Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Padyak V. Istoriia karpatorusyns′koho natsional′noho teatra y dramaturgiï. Vysokoshkols′kyi uchebnyk. Priashiv: Vydavatel′stvo Priashivs′koho univerziteta, 2018. 344 s.

View through CrossRef
This article presents the textbook of the famous Transcarpathian and Slovak Rusinist Valery Padyak Istoriia karpatorusyns′koho natsional′noho teatra y dramaturgiï [History of the Carpatho-Rusyn National theatre and drama]. The Rusyns (more precisely, the Carpatho-Rusyns) are the autochthonous East Slavic population of the Carpathian region: Ukrainian Transcarpathia and the adjacent regions of Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, and Romania. There is also a Rusyn diaspora present in Serbia, Croatia, the USA, Canada, and other states. The number of Rusyns in the world is a controversial issue, one reason for this being their polyvariant identification. At present, a significant proportion of ethnic Rusyns consider themselves representatives of an independent people, who are not Ukrainian or Russian. Padyak, a staunch supporter of the Rusyn ethno-national identity and at the same time a serious academic scientist, made an attempt to trace the development of drama and theatre in the Rusyn environment in parallel with the processes of Rusyn national self-determination. The author traces the evolution of folk theatre performances to the modern Rusyn national theatre, which is actively being developed in different states with Rusyn inhabitants. V. Padyak pays increased attention to theater and drama in the second half of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as well as during the period when Subcarpathian Rus (Transcarpathia) entered the structure of interwar Czechoslovakia and Horthy Hungary. In contrast, the author hardly examines post-war theater life in the Transcarpathian region, believing that its study is more appropriate in the context of Ukrainian, rather than Rusyn, studies. This textbook by V. Padyak, addressed primarily to Rusynist students at the University of Prešov (Slovakia), is of undoubted interest to anyone interested in the history and culture of the Rusyns.
Institute of Slavic Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences
Title: Padyak V. Istoriia karpatorusyns′koho natsional′noho teatra y dramaturgiï. Vysokoshkols′kyi uchebnyk. Priashiv: Vydavatel′stvo Priashivs′koho univerziteta, 2018. 344 s.
Description:
This article presents the textbook of the famous Transcarpathian and Slovak Rusinist Valery Padyak Istoriia karpatorusyns′koho natsional′noho teatra y dramaturgiï [History of the Carpatho-Rusyn National theatre and drama].
The Rusyns (more precisely, the Carpatho-Rusyns) are the autochthonous East Slavic population of the Carpathian region: Ukrainian Transcarpathia and the adjacent regions of Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, and Romania.
There is also a Rusyn diaspora present in Serbia, Croatia, the USA, Canada, and other states.
The number of Rusyns in the world is a controversial issue, one reason for this being their polyvariant identification.
At present, a significant proportion of ethnic Rusyns consider themselves representatives of an independent people, who are not Ukrainian or Russian.
Padyak, a staunch supporter of the Rusyn ethno-national identity and at the same time a serious academic scientist, made an attempt to trace the development of drama and theatre in the Rusyn environment in parallel with the processes of Rusyn national self-determination.
The author traces the evolution of folk theatre performances to the modern Rusyn national theatre, which is actively being developed in different states with Rusyn inhabitants.
V.
Padyak pays increased attention to theater and drama in the second half of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as well as during the period when Subcarpathian Rus (Transcarpathia) entered the structure of interwar Czechoslovakia and Horthy Hungary.
In contrast, the author hardly examines post-war theater life in the Transcarpathian region, believing that its study is more appropriate in the context of Ukrainian, rather than Rusyn, studies.
This textbook by V.
Padyak, addressed primarily to Rusynist students at the University of Prešov (Slovakia), is of undoubted interest to anyone interested in the history and culture of the Rusyns.

Related Results

Abstract 5409: MEI-344, a novel isoflavone with activity as a mitochondrial oxygenase inhibitor
Abstract 5409: MEI-344, a novel isoflavone with activity as a mitochondrial oxygenase inhibitor
Abstract ME-344, a second-generation derivative of a natural product isoflavone is being developed as a clinical candidate in small cell lung and ovarian cancer by M...
An MRI-Derived Neuroanatomical Atlas of the Fischer 344 Rat Brain
An MRI-Derived Neuroanatomical Atlas of the Fischer 344 Rat Brain
AbstractThis paper reports the development of a high-resolution 3-D MRI atlas of the Fischer 344 adult rat brain. The atlas is a 60 μm isotropic image volume composed of 256 corona...
CHURU-KOHO POTTERY OF LAM DONG PROVINCE IN RELATION TO CHAM POTTERY
CHURU-KOHO POTTERY OF LAM DONG PROVINCE IN RELATION TO CHAM POTTERY
This article examines Churu-Koho pottery in relation to Cham pottery in Central Vietnam and the Central Highlands. Research shows that Churu-Koho pottery (Lam Dong Province) is rel...
Is politics Aung San Suu Kyi’s vocation?
Is politics Aung San Suu Kyi’s vocation?
AbstractWestern human rights activists saw Myanmar’s prominent leader Aung San Suu Kyi as an embodiment of themselves, for which she was awarded the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize for her ...
70 godina časopisa Radovi Šumarskog fakulteta Univerziteta u Sarajevu
70 godina časopisa Radovi Šumarskog fakulteta Univerziteta u Sarajevu
Seventy years of continuous publishing of the Journal “Radovi Šumarskog fakulteta Univerziteta u Sarajevu” (Works of the Faculty of Forestry University of Sarajevo) represents a si...
Ecologies of Socialism: Soviet Gradostroitel'stvo and Late Soviet Socialism
Ecologies of Socialism: Soviet Gradostroitel'stvo and Late Soviet Socialism
The most lasting legacy of the Soviet experience, more so than institutions that persist in the Russian Federation today or the mentalities of citizens of post-Soviet states, was i...
Review of Iurii Shapoval. Oleksandr Shums'kyi: Zhyttia, dolia, nevidomi dokumenty; Doslidzhennia, arkhivni materialy.
Review of Iurii Shapoval. Oleksandr Shums'kyi: Zhyttia, dolia, nevidomi dokumenty; Doslidzhennia, arkhivni materialy.
Book review of Iurii Shapoval. Oleksandr Shums'kyi: Zhyttia, dolia, nevidomi dokumenty; Doslidzhennia, arkhivni materialy [Oleksandr Shums'kyi: Life, Fate, Unknown Documents; Resea...

Back to Top