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Dictionnaire Adégien : Néologismes, régionalismes et mots d'argot dans l'oeuvre d'A.D.G., maître du néo-polar et amoureux des mots
Galli, Hugues; Vanoncini, André. - : HAL CCSD, 2021. : l'Harmattan, 2021
In: https://hal-univ-bourgogne.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03477861 ; l'Harmattan, 360 p., 2021, 978-2-343-23749-7 (2021)
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Russia’s Futures, from Fairy Tales and Editorials to Kremlin Narratives: Prokhanov, Dugin, Surkov
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30 Years after the Breakup of the USSR: Russia and Post-Soviet Europe, Narratives and Perceptions
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Unpacking the efficacy of Reading to Learn using Cognitive Load Theory
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Phonetic fieldwork in southern New Guinea
Lindsey, Kate L.; Schokkin, Dineke. - : University of Hawai'i Press, 2021
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Representations of Language Varieties Are Reliable Given Corpus Similarity Measures
Dunn, Jonathan. - : Association for Computational Linguistics, 2021
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The Role of Input in Language Revitalization: The Case of Lexical Development
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30 Years after the Breakup of the USSR: Russia and Post-Soviet Europe, Narratives and Perceptions. Special Issue Introduction
Abstract: The year 2021 marks a major milestone in the global geopolitical history – 30 years since the collapse of the USSR. Our Special Issue is a scholarly reflection on the evolving and evolved narratives and perceptions formed in the post-Soviet time and space. In our focus is one piece of the post-Soviet puzzle – five independent states of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Ukraine and Russia that once built the ‘western flank’ of the USSR. The five countries have remarkably different paths following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Yet, we argue that the three Baltic states, Ukraine and to certain degree Russia share a common plank in their identity of postcommunist states, sometimes described as “liminal Europeanness” (Morozov 2011, Filippov, 2020). A “historical legacy of the Western European Enlightenment, which invented and juxtaposed Western (superior) and Eastern (inferior) Europe” (Matheson et al. 2021) has triggered a particular vision of this region in Europe of “ever becoming European” and being “betwixt and between” (Mälksoo 2009) East and West. These spatial identities, related to the visions of core and periphery, intersect with the temporal dimension. The 30-year time line is a critical historical period when slowly evolving perceptions, images and narratives start crystallising into modified and/or new mental schemas shared collectively. Moreover, there is a new generation born after the watershed event – a generation without direct historical experiences of the USSR and its shared legacy. This generation is already the backbone of the work force and voting cohorts in the respective countries. New identities emerge – identities without reference to the Soviet past. The 30-year historical period is characterised by an uneasy intersection between different generations. The “rosy past syndrome” – a phenomenon well-known in political psychology (see Duffy 2018 for review) – means that older generations tend to see the past better than it used to be. While cognitive details fade as time goes by, the emotive and normative image elements remain and may dominate. This Special Issue reflects on the three image elements – cognitive, emotive and normative (see also Boulding 1959; Hopmann 1996) – and uses these concepts to reflect on political communication flows shaped by narratives and perceptions communicated 6 N. CHABAN, H. MONDRY, E. PAVLOV by influential opinion-maker and multipliers, as well as shared by the members of the respective societies. Of special interest to us are young people in the post-Soviet societies and their political imaginaries of the world, region, their country and themselves. The temporal dimension is important not only for its longer historical span. This region has become a new ‘hotspot’ in the geopolitics of Europe in the most recent history of the continent. It features the ongoing RussiaUkraine conflict following Ukraine’s Euro-Maidan in 2013-2014, Ukraine’s strategic vision of its “European choice” and its direction to the EuroAtlantic integration sealed by the Ukrainian Constitution. The region is marked by growing security concerns among the three Baltic states that are currently members of the European Union (EU) and NATO, and ardent supporters of Ukraine’s pro-Western orientation. Russia’s ambitious and aggressive geopolitical stance in the region and in the world is perceived by these four states to be the main threat. Such perceptions are reinforced by the annexation of Crimea from Ukraine by Russia (the first landgrab in the postWWII Europe), the war by proxy in the east of Ukraine, and numerous incidents and provocations challenging the Baltic states and Ukraine (e.g. Russian cyberattacks against Estonia, the capture of Ukrainian navy ships in November 2018, or deployment of substantial number of Russian troops – 85,000 to 110,000 soldiers (The Washington Post 2021) – and military drills near the border with Ukraine in May 2021). Challenging relations between the Baltic States and Ukraine on the one side and Russia on the other are unfolding against the background of an increasing instability in the postSoviet space. The war between Azerbaijan and Armenia and the bloody suppression of domestic opposition in Belarus in 2021 demonstrate that the post-Soviet space remains volatile 30 years into independence. This period has also demonstrated that the current leadership of the largest and most powerful post-Soviet state, Russia, is very clear in its visions that the collapse of the Soviet empire “was the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century” (NBC 2005). According to President Putin, if he had a chance to alter modern Russian history, he would reverse the collapse of the Soviet Union (Reuters 2018). Perhaps more concerning is the Russian leadership’s consistent anti-Ukrainian frame – from the 2008 statement by President Putin to President Bush that “Ukraine is not a country” (The Washington Post, 2018) to his most recent statement that Ukraine is becoming “anti-Russia,” “requiring our special attention from a security point of view” (Reuters 2021). The Baltic states remain highly aware and outspoken on the current uneasy situation and threat perception. Voting against the 2021 FrancoGerman proposal to hold an EU summit with Russia, Lithuanian President 30 YEARS AFTER THE USSR: INTRODUCTION 7 Gitanas Nausėda said the idea was like “trying to engage the bear to keep a pot of honey safe,” while Latvian Prime Minister Krišjānis Kariņš said Russia might see a summit as a reward when diplomacy had failed to end the conflict in eastern Ukraine (Reuters, 2021). Reflecting on the complex region with sensitive geopolitics, tangled dialogue between generations and approaching historical celebration, our Special Issue features interdisciplinary reflections, collaboration between generations of scholars and diverse geography.
Keyword: 2003 Language Studies; 2004 Linguistics; 2005 Literary Studies; communication and culture::4701 - Communication and media studies::470101 - Communication studies; communication and culture::4702 - Cultural studies::470206 - Cultural studies of nation and region; communication and culture::4702 - Cultural studies::470208 - Culture; Fields of Research::47 - Language; representation and identity
URL: https://hdl.handle.net/10092/103131
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An ecological approach to family language policy research: the case of Miao families in China
Shen, Q; Wang, L; Gao, X. - 2021
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THE MULTILINGUAL INSTRUCTOR: WHAT FOREIGN LANGUAGE TEACHERS SAY ABOUT THEIR EXPERIENCE AND WHY IT MATTERS
(Andy) Gao, X; Bao, M. - : OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2021
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Language teachers’ identity in teaching intercultural communicative competence
Lai, C; Gao, XA; Gong, YF. - 2021
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Crowd creation and learning of multimedia content: an action research project to create Curriculum 2.0 translation and interpreting courses
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The Multilayered Nature of Becoming Nonnative-English-Speaking Teacher
Hsieh, JKT; Gao, X; Bell, S. - : Wiley, 2021
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Parents’ experiences of discrimination and children’s depressive symptoms: Evidence from China
Deng, Z; Li, B. - : Springer, 2021
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Language, Culture and Identity in Two Chinese Community Schools: More than One Way of Being Chinese
Zheng, S; Gao, XA. - : ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2021
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Getting their wires crossed: Interpreters and clinicians' expectations of the role of the professional interpreters in the Australian health context
Crezee, I; Zucchi, E; Julich, S. - : International Association for Translation and Intercultural Studies, 2020. : https://www.iatis.org/index.php/new-voices-in-translation-studies/item/2335-new-voices-in-translation-studies-23-2020, 2020
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Locating de-lateralization in the pathway of sound changes affecting coda /l/
Strycharczuk P; Derrick, Donald; Shaw J. - : Ubiquity Press, Ltd., 2020
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Using visual feedback to tune the second vocal tract resonance for singing in the high soprano range
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Eva N.S. Ng. Common law in an uncommon courtroom: Judicial interpreting in Hong Kong
Stern, L. - : John Benjamins Publishing, 2020
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Identity performance and language policing in Hong Kong's media
Guo, Q; Gao, X; Shao, Q. - 2020
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