Academic literature on the topic 'Drohobych (Ukraine)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Drohobych (Ukraine)"

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Ilnytskyi, Vasyl, Nataliya Kantor, and Taras Batiuk. "EVERYDAY LIFE IN DROHOBYCH TEACHER’S INSTITUTE: A NEW DOCUMENT IN HISTORY (1946–1949)." Problems of humanities. History, no. 6/48 (April 27, 2021): 342–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.24919/2312-2595.6/48.228501.

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Summary. The purpose of the article is to publish and analyze an underground document from the Lapayev Archive "Report on Life at the State Teachers’ Institute in Drohobych" (1949) as a source for the history of everyday life at the Drohobych Teachers’ Institute in particular and in Western Ukraine in general. Research methodology – the principles of science, objectivity, historicism, methods of external and internal criticism of sources. The scientific novelty is that for the first time a hitherto unknown document on everyday life at the Drohobych Teachers’ Institute (1949) is introduced into scientific circulation and its analysis is carried out. Conclusions. Thus, the published document ("Report on Life at the State Teachers’ Institute in Drohobych") is an important source for studying the everyday history not only of the Drohobych Institute (1948–1949), but also of the whole of Western Ukraine. It is stored in the Archives of the Center for the Study of the Liberation Movement (Fund 63, Volume 4, Sheet 1‒4). The author of the document is the propaganda officer of the Drohobych OUN supra-district leadership J. Luzhetsky-"Stone" (who in this document signed one of the pseudonyms "5-TR"). The document itself was prepared on August 9, 1949. Although it includes information reports for 1948 – the first half of 1949. Note that the published documents are an important source for a comprehensive study of everyday life Drohobych Institute (1948–1949) in particular and postwar life residents of the Western Ukraine in general. The vocabulary, author’s and editorial features of the sources are preserved in the publication as much as possible. Own and geographical names are given without changes. Only the most obvious grammatical flaws could be corrected. Each document is accompanied by a legend, which indicates the place of storage of the document (name of the archive, fund number, description, case, sheets).
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Underhill, Karen C. "Next Year in Drohobych." East European Politics and Societies: and Cultures 25, no. 3 (July 11, 2011): 581–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0888325410388270.

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In Israeli director Yael Bartana’s 2007 film Mary Koszmary—meaning “Bad Dreams” or “Nightmares”—a young Polish politician delivers a resounding speech to an empty, crumbling, communist-era Stadion Dziesięciolecia in Warsaw. The speech, he says, is an appeal: “This is a call. . . . It is an appeal for life. We want three million Jews to return to Poland, to live with us again. We need you! Please come back!” This article considers the powerful and perhaps disturbing premise of these lines and explores their possible meanings in a contemporary Polish context. What can it mean for Poles and Polish culture to need Jews—and in particular, to need those Jews who can never return? The complex phenomenon of Jewish memory in Poland and Eastern Europe cannot be contained within specific, present-day borders—whether of geography or of academic discipline: similar dynamics to those Bartana has identified in Poland exist throughout the region. Thus, against the background of Bartana’s film, the article considers the growing phenomenon and importance of local Jewish festivals in Poland and present-day Ukraine, focusing in detail on two specific festivals: the annual festival “Encounters with Jewish Culture,” held in Chmielnik, Poland, and the biannual Bruno Schulz Festival in Drohobych, Ukraine. The analysis explores ways that the memory of Polish Jews—and more specifically the figure of the absent Polish Jew—can function as a central element in the construction of new, communal Polish and Ukrainian narratives since the fall of Communism.
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Ilnytskyi, Vasyl, and Maria Yarushak. "TO THE HISTORY OF THE ACTIVITIES OF YOUTH NATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IN THE DROHOBYCH AGRICULTURAL SCHOOL AND THE DROHOBYCH OIL COLLEGE (1950–1951)." Problems of humanities. History, no. 5/47 (March 27, 2021): 427–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.24919/2312-2595.5/47.217759.

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Summary. The purpose of the article is to publish and analyze extracts from the reports on agent cases at the students of the Drohobych Agricultural School and a group of students of the Drohobych Oil College (1951) as a source for the history of functioning of the nationalist youth movement in Drohobych region, and in Ukraine in general. Research methodology – principles of scientific, objectivity, historicism, methods of external and internal critique of sources. The scientific novelty is that for the first time two hitherto unknown documents about the students of the Drohobych Agricultural School and students of the Drohobych Oil College (1951) are published and their analysis is carried out. Conclusions. Thus, the published documents (extracts from agent case reports on students of the Drohobych Agricultural School and a group of students of the Drohobych Oil College) are a real example of the work of law enforcement bodies in the search for youth nationalist organizations. They are stored in the Sectoral State Archives of the State Security Service of Ukraine (Fund 3: the fifth Department of the MGB-KGB of the UkrSSR (1935‒1959), description 246 (1953), case 4, pages 47–49, 53–55, 186–187, 191–194). The first document is an extract from a memorandum "On the results of the agency-operative work of the 5th Department of the MGB of the Drohobych region for March-April 1951" (April 28, 1951), signed by Colonel M. Moroz, the chief of the UMGB of the Drohobych region, and addressed to the Minister of State Security of the USSR, Lieutenant General M. Kovalchuk; the second one is an extract from the report "On the results of the agency-operative work of the 5th Department of the MGB of the Drohobych region for November-December 1951" (January 12, 1952) was sent to the Chief of the 5th Department of MGB of UkrSSR F. Tsvietukhin from the Chief of the UMGB of the Drohobych Region, Major General S. Kozhevnikov, and the Chief of the 5th Department of the UMGB of the Drohobych Region, Major I. Chudinov. It should be noted that the published documents are an important source for a comprehensive study of the formation and functioning of national youth organizations in general and in Drohobych region in particular. The edition retains maximum vocabulary, author’s style and editorial features of the sources. Proper and geographical names are presented without changes. Only the most obvious grammatical errors have been corrected. Each document is accompanied by a legend, indicating the place where the document is stored (archive name, fund number, descriptions, cases, pages).
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4

Krąpiec, Marek, Elżbieta Szychowska-Krąpiec, Leonid Tymoshenko, and Roman Myska. "Dendrochronological dating of St. George’s Orthodox Church in Drohobych, Ukraine." Geochronometria 47, no. 1 (January 1, 2020): 93–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/geochr-2020-0023.

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Abstract St. George’s Orthodox Church in Drohobych is a wooden monument of sacral architecture, recently registered in the UNESCO World Heritage List. However, clear, unequivocal written sources about the origins of the structure are lacking. Absolute dating was attempted with the dendrochronological method, and it was carried out in a noninvasive way due to the status and value of the object. Construction elements of the church were documented with over 40 macrophotographs. The studies were made for selected elements, displaying distinct perpendicular or tangential cross sections. Most of the elements examined represented fir wood. It turned out that the wood used for the construction of this church was contemporaneous and most likely represented a single construction phase. The 124-year chronology based on correlated curves covers the period 1464–1598 AD. Construction elements with the outermost rings retained indicate that the timber was harvested in the 1590s. In most cases, the outermost rings were lacking, which allowed only for dating terminus post quem. The youngest preserved rings (1598 AD) from the church wood apparently reveal the dates of both the wood harvesting and the structure’s construction. Such a dating may indicate that the church mentioned in the sources as purchased in Nadiyevo in 1657 AD could be the basis for the rebuilding of Drohobych St. George’s Orthodox Church, only adapted to the new conditions. The church later underwent renovation, consisting in reconstruction of the dome in 1821 AD.
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5

KHATAYEVA, Tetyana. "CONSTRUCTIONAL CHARACTERISTICS OF SAINT GEORGE CHURCH (1657) LOCATED IN DROHOBYCH, UKRAINE." Journal of Architecture and Planning (Transactions of AIJ) 76, no. 668 (2011): 1989–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.3130/aija.76.1989.

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6

Marples, David R. "The Soviet Collectivization of Western Ukraine, 1948-1949." Nationalities Papers 13, no. 1 (1985): 24–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00905998508408009.

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Western Ukraine comprises those areas of Ukraine annexed by the Soviet Union after September 1939. They are (1) Galicia, made up of the Soviet oblasts of Lviv, Stanislav (now Ivano-Frankivsk), Drohobych (now part of Lviv oblast) and Ternopil; (2) Volynia, made up of Rivne and Volyn oblasts; (3) Bukovyna (Chernivtsi oblast); and (4) Transcarpathia (Zakarpatska oblast). In the interwar period, the Galician and Volynian territories were governed by Poland, Chernivtsi was part of Romania and Transcarpathia was ruled by Czechoslovakia. Whereas the former areas were all annexed by the USSR after the invasion of Eastern Poland in 1939, Transcarpathia became part of the Soviet Union only in June 1945.
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V, Proskuryakov, Ivanov-Kosteckyy S, Fitio A, and Anisimova M. "ARCHITECTURAL, ECONOMIC, AND MENTAL FACTORS OF THE REVIVAL OF HISTORICAL INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN THE CONTEXT OF THE FORMATION OF TERRITORIAL COMMUNITIES OF UKRAINE (ON THE EXAMPLE OF THE RENOVATION OF A SALT FACTORY IN DROHOBYCH)." Architectural Studies 7, no. 1 (April 30, 2021): 66–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.23939/as2021.01.066.

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Terletska, Oksana. "Ecological condition of post-industrial towns of Ukraine based on the case study of Drohobych town." Pedagogy and Psychology of Sport 4, no. 1 (January 4, 2018): 11. http://dx.doi.org/10.12775/pps.2018.001.

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9

Oksana Andriivna, Babelyuk, Koliasa Olena Vasylivna, Kushlyk Oksana Pavlivna, and Smaglii Valeriia Mykhaylivna. "Using Distance EdTech for Remote Foreign Language Teaching During the COVID-19 Lockdown in Ukraine." Arab World English Journal, no. 3 (November 15, 2020): 4–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.24093/awej/elt3.1.

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The situation with a coronavirus challenged the education system and forced educators to shift to a fully E-learning. Many academic institutions were not ready for such a rapid change. The remote learning of foreign languages during the COVID-19 lockdown caused modern teaching technologies to expand the scope of the educational process, broaden its practical orientation, contribute to the intensification of students' independent work, increasing their cognitive activity. The goals of the article include: to define types and specifics of modern edTech for the educational process on the way of transition from no E-Learning to fully E-Learning; to eliminate the role of the Internet as means of information and communication edTech in teaching foreign languages at higher education establishments; to find out the ways of improving students' learning at higher educational establishments, the importance of using distance edTechs and Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, & Challenges (SWOC) analysis of E-learning techniques during the pandemic lockdown. This article also provides the examples of usage of different edTechs in Ukrainian higher education establismens in general. Drohobych Ivan Franko State Pedagogical University, Lviv State University of Life Safety, Odesa National Maritime University in particular.
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Czyżak, Agnieszka. "W „Drohobyczach” – wokół zbioru poetyckiego Serhija Żadana." Narracje o Zagładzie, no. 5 (December 22, 2019): 228–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.31261/noz.2019.05.12.

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Celem artykułu jest analiza kulturowego fenomenu Drohobycza (obecnie terytorium Ukrainy), miasteczka, w którym Bruno Schulz – wielki europejski/żydowski/polski pisarz – żył i umarł podczas drugiej wojny światowej. Pierwsza część zawiera refleksje na temat przedtawień Drohobycza w literaturze (Andrzej Chciuk, Jurij Andruchowycz, Henryk Grynberg). W kolejnej części autorka proponuje interpretację tomu wierszy napisanych w latach 2014–2016 przez ukraińskiego poetę Serhija Żadana, zatutułowanego Drohobycz (w przekładzie Jacka Podsiadło). Wszyscy wyżej wymienieni pisarze traktują Drohobycz jako „miejsce Brunona Schulza", pełne jego śladów i niejako stworzone przez jego prozę.
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Books on the topic "Drohobych (Ukraine)"

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Narysy z istoriï Drohobycha: Vid naĭdavnishykh chasiv do pochatku XXI st. Drohobych: Vydavnyt︠s︡tvo Kolo, 2009.

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Pastukh, Roman. Ridna shkola v Drohobychi. Lʹviv: "Memorial", 1991.

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3

Trajdos, Tadeusz M. Drohobycz: Miasto królewskie i jego kościoły. Warszawa: Stowarzyszenie "Wspólnota Polska", 2001.

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Dovidnyk-poshukivet͡s︡ʹ: Rei͡e︡str osib, pov'i͡a︡zanykh z vyzvolʹnoi͡u︡ borotʹboi͡u︡ na terenakh Drohobychchyny, 1939-1950 : za arkhivnymy dokumentamy. Toronto: Litopys Upa, 2005.

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Drohobyt͡s︡ʹki khramy Vozdvyz͡h︡enni͡a︡ ta Svi͡a︡toho I͡U︡ra u doslidz͡h︡enni͡a︡kh: Druhi chytanni͡a︡ : materialy vystupiv 9 kvitni͡a︡ 2000 r. Drohobych: Vydavnycha firma "Vidrodz͡h︡enni͡a︡", 2000.

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Zynoviĭ, Bervet︠s︡ʹkyĭ, and Skop Lev, eds. Sakralʹne mystet︠s︡tvo Boĭkivshchyny: Treti naukovi chytanni︠a︡ pam'i︠a︡ti Mykhaĭla Drahana : materialy vystupiv na konferent︠s︡iï 19-20 lystopada 1998 roku, m. Drohobych. Drohobych: "Vidrodz︠h︡enni︠a︡", 1998.

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Drohobyt︠s︡ʹki khramy Vozdvyz︠h︡enni︠a︡ ta Svi︠a︡toho I︠U︡ra u doslidz︠h︡enni︠a︡kh: Pershi chytanni︠a︡ : materialy vystupiv 23 chervni︠a︡ 1998 r., m. Drohobych = Wooder [sic] templees [sic] of Drohobych churches of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross and St. Georges [sic] by the eyes of reseerchers [sic] ; first readings. Drohobych: "Vidrodz︠h︡enni︠a︡", 1998.

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Dovidnyk-Poshukivets': Reiestr Osib, Pov'iazanykh Z Vyzvol'noiu Borot'boiu Na Terenakh Drohobychchyny, 1939-1950: Za Arkhivnymy Dokumentamy. Not Avail, 2005.

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