Information about a product
Edition: | 1 |
Place and year of publication: | Warszawa 2024 |
Publication language: | ukraiński , polski , angielski |
ISBN/ISSN: | 2451-2958 |
Number of page: | 281 |
Method of publication: | PDF |
Size of the file: | 3,42 MB |
Publication type: | Praca naukowa , Open access |
The issue opens with the section ‘Polish-Ukrainian Contexts in a European Perspective’, which includes an interview with the eminent Italian Ukrainianist and Slavist Giovanna Brogi, conducted on the occasion of her 80th birthday, and an article by Andriy Feloniuk on the 150th anniversary of the Shevchenko Scientific Society.
In the section ‘Being as Perseverance’ features articles by well-known researchers such as Bohdana Krysa, Iryna Matiash and Mykola Tymoshyk. Their pieces focus on various aspects of human perseverance, starting from the Baroque paradigm of being as perseverance, through the philosophy of perseverance of artist-diplomat Eugène Deslaw, to the history of Ivan Ohienko’s founding of the journal Ridna Mova.
Readers will find the results of source-centred research in the ‘Ad fontes’ section. Оlha Novyk, Natalia Levchenko and Valentina Holovatiuk devoted their articles to the everyday life of the pilgrim in Vasyl Hryhorovych-Barskyi’s Mandry, the language of Hryhorii Skovoroda’s works and Mikhailos Lesiv’s research of the folklore of the Polish-Ukrainian borderland.
The following section is devoted to dissidents, emigrants and forgotten and forbidden persons. Liudmyla Tarnashynska, Oksana Mykytenko and Tetiana Trofymenko present the stories of these exceptional figures through their personal records and documents.
The section ‘Ego-documents in the age of war and artificial intelligence’ includes research by Marta Zambrzycka and Olena Bondareva. The articles deal with representations of the sick and dysfunctional body in Ukrainian prose of the 1990s and the tragedy of the defenders of Azovstal in the drama Inny Goncharova’s.
The review articles section offers analyses by Tetiana Kachak and Ihor Nabytovych. The reviews concern Mateusz Świetlicki’s book Next-Generation Memory and Ukrainian Canadian Children’s Historical Fiction and the works of Oles Ulianenko.
The ‘Varia’ section presents a variety of articles by authors such as Olha Shchelkunova, Martyna Frątczak, Kamila Brodowska and Dawid Bzorek. These papers deal with traditions and innovations in Polish-Ukrainian studies, the promotion of the journal Polish-Ukrainian Studies, and reports from the 5th International Scientific Conference in the series ‘Philosophy of Being and Survival in Ego-Documens of Ukrainian writers, painters and filmmakers’. The issue closes with texts dedicated to the memory of prominent figures such as Fenia Dmytrivna Pustova and the Polish Ukrainian writer Elżbieta Wiśniewska (1931–2024).
We invite you to discover the wealth of content contained in the new issue of Polish-Ukrainian Studies.
The publication is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Poland license (CC BY 3.0 PL) (full license available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode).
In the section ‘Being as Perseverance’ features articles by well-known researchers such as Bohdana Krysa, Iryna Matiash and Mykola Tymoshyk. Their pieces focus on various aspects of human perseverance, starting from the Baroque paradigm of being as perseverance, through the philosophy of perseverance of artist-diplomat Eugène Deslaw, to the history of Ivan Ohienko’s founding of the journal Ridna Mova.
Readers will find the results of source-centred research in the ‘Ad fontes’ section. Оlha Novyk, Natalia Levchenko and Valentina Holovatiuk devoted their articles to the everyday life of the pilgrim in Vasyl Hryhorovych-Barskyi’s Mandry, the language of Hryhorii Skovoroda’s works and Mikhailos Lesiv’s research of the folklore of the Polish-Ukrainian borderland.
The following section is devoted to dissidents, emigrants and forgotten and forbidden persons. Liudmyla Tarnashynska, Oksana Mykytenko and Tetiana Trofymenko present the stories of these exceptional figures through their personal records and documents.
The section ‘Ego-documents in the age of war and artificial intelligence’ includes research by Marta Zambrzycka and Olena Bondareva. The articles deal with representations of the sick and dysfunctional body in Ukrainian prose of the 1990s and the tragedy of the defenders of Azovstal in the drama Inny Goncharova’s.
The review articles section offers analyses by Tetiana Kachak and Ihor Nabytovych. The reviews concern Mateusz Świetlicki’s book Next-Generation Memory and Ukrainian Canadian Children’s Historical Fiction and the works of Oles Ulianenko.
The ‘Varia’ section presents a variety of articles by authors such as Olha Shchelkunova, Martyna Frątczak, Kamila Brodowska and Dawid Bzorek. These papers deal with traditions and innovations in Polish-Ukrainian studies, the promotion of the journal Polish-Ukrainian Studies, and reports from the 5th International Scientific Conference in the series ‘Philosophy of Being and Survival in Ego-Documens of Ukrainian writers, painters and filmmakers’. The issue closes with texts dedicated to the memory of prominent figures such as Fenia Dmytrivna Pustova and the Polish Ukrainian writer Elżbieta Wiśniewska (1931–2024).
We invite you to discover the wealth of content contained in the new issue of Polish-Ukrainian Studies.
The publication is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Poland license (CC BY 3.0 PL) (full license available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode).
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