Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Narrative Complexes about Sign Boards in Moscow by F. Distribuendi and S. Krzhizhanovsky (Imperial and Soviet Perspectives).
View through CrossRef
The study appeals to two works on Moscow sign boards: F. Distribuendi’s brochure and S. Krzhizhanovsky’s essay were aimed at examining the authors’ final conclusions and visions of both the imperial and soviet in conceptual form, rather than an ideological marker of chronological time of analysis of street sign boards in Moscow. The maximum coverage of the components of each of the stories about the decoration of sign boards guaranteed the presentation of these authorized stories as a completed narrative complex, which excludes the possibility of involving these works in premature, external to the consistent course of each of these stories, comparison.An analysis of Distribuendi’s narrative complex of Moscow signs showed that the continuing deterioration in the artistic level of ordinary signboards could not preserve the legendary history of their origins and preserve the possibility of reviews of these signboards as a new historical monument.A possible reform of the design of signboards in the form of unified completed forms is hindered not by the lack of calculations but only by the lack of omnipotent desire. F. Distribuendi’s vision of the desire for the final basis of the reform in the design of signboards connects this reform to all previous reforms in the empire, which were implemented only by the power and makes the whole narrative complex of Distribuendi’s work an organic imperial vision. Analysis of the narrative complex of S. Krzhizhanovsky’s essay on Moscow signs made it possible to identify a certain core in it, which streamlines the analysis of the presence of signboards in the city. This core was the vision of capturing the signboards of visual attention and memory of the average person as result of the organization of thinking in a pattern.The last option of thinking can level the sense of difference between people and everyday phenomena. Therefore, the liberation of sight and attention of the sign, an instruction of Soviet institutions from the performances of symbolic signs as the most powerful pattern of hunting for the buyer, was proposed to study further, but under the Soviet vision: transmission of knowledge about the final victory over thinking in patterns on sign boards to new generations.
National University of Kyiv - Mohyla Academy
Title: Narrative Complexes about Sign Boards in Moscow by F. Distribuendi and S. Krzhizhanovsky (Imperial and Soviet Perspectives).
Description:
The study appeals to two works on Moscow sign boards: F.
Distribuendi’s brochure and S.
Krzhizhanovsky’s essay were aimed at examining the authors’ final conclusions and visions of both the imperial and soviet in conceptual form, rather than an ideological marker of chronological time of analysis of street sign boards in Moscow.
The maximum coverage of the components of each of the stories about the decoration of sign boards guaranteed the presentation of these authorized stories as a completed narrative complex, which excludes the possibility of involving these works in premature, external to the consistent course of each of these stories, comparison.
An analysis of Distribuendi’s narrative complex of Moscow signs showed that the continuing deterioration in the artistic level of ordinary signboards could not preserve the legendary history of their origins and preserve the possibility of reviews of these signboards as a new historical monument.
A possible reform of the design of signboards in the form of unified completed forms is hindered not by the lack of calculations but only by the lack of omnipotent desire.
F.
Distribuendi’s vision of the desire for the final basis of the reform in the design of signboards connects this reform to all previous reforms in the empire, which were implemented only by the power and makes the whole narrative complex of Distribuendi’s work an organic imperial vision.
Analysis of the narrative complex of S.
Krzhizhanovsky’s essay on Moscow signs made it possible to identify a certain core in it, which streamlines the analysis of the presence of signboards in the city.
This core was the vision of capturing the signboards of visual attention and memory of the average person as result of the organization of thinking in a pattern.
The last option of thinking can level the sense of difference between people and everyday phenomena.
Therefore, the liberation of sight and attention of the sign, an instruction of Soviet institutions from the performances of symbolic signs as the most powerful pattern of hunting for the buyer, was proposed to study further, but under the Soviet vision: transmission of knowledge about the final victory over thinking in patterns on sign boards to new generations.
Related Results
CLIMATE-2019 Program committee
CLIMATE-2019 Program committee
NOTITLE. Chairman
Mokhov Igor
RAS academecian, Dr. Sci., Professor
...
Soviet Shipbuilding: Productivity improvement Efforts
Soviet Shipbuilding: Productivity improvement Efforts
Constant demand for new naval and commercial vessels has created special conditions for the Government-owned Soviet shipbuilding industry, which practically has not been affected b...
A Survey on Beagle Boards and its Applications
A Survey on Beagle Boards and its Applications
<p>This paper consists of an overview and a brief description of all the Beagle Boards from the original Beagle Board released in 2008 to the latest board BeagleV released in...
Soviet Union in World War II
Soviet Union in World War II
The Soviet Union in World War II is the story of several wars. When World War II started, the Soviet Union was effectively an ally of Nazi Germany in a relatively conventional Euro...
Sino-Soviet Relations, 1949–1991
Sino-Soviet Relations, 1949–1991
Less than three months after the founding of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) in October 1949, Mao Zedong, the chairman of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), arrived in Moscow ...
Ionic complexes of biodegradable polyelectrolytes
Ionic complexes of biodegradable polyelectrolytes
Biopolymers are polymers produced by living organisms. A more broad classification would embrace also those polymers synthesized from renewable sources which are able to display bi...
Schooling Experiences of Canadian Students with Post-Soviet Backgrounds in Toronto: An Underrepresented Perspective
Schooling Experiences of Canadian Students with Post-Soviet Backgrounds in Toronto: An Underrepresented Perspective
Abstract
Research on educational experiences of post-Soviet[1]migrants in Canada and North America is very scant. In a way, their voices have remained mute. The few...
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...

