ScriptoriaSlavica

Medieval Slavic Manuscripts and Culture

Category: Publications (page 1 of 3)

Welcome to the Hilandar Research Library & the Resource Center for Medieval Slavic Studies at The Ohio State University

To welcome new visitors and patrons, we summarize here some resources to explain to the uninitiated about the Hilandar Research Library (HRL) and the Resource Center for Medieval Slavic Studies (RCMSS).

Note that the photo of the HRL/RCMSS in the video (see below) shows one of the two rooms we inhabited before the renovation of the William Oxley Thompson Library.

Hilandar Research Library, 225 Main Library, circa 1992

Former location of the Hilandar Research Library, circa 1992

Here’s where we are currently located, sharing  space since 2009 with the Rare Books and Manuscripts Library and the Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee Theatre Research Institute in the Jack and Jan Creighton Special Collections Reading Room (Thompson Library 105):

 Jack and Jan Creighton Special Collections Reading Room (THO 105)

The Jack and Jan Creighton Special Collections Reading Room (THO 105)

THO-105-a

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Recent Electronic Publications from the Serbian Academy of Sciences & Arts

 

Miklosichiana Bicentennalia: Зборник участ двестоте годишњице рођења Франца Миклошича.

A collection of articles in honor of the bicentennial anniversary of the birth of Franz Miklosich, edited by Jasmina Grković-Major and Aleksandar Loma.

Контрастивна граматика српског и украјинског језика: Таксис и евиденцијалност.

A Contrastive Grammar of Serbian and Ukrainian: Taxis and Evidentiality by Ljudmila Popović.

Теолингвитичка проучавања словенских језика.

Тheo-Linguistic Studies of the Slavic Languages. A collection of articles edited by Jasmina Grković-Major and Ksenija Končarević.

La toponymie de la charte de fondation de Banjska: Vers la conception d’un dictionnaire des noms de lieux de la Serbie medievale et une meilleure connaissance des structures onomastiques du slave commun by Aleksandar Loma.

Matthew Blastares: The Syntagma. Translated from Serbian Church Slavonic by Tatjana Subotin-Golubović.

Polata Knigopisnaia

Poziv za slanje radova

         Polata Knigopisnaia jedini je međunarodni časopis posvećen proučavanju slovenske srednjovekovne pismenosti na Zapadu. Od samog pojavljivanja – od 1978. godine – časopis Polata Knigopisnaia posvećen je održavanju visokog nivoa kvaliteta radova koji se u njemu objavljuju. Od 2006. godine časopis je dostupan samo kao internet izdanje na internet adresi Banke znanja Državnog univerziteta u Ohaju (Knowledge Bank at The Ohio State University): <https://kb.osu.edu/dspace/handle/1811/6399>

Polata knigopisnaia 1 (1978)

Polata Knigopisnaia 1 (1978)

Urednici časopisa, Kristijano Didi (Cristiano Diddi) sa Univerziteta u Salernu (University of Salerno), M. A. Džonson iz Hilandarske istraživačke biblioteke Državnog univerziteta Ohaja (Hilandar Research Library at The Ohio State University) i Robert Romančuk (Robert Romanchuk) sa Državnog univerziteta Floride (Florida State University), primenjivaće novi sistem recenziranja radova potencijalnih saradnika od 2007. godine pa nadalje.

Svi potencijalni saradnici časopisa za koje urednici budu smatrali da su zadovoljili kriterijume časopisa biće anonimno recenzirani od strane dva recenzenta.

Recenzenti časopisa su: Dejvid Birnbaum (David J. Birnbaum) sa Univerziteta u Pitsburgu (University of Pittsburgh), Danijel Kolins (Daniel E. Collins) sa Državnog univerziteta Ohaja (The Ohio State University), Predrag Matejić iz Hilandarske istraživačke biblioteke Državnog univerziteta Ohaja (Hilandar Research Library at The Ohio State University), Dženifer Spok (Jennifer Spock) sa Univerziteta Istočnog Kentakija (Eastern Kentucky University) i Julija Verkholancev (Julia Verkholantsev) sa Univerziteta u Pensilvaniji (University of Pennsylvania).

Urednici časopisa Polata Knigopisnaia objavljuju poziv za slanje radova koji bi trebalo da se pojave u 2014. godini, u svesci br. 39. Polata Knigopisnaia objavljuje izdanja srednjovekovnih slovenskih tekstova, ali i članke, indekse, bibliografije i prikaze posvećene slovenskim srednjovekovnim tekstovima (rukopisima i štampanim knjigama), posebno njihovom istorijskom i kulturnom kontekstu.

Autori koji žele priložiti rad dodatne informacije o tematici časopisa i načinu priređivanja radova mogu dobiti od urednika časopisa.

 

Urednici:

Cristiano Diddi crdiddi@unisa.it

M.A. Johnson johnson.60@osu.edu

Robert Romanchuk rromanch@mailer.fsu.edu

CFP: Polata Knigopisnaia 39 (2014)

 

Polata Knigopisnaia Issues Call for Papers

Polata Knigopisnaia, an international journal of Early Slavic books, texts, and literatures, is the only Western serial focused primarily on the study of Early Slavic manuscripts and material texts. Since publication began in 1978 it has maintained a rigorously high level of quality; from 2006 it has been available exclusively on-line at the Knowledge Bank at The Ohio State University:

<https://kb.osu.edu/dspace/handle/1811/6399>.

Polata knigopisnaia 1 (1978)The editors of Polata Knigopisnaia, Cristiano Diddi of the University of Salerno, M. A. Johnson of the Hilandar Research Library at The Ohio State University, and Robert Romanchuk of Florida State University, have adopted an editorial-board peer review system for contributions from 2007 forward. All contributions that the editors consider to fit the scope and criteria of PK will be reviewed anonymously by two members of the editorial board.

The editorial board of Polata Knigopisnaia is: David J. Birnbaum of the University of Pittsburgh, Daniel E. Collins of The Ohio State University, Predrag Matejic of the Hilandar Research Library at The Ohio State University, Jennifer Spock of Eastern Kentucky University, and Julia Verkholantsev of the University of Pennsylvania.

The editors of Polata Knigopisnaia are issuing a call for papers to appear in vol. 39 (2014). PK publishes scholarly articles, editions, indexes, and bibliographical and review essays related to Early Slavic texts, manuscripts, and early printed books, and their historical and cultural contexts.

Authors considering submitting an article are encouraged to contact an editor to discuss length and subject matter, and to obtain a style sheet.

 

Cristiano Diddi <crdiddi@unisa.it>

M.A. Johnson <johnson.60@osu.edu>

Robert Romanchuk <rromanch@mailer.fsu.edu>

More Selected Papers of the 2007 ASEC Conference Published

 

The latest issue of Russian History has been released – and it contains more selected papers from the  second conference of the Association for the Study of Eastern Christian History and Culture (ASEC), “Centers and Peripheries: Interaction and Exchange in the Social, Cultural, Historical, and Regional Situations of Eastern Christianity” that was held at The Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio, October 5–6, 2007.


Russian History
40.2 (2013): Centers and Peripheries in Eastern Christianity–Part 2.

Guest editors: J. Eugene Clay, Russell E. Martin, Barbara J. Skinner

Section 3. Community: Social and Perceptual Dynamics of the Center

Charles J. Halperin, “Church Immunities in Practice During the Reign of Ivan IV”

Marlyn Miller, “Social Revolution in Russian Female Monasticism: The Case of the Convent of the Intercession, 1700-1917 ”

Sergei I. Zhuk, “Popular Religiosity in the ‘Closed City’ of Soviet Ukraine: Cultural Consumption and Religion During Late Socialism, 1959-1984”

Amy A. Slagle, “A View from the Pew: Lay Orthodox Christian Perspectives on American Religious Diversity”

Section 4. Division and Inclusion: Defining Center and Peripheries of Orthodoxy

J. Eugene Clay, “Russian Spiritual Christianity and the Closing of the Black-Earth Frontier: The First Heresy Trials of the Dukhobors in the 1760s”

Page Herrlinger, “Trials of the Unorthodox Orthodox: The Followers of Brother Ioann Churikov and Their Critics in Modern Russia”

Bryan Rennie, “Mircea Eliade’s Understanding of Religion and Eastern Christian Thought”

 

 

Source of the Russian History 40.2 table of contents: Lawrence Langer (University of Connecticut) via the Early Slavic Studies listserv.

 

Call for Papers – Journal of Icon Studies

Call for Papers

Call for Papers

Cyrillic Manuscript Heritage 33 (June 2013) Available

 

The latest issue of Cyrillic Manuscript Heritage, vol. 33 (June 2013), is now available, and readers in the US have reported receipt of the RCMSS/HRL newsletter in the mail. The lead article describes the current exhibit in the Thompson Library Gallery, May 15-September 8, 2013: “Travelers to and from Mount Athos: The Translation of Culture, Knowledge, and Spirituality,” an exhibit of the Hilandar Research Library.

 

Photo of the front cover of the RCMSS/HRL newsletter volume 33 , June 2013

CMH 33 (June 2013)

Additional highlights of this issue include:

  • a two-page article by Peter DeSimone (MSSI 2008, RCMSS graduate associate, and OSU History PhD 2012), “Old Rite in Late Tsarist Russia: Documents of the Moscow Old Ritualists in the Pimen Sofronov Collection”;
  • the preliminary program of the forthcoming 6th International Hilandar Conference, July 19-21, 2013;
  • RCMSS & HRL News Notes;
  • Director’s Desk;
  • an article outlining the various ways to support the Hilandar Research Library and the Resource Center for Medieval Slavic Studies, along with a list of recent contributions to the Hilandar Endowment Fund, Hilandar’s Friends of the Library Fund, and Gifts in Kind.

 

 

Slověne: Online International Journal of Slavic Studies

 

Issue 2 of Slověne has been published.

Table of Contents:

Björn Wiemer, Veronika Kampf (Mainz). On Conditions Instantiating Tip Effects of Epistemic and Evidential Meanings in Bulgarian / Об условиях, выдвигающих то эпистемические, то эвиденциальные значения в болгарском языке (pp. 5–38) <http://www.slovene.ru/2012_2_Wiemer_Kampf.pdf>

Iskra Hristova-Shomova (Sofia). Календарът на Остромировото евангелие като свидетелство за историята на славянските богослужебни книги / The Calendar of the Ostromir Gospel as Evidence of the History of the Slavonic Liturgical Books (pp. 39–65)<http://www.slovene.ru/2012_2_Hristova-Shomova.pdf>

Michail Oslon (Moscow). Über den Silbenakzent in Juraj Križanićs Dialekt / О слоговых интонациях в диалекте Юрия Крижанича (pp. 66–80)<http://www.slovene.ru/2012_2_Oslon.pdf>

Philip R. Minlos (Moscow). Word Order in Adjective-Noun Pairs Inside and Outside the Prepositional Phrase: A Contribution to the 15th International Congress of Slavists (Minsk, 2013) / Порядок слов в сочетаниях существительного с прилагательным в предложных и беспредложных группах: Доклад к XV Международному съезду славистов  (pp. 81–94)<http://www.slovene.ru/2012_2_Minlos.pdf>

Alexander I. Grishchenko (Moscow). Славянские приключения греческого Кеѓата: О происхождении названия древнерусской “Книги Кааф” / The Slavic Adventures of Greek Kohath: On the Origin of the Title of the Old Russian Book of Kaaf (pp. 95–110)<http://www.slovene.ru/2012_2_Grishchenko.pdf>

______________________

RESEARCH NOTES / ЗАМЕТКИ

Larry Labro Koroloff (Toronto). Notes on the Dialect of Zhèrveni, Kostur Region, as Spoken by Their Descendants in Mustafapaşa and Cemilköy, Turkey / Заметки о диалекте с. Же́рвени (район Костура) у переселенцев в Мустафапаше и Джемилькёй (Турция) (pp. 111–116)<http://www.slovene.ru/2012_2_Koroloff.pdf>

Andrey Yu. Vinogradov (Moscow). Особенности борисоглебских торжеств в свете византийской традиции /The Features of Boris and Gleb Festivals in the Light of Byzantine Tradition (pp. 117–134)<http://www.slovene.ru/2012_2_Vinogradov.pdf>

Julia B. Kamchatnova (Moscow). О семантико-стилистическом своеобразии выражения сесть в лужу в русском языке / On the Russian Expression сесть в лужу: Semantic and Stylistic Peculiarities (pp. 135–152)<http://www.slovene.ru/2012_2_Kamchatnova.pdf>

 

Source: Early Slavic Studies listserv message from Feodor Uspenskii fjodoruspenski@ya.ru

 

Ohio State Partners with Google Books Library

 

Read the article about Ohio State Partnering with Google Books Library in OnCampus: Ohio State’s Faculty and Staff News Source.

screen shot of the online publication of the OnCampus article with a photograph of OSU Depository stacks

 

 

 

News of ASEC 2013 Conference Participants

 

The Association for the Study of Eastern Christian History and Culture (ASEC) held its fifth biennial conference at Georgetown University, Washington, DC, on March 89, 2013.

Eve Levin (University of Kansas), chair of the panel “Orthodoxy Amidst the ‘Other,'” included in her introduction to Matthew Lee Miller’s presentation that his book, The American YMCA and Russian Culture: The Preservation and Expansion of Orthodox Christianity, 1900-1940, had just been released by Lexington Books.

Roland Clark (Eastern Connecticut University), who presented at ASEC on “Prophecy, Miracles, and Pilgrimage in Interwar Romania,” has just had a book review published in the latest issue of Balkanistica 26 (2013): 265-267, which is published for The South East European Studies Association. He reviews Antonio Momoc’s Capcanele politice ale sociologiei interbelice: Şcoala Gustiană între carlism şi legionarism ‘The Political Snares of Interwar Sociology The Gusti School Between Carlism and Legionarism.’

In the same issue of Balkanistica, Lucien J. Frary (Rider University) has a review article in which he critiques three recent titles related to “Health, Society and the Family in the 20th Century Balkans” (241-254).

The latest issue of Russian History has been released – and it contains selected papers from the ASEC’s second conference, “Centers and Peripheries: Interaction and Exchange in the Social, Cultural, Historical, and Regional Situations of Eastern Christianity, which was held at The Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio, October 5–6, 2007.

Guest editors J. Eugene Clay and Barbara J. Skinner also presented at the 2013 ASEC conference.

Russian History 40.1 (2013): Centers and Peripheries in Eastern Christianity–Part 1.

Guest editors: J. Eugene Clay, Russell E. Martin, Barbara J. Skinner

Section 1. Text and Interpretation

Alice Whealey, “Muslim Motives for Conquering the Byzantine Empire 634-720: The Evidence from Eastern Christian Sources”

Enrique Santos Marinas, “Reassessment, Unification, and Enlargement of the Sources of Slavic Pre-Christian Religion”

Donald Ostrowski, “Dressing a Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing: Toward Understanding the Composition of the Life of
Alexander Nevskii”

Martha M. F. Kelly, “Cultural Transformation as Transdisfiguration in Pasternak’s Doctor Zhivago”

Section 2. Mission: Expanding the Periphery

Jesse D. Murray, “Together and Apart: The Russian Orthodox Church, the Russian Empire, and Orthodox Missionaries in Alaska, 1794-1917”

Mara Kozelsky, “A Borderland Mission: The Russian Orthodox Church in the Black Sea Region”

Lucien J. Frary, “Russian Missions to the Orthodox East: Antonin Kapustin (1817-1894) and his World”

 

Source of the Russian History 40.1 table of contents: Lawrence Langer (University of Connecticut) via the Early Slavic Studies listserv.

 

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