society’ and recognised the need for a new ‘science’ to study it. Perhaps things are not so clear-cut as this implies. It is certainly true that Comte invented the word ‘sociology’, combining the Latin word socius (‘society’) 02-Scott (social)-3317-02.qxd 10/19/2005 4:04 PM Page 8 8 Social theory: central issues in sociology with the Greek word logos (‘study’), but the systematic study of society has more complex roots than this. A more satisfactory answer might be that scientific soci- ology originated among the intellectual heirs of Comte who built a ‘classical’ tra- dition of sociological analysis.
    [Show full text]
  • Appendix A: Biographies of Nikolay Kondratieff and Kaname Akamatsu 1
    Appendix A: Biographies of Nikolay Kondratieff and Kaname Akamatsu 1 Nikolay D. Kondratieff Nikolay Dmitrievich Kondratieff was born on the 17th March, 1892 in the village of Galuevskaya, Kostroma Governorate, into a peasant family.2 He was the eldest among ten other children of his parents. After he had fi nished his primary school, Nikolay entered a teachers training seminary where he befriended Pitirim Sorokin (who later became a world-famous sociologist as well as a founder of the Sociology Department in the Harvard University). This friendship continued throughout their life; in addition, until Sorokin’s emigration they were tied together by political activities. During the First Russian Revolution (1905–1907) Nikolay joined the Party of Socialists-Revolutionaries, with which he remained connected for many years; he became deeply involved in revolutionary activities. As a result he was expelled from the seminary and had to go to Ukraine, where he continued his educa- tion. In 1908 he decided to study in Saint Petersburg and in 1910 he entered the Department of Economics of the University Faculty of Law. Nikolay attended classes of such brilliant scholars as Mikhail Tugan-Baranovsky, Maksim Kovalevsky, Leon Petrazycki and others; he continued contacts with them long after the gradua- tion. Nikolay soon started his own research and in 1912–1914, while still being a student, he published more than 20 articles, reviews and other works. In 1915 he graduated from the University with a diploma of the First Grade. The same year he published his fi rst monograph which was met with positive reviews in the academic 1 This appendix has been prepared with support of the Russian Foundation for the Humanities (Project No.
    [Show full text]
  • La Idea De Bizancio En La Tradición Intelectual Rusa Y Soviética, 1840-1970 *
    Byzantion Nea Hellás 25, 2006: 183 - 203 LA IDEA DE BIZANCIO EN LA TRADICIÓN INTELECTUAL RUSA Y SOVIÉTICA, 1840-1970 *. Pablo Ubierna CONICET- Universidad de Buenos Aires Resumen: Este artículo trata de la imagen de Bizancio en el pensamiento ruso de los siglos XIX y XX (tanto en historia como en filosofía y teología). Un cierto conocimiento sobre Bizancio y la imagen de ese imperio que se construye a partir de ese conocimiento fue fundamental no sólo para los historiadores profesionales que trabajaban sobre historia rusa primitiva sino también para aquellos filósofos y teólogos que estudiaban el lugar de la tradición ortodoxa en la herencia cultural rusa y la forma de relacionarla con el mundo moderno. Palabras Claves: historiografía bizantina - historia intelectual rusa - imperialismo y orientalismo THE IDEA OF BYZANTIUM IN RUSSIAN AND SOVIET INTELLECTUAL TRADITION, 1840-1970. Abstract: This article deals with the image of Byzantium in russian scholarship (both history, philosophy and theology) from the early XIXth century to mid-XXth century. A certain knowledge about Byzantium and the image of that empire built on that knowledge was important not only for professional historians dealing with early Russian history but also for theologians and philosophers working on the place of orthodox tradition within Russian heritage and on the ways of linking that tradition to the modern world. Key words: Byzantine historiography, Russian intellectual tradition, imperialism and orientalism Recibido: 28.02.2006 - Aceptado: 24.03-2006 Correspondencia: Pablo Ubierna ([email protected]) Doctor en Historia. Investigador en Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas (CONICET), Universidad de Buenos Aires. Dirección postal: Av.
    [Show full text]
  • AN OVERVIEW S. Akinmayọwa Lawal
    LAPAI INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT AND SOCIAL SCIENCES A Publication of the Faculty of Management & Social Sciences, IBB University, Lapai, Niger State-Nigeria Vol. 11 No.2, December, 2019 ISSN: 2006-6473 UNDERSTANDING SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH: AN OVERVIEW S. Akinmayọwa Lawal ([email protected]) +2348058536815 Department of Sociology, Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State, Nigeria Abstract Social science research is a method to uncover social happenings in human societies. Through social research, new knowledge is derived to help societies progress and adapt to change. Today, the concept of social science research has become important to researchers especially for those in the social sciences. Through social research, the social world is better understood as ongoing, emerging, re-merging and newly emerging social problems are known. More so, solutions are derived through social research. This paper discusses the concept of social science research. It explains the origins of social science research and its benefits. The paper gives insight on the nature of social science research showing the two major approaches (quantitative and qualitative) of social science research. The paper discusses the forms of analysis employed by quantitative social science researchers and qualitative researchers in doing social science research. The similarities and dissimilarities between both approaches are explained. The paper provides a social science research process and programme intervention framework. The framework shows core attributes and elements of social science research used to address diverse social issues in society. In conclusion, social science research remains a vital process to address societal challenges and to proffer solutions on social issues based on globally accepted scientific processes.
    [Show full text]
  • Leonid Grinin Andrey Korotayev Arno Tausch
    International Perspectives on Social Policy, Administration, and Practice Leonid Grinin Andrey Korotayev Arno Tausch Economic Cycles, Crises, and the Global Periphery International Perspectives on Social Policy, Administration, and Practice Series Editors Sheying Chen Pace University , New York , USA Jason L. Powell University of Lancashire, Preston, Lancashire, United Kingdom [email protected] The Springer series International Perspectives on Social Policy, Administration and Practice puts the spotlight on international and comparative studies of social policy, administration, and practice with an up-to-date assessment of their character and development. In particular, the series seeks to examine the underlying assumptions of the practice of helping professions, nonprofi t organization and management, and public policy and how processes of both nation-state and globalization are affecting them. The series also includes specifi c country case studies, with valuable comparative analysis across Asian, African, Latin American, and Western welfare states.The series International Perspectives on Social Policy, Administration and Practice commissions approximately six books per year, focusing on international perspectives on social policy, administration, and practice, especially an East-West connection. It assembles an impressive set of researchers from diverse countries illuminating a rich, deep, and broad understanding of the implications of comparative accounts on international social policy, administration, and practice. More information
    [Show full text]