Crowe, B. Concise Dictionary of Soviet Terminology, Inistitutions and Abbreviations. Pergamon Press (Pergamon of Canada Ltd.); Pockney, B. P. 88 Short Russian Stories, Reader No. 1. Collet’s Ltd. Denington Estate, Wellingborough. Northamptonshire, England 1969; Collin, P. H. Sannikov’s Land. George G. Harrap and Co. Ltd. (Clarke, Irwin & Co. Ltd.). 1968; Shanskii, A. M. Russian Word Formation. (Translated by B. S. Johnson, edited by J. E. S. Cooper). Pergamon Press Ltd. 1968; Bryzgunsva, E. A., Zvuki i intonatsiya russkoi rechi (The Sounds and Intonation of Russian Speech); Lingafonnyi kurs dlya innostantsev. Moscow, 1969, distributed by Collet’s Holdings Ltd., Wellingborough, Great Britain; Nebel, H. Selected Prose of N. M. Karamzin, translation and introduction. Northwestern University Press, Evanston 1969; Vinogradov: The History of the Russian Literary Language froni the Seventeenth Century to the Nineteenth. A condensed adaptation into English with an introduction by Lawrence L. Thomas. The University of Wisconsin Press. Madison (Milwaukee). 1969Crowe, B. Concise Dictionary of Soviet Terminology, Inistitutions and Abbreviations. Pergamon Press (Pergamon of Canada Ltd.). May 1969. 182 pages. $5.50.Pockney, B. P. 88 Short Russian Stories, Reader No. 1. Collet’s Ltd. Denington Estate, Wellingborough. Northamptonshire, England 1969. 144 pp. Price 16/-.Collin, P. H. Sannikov’s Land. George G. Harrap and Co. Ltd. (Clarke, Irwin & Co. Ltd.). 1968. pp. 124. $2.30.;Shanskii, A. M. Russian Word Formation. (Translated by B. S. Johnson, edited by J. E. S. Cooper). Pergamon Press Ltd. 1968. pp. 174. Hard cover $6.50; flexi-cover $5.00.Bryzgunsva, E. A., Zvuki i intonatsiya russkoi rechi (The Sounds and Intonation of Russian Speech); Lingafonnyi kurs dlya innostantsev. Moscow, 1969, distributed by Collet’s Holdings Ltd., Wellingborough, Great Britain, 247 pp., paperback, 8sNebel, H. Selected Prose of N. M. Karamzin, translation and introduction. Northwestern University Press, Evanston 1969. 214 pp.Vinogradov: The History of the Russian Literary Language froni the Seventeenth Century to the Nineteenth. A condensed adaptation into English with an introduction by Lawrence L. Thomas. The University of Wisconsin Press. Madison (Milwaukee). 1969. 275 pp. $12.50.

Author(s):  
E.K.
1972 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 123
Author(s):  
C. Nicholas Lee ◽  
V. V. Vinogradov ◽  
Lawrence L. Thomas

1970 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 115
Author(s):  
Felix J. Oinas ◽  
Vinogradov ◽  
Lawrence L. Thomas

Author(s):  
W. F. Ryan

This chapter examines the history and developments in Slavonic studies in Great Britain. It explains that English awareness of Slav Europe was not great in the middle ages and that the inclusion of the medieval period of the various Slav peoples in the general history of Europe was a gradual process. It suggests that the study of Slavonic languages and literatures was not a discipline in British universities until comparatively recent times. However, a good many of the university departments of Russian or Slavonic studies which formerly existed in Great Britain, especially in the post-World War 2 period, have now been closed.


Author(s):  
Stephen A. Mrozowski

This chapter outlines some of the benefits of collaborative research. It draws on the experience gained and the lessons learned from close to a decade’s collaboration between the Fiske Center for Archaeological Research at the University of Massachusetts Boston and the Nipmuc Nation of Massachusetts. Close collaboration as part of the Hassanamesit Woods Project between Nipmuc archaeologist Dr. D. Rae Gould of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, a member of the Hassanamisco Nipmuc, and the author has resulted in numerous ontological shifts. One of the more noteworthy has been a reassessment of the history of the seventeenth-century “Praying Indian” communities of colonial Massachusetts and Connecticut that have always been viewed as having been “established” by English missionary John Eliot. Such a view, long held by historians and archaeologists alike, was challenged as an outgrowth of collaborative dialogue resulting in a reassessment of notions of community and deeper connections to traditional Nipmuc lands. As a result, research examined deeper connections between the seventeenth-century community of Hassanamesit and earlier Nipmuc use of the area. Through a series of analytical studies, it was determined that cultural and spatial continuity could be demonstrated between recent Nipmuc communities and a deeper past.


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