Academic literature on the topic 'Karelia (Russia)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Karelia (Russia)"

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Kangaspuro, Markku. "Finnish Project: Karelian Workers’ Commune." Journal of Finnish Studies 15, no. 1-2 (2011): 40–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/28315081.15.1.2.05.

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Abstract The establishment of Soviet Karelia in 1920 resulted from a captivating mix of factors: the Russian Civil War, the normalization of Finnish-Russian state relations, the institutionalization of the Soviet Union's state structure, and the emancipation of the minority nations of the former Russian empire. After the independence of Finland, Soviet Russia met Finnish demands to expand its borders to eastern Karelia. The establishment of Karelian national autonomy was a compromise that both parties could accept in order to clear a path to the Tartu peace negotiations of 1920. Karelia's Finnish leadership needed American Finns to meet the demand for a qualified workforce in its timber industry and to ensure that the Finnish-Karelian proportion of the republic's population would not drop below 40 to 50 percent. It was the misfortune of American Finns that they arrived in Karelia at a moment when the Soviet Union turned toward Stalinism, resulting in purges and the removal of Finns from the leadership of Karelia.
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Kondrateva, Svetlana V., and Ekaterina A. Shlapeko. "Travel preferences of Finnish cross-border tourists: Opportunities and limitations for Russian Karelia." Geographia Polonica 94, no. 4 (2021): 555–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.7163/gpol.0220.

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The study aims to examine travel preferences of Finnish cross-border tourists with special reference to the Republic of Karelia, Russia. Data were collected using paper-based and online surveys from 300 respondents travelling from Finland to the Russian Karelia. Although cross-border tourists are a significant part in the inbound tourist flow to Russian Karelia, several obstacles for this type of tourism have been revealed. Measures to stimulate Finnish tourists to travel to Russian Karelia are suggested. The results of this study can be used to improve Karelian tourist products by providing services as expected by tourists. The findings are limited to visitors of Russian Karelia and should therefore be interpreted with caution.
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Lähteenmäki, Maria. "A Sense of Terijoki: The Discourse of Karelia in the Karelian Borderlands." Journal of Finnish Studies 16, no. 2 (2013): 29–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/28315081.16.2.04.

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Abstract Karelia, the borderland between Finland and Russia, has been a “land of quarrels” for centuries. The Swedish kingdom, the Novgorod realm, and the Russian Empire, one after another, have colonized the area. In 1812 the southwest part of Karelia, the Karelian Isthmus, was incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Finland. This incorporation was practical: for hundreds of years the area had already been a region of Finnish-speaking people. After Finland's declaration of independence (1917) and civil war (1918) and the birth of Soviet Russia (1917), political tensions sharpened in the Karelian Isthmus. In those days, the borderline between Finnish Terijoki and Russian St. Petersburg became the most important ideological barrier between revolutionary Russia and Finland, where the right-wing Whites had won the civil war and begun an unequalled campaign against the Bolshevist power. In 1939 and again in 1944, Soviet troops occupied the Karelian Isthmus, and the area ever since has been a part of the Soviet Union/Russia.
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Mironova, Valentina Petrovna, and Liudmila Ivanovna Ivanova. "MORE ON THE STUDY OF THE FOLKLORE TRADITION OF KARELIANS." Yearbook of Finno-Ugric Studies 15, no. 3 (2021): 424–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.35634/2224-9443-2021-15-3-424-432.

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The article is a review of scholarly works by Karelian folklore researcher, Cand. Sci. (Philology), Merited Scientist of Karelia Alexandra Stepanovna Stepanova. Her biography is briefly presented, the collecting and scientific activity of the researcher is examined, the contribution to the study of the Karelian lamentation tradition and folk culture as a whole is analyzed in the article. A. S. Stepanova made more than fifty expedition trips to the various regions of Karelia during her working at the ILLH KRC RAS, she recorded language and folklore-ethnographic material from representatives of all groups of Karelians living both in the Republic of Karelia and in the neighbouring territories. She is the author of a number of scientific collections, monographs and more than 50 articles. She introduced the samples of the Karelian lamentations into the scientific circulation for the first time, as well as their translations into Russian. A special merit of A. S. Stepanova consists in compiling the “Dictionary of the language of Karelian lamentations”, the appearance of which has set a new direction in Karelian science - linguistic folkloristics. Nowadays, the researcher’s scientific works stay relevant among the scientific community both in Russia and abroad. The honorary titles of a foreign corresponding member of the Society of Finnish Literature (Suomalaisen kirjallisuuden seura), of the Kalevala Society (Kalevalaseura), of the Finno-Ugric Society (Suomalais-ugrilainen seura) are the evidences of this. Scientific collections and anthologies on Karelian folklore are actively used for the study of the native (Karelian) language, oral folk art and folk culture in the universities and schools of the Republic of Karelia. In addition, Stepanova’s books are popular among all the people who express the interest in the folk culture.
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Shevchenko, Т. I. "Sergius (Stragorodsky), Archbishop of Finland and Vyborg — features of pastoral service in political and sociocultural contexts." Orthodoxia, no. 2 (May 14, 2024): 128–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.53822/2712-9276-2024-2-128-173.

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The article is devoted to the analysis of the “Finnish period” of the pastoral service of Sergius (Stragorodsky), future Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia. The period covers the years 1905–1917, during which there was an exacerbation of Russian-Finnish relations. In Finnish historiography, these years are referred to as another period of russification (1908–1917), while in Russian historiography, they are marked by attempts to Finnize and Lutheranize Russian Karelia. Formed in 1892 as the vicariate of the St. Petersburg diocese, the Vyborgand Finnish diocese of the Orthodox Russian Church united the parishes of the Grand Duchy of Finland, to which the Vyborg province (Old Finland) belonged, annexed to the Grand Duchy by Alexander I in 1811. In 1913, the Serdobolsk vicariate was established in the diocese for Karelian parishes. Archbishop Sergius was tasked with countering “pan-Finnish propaganda” in Karelia and defending the interests of the Russian Church in the Grand Duchy, the vast majority of whose population adhered to Lutheranism. The Karelians inhabited the eastern part of the Grand Duchy of Finland, Olonets and Belomorsk Karelia. Through joint efforts of church and provincial authorities in these regions, the process of Lutheranization of Karelians directed by Finnish nationalists was stopped. However, Archbishop Sergius policy in the Grand Duchy caused rejection from local elites and church figures. Relations with Russian politicians were also complicated for the Archbishop of Finland. This was largely due to the exacerbation of Finnish and Karelian issues. The article analyzes the political and socio-cultural contexts of the pastoral service of Archbishop Sergius, emphasizes important facts of his biography that help understand the logic of his decisions, presents preliminary conclusions based on a review of the modern historiography of the issue, which has not received sufficient attention from Russian researchers to date.
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Chikina, Natalia V. "Eino G. Karhu (to the Centenary of Birth)." Bibliography and Bibliology, no. 2 (August 3, 2023): 92–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.25281/2411-2305-2023-2-92-100.

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The article is devoted to E.G. Karhu, Doctor of Philology, Russian literature scholar, specialist in the literature of Karelia and Karelian-Finnish folklore, who worked at the Institute of Linguistics, Literature and History of the Karelian Research Centre RAS. Special attention is paid to bibliography of his scholarly works. A detailed bibliography of the scientist’s papers published from 2013 to 2023 is presented. The actuality of the article is the analysis of E.G. Karhu’s scientific ideas and his bibliographic works. Such a study is carried out for the first time. Academic works of E.G. Karhu are an integral part of the literature of Karelia. His generalizing papers are of interest for both Russian and foreign researchers. The aim of this study is to spot E.G. Karhu’s publications and the literature about his life and work published in the 20th—21st centuries. Publications in Russian, Karelian, and Finnish languages published in Russia both in mass media and as separate books have been identified.
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Yarovoy, Gleb. "EU-Russian cross-border cooperation between (de-)securitization and paradiplomacy: In search of new approaches towards cross-border governance." Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. International relations 14, no. 2 (2021): 156–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.21638/spbu06.2021.203.

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For almost 30 years, cross-border cooperation between Russia and the European Union has been balancing between cooperation and control, geopolitics and paradiplomacy. In different periods of relations, the dominance of one or another logic of development is noticeable. In the “post-Crimean” period of international relations in Europe, cross-border cooperation remained one of the few spheres of interaction between Russia and the EU which showed somewhat positive dynamics, or at least had not degraded significantly. The Karelian section of the Russian state border attracted close attention from both Russian and Western researchers in the 1990s due to the rapid pace of institutionalization of cross-border cooperation. The creation of Euregio “Karelia” in 2000 and the launch of cross-border cooperation programs within the framework of the European Neighborhood Policy helped to maintain research interest. In recent years, the negative dynamics of relations between Russia and the EU has led to a noticeable decrease in the research interest to some issues of EU-Russian cross-border cooperation. At the same time, cross-border cooperation projects continue to have a positive impact on the development of border communities, and the cross-border governance system continues to develop and transform. Thus, the study of the dynamics of cross-border cooperation in the Euregio “Karelia” is still of scientific interest. It makes it possible to answer specific questions about the peculiarities of interaction between Karelia and Finland, as well as more general questions related to EU-Russian relations. Based on the analysis of discursive cooperation practices inherent to different participants of the cross-border cooperation in the Euregio “Karelia”, the article shows why positive interaction of actors is still possible, and what vector of development can be expected for the regional cooperation between Russia and the EU in the medium-term perspective.
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Dorian, Nancy C. "Anneli Sarhimaa, Syntactic transfer, contact-induced change, and the evolution of bilingual mixed codes: Focus on Karelian-Russian language alternation. Helsinki: Finnish Literature Society, 1999. Pp. 340." Language in Society 30, no. 2 (2001): 308–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0047404501342057.

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The data that underlie Anneli Sarhimaa's excellent study were gathered between 1989 and 1992, under restrictive field circumstances. Visits to Karelia required what the author terms “intricate co-operation with academic and public authorities in Russia” (p. 76), and the duration of any stay was limited to a few weeks. From her home base in Finland, she made short visits to three Central Karelian villages in the summers of 1989 and 1991, working with additional Central Karelian speakers resident in the capital city of Karelia in the winters of 1990 and 1991; in 1992, a two-week trip allowed her to work in nine Tver Karelian villages in central Russia. That these compressed visits produced 30-some hours of taped interviews and 31 sets of translation-task data (15 Central Karelian, 16 Tver Karelian) does credit to her careful advance planning; the frankness with which she points to limitations in the resulting data does equal credit to her scholarly scrupulousness.
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Nielsen, Henrik D. "State And Non-State Cross-Border Cooperation Between North Karelia And Its (Un) Familiar Russian Neighbors." GEOGRAPHY, ENVIRONMENT, SUSTAINABILITY 14, no. 2 (2021): 42–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.24057/2071-9388-2020-211.

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Russia has often been seen in a negative light and as a difficult place for foreigners to operate, both currently and in the past. To a large extent, this is also true for Finland, which has fought several wars against its eastern neighbor and whose border with Russia has been closed for years. However, Finland, and in particular North Karelia, also has a long history of cross-border cooperation with Russian partners.This paper seeks to analyze why North Karelian governmental and NGO actors choose to engage in cross-border cooperation with Russian counterparts and explain why they have been so successful.The answers are sought via a historical review of the relationship between Finland and Russia, in particular the role and importance of Karelia as a source of both conflict and consolidation. Furthermore, semi-structured interviews with Finnish cross-border cooperation actors are utilized in the analysis. The theoretical approach is grounded in (un)familiarity, which is used to explain the pull-push effects of the border.In conclusion, it was found that the Finnish actors harbor a historical feeling of connectedness and nostalgia towards the Karelian area which pulls them across the border. Because of the proximity they see cross-border cooperation as a natural extension of their work. Finally, the success is connected to the increased familiarity and close personal relations that have been build up over the years.
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Pitukhina, Maria, Oleg Tolstoguzov, Lyubov Kulakova, Eugene Pitukhin, and Ivan Radikov. "Foreign labor migration control in Russian regions using multicultural barometer (by the example of the Republic of Karelia)." E3S Web of Conferences 284 (2021): 11008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202128411008.

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The article deals with foreign labor migration flows control as well as migration monitoring which are important for the Russian Federation regions’economy development. A new migration monitoring toolkit is proposed by the authors - Multicultural Barometer. It allows to quantify migration indicators in a region from 4 various angles: labor market; national identity; migrants’ adaptation; migrants’integration. The research data is coming from open sources (Kareliastat, Federal Migration Service of the Republic of Karelia, Ministry of Labor and Employment of the Republic of Karelia, data obtained from Centers for Interethnic Cooperation in Karelian municipalities); both migrants’ pilot survey and host community survey organized in 18 municipalities of the Republic of Karelia. The study conducted in Karelia seems to be important in a context of its geographical location (on a border with Finland) highlighting both successful practices and developing new tools for migration monitoring aimed at scientifically based solutions for migration control. Multicultural barometer as a tool was recommended by the Federal Agency on Ethnic Issues of Russia (FADN) and Strategic Initiatives Agency in 2017 as best regional practice for further implementation all over the Russian Federation.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Karelia (Russia)"

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Baron, Nicholas Paul. "Soviet Karelia, 1920-1937 : a study of space and power in Stalinist Russia." Thesis, University of Birmingham, 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.246507.

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Welker, Lauren ELizabeth. "Rural Inequality in the Republic of Karelia: Considering Nonfarm Communities in Russian Rural Studies." The Ohio State University, 2011. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1293723070.

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Wright, Alistair S. "The establishment of Bolshevik power on the Russian periphery : Soviet Karelia, 1918-1919." Thesis, University of Glasgow, 2012. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/3105/.

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Using an array of original materials from Russian regional and central archives this detailed study of Soviet Karelia from 1918-1919 is the first to appear in English after the fall of the Soviet Union. It adds to the still limited number of regional studies of the civil war period and using the Karelian districts as a case study discusses how the Bolsheviks consolidated power on the periphery, what factors hindered this process and what were the sources of resistance. Karelia is unique for a combination of reasons. First, it is a grain deficit region and so was always in need of help with the supply of grain from the Volga and other parts of central Russia. Second, the political influence of the Left Socialist Revolutionary party (Left SRs) continued for a considerable time after the events of July 1918. The thesis explores how power was transferred in the region following the October revolution and how the planned political objectives of the Bolsheviks were stalled by the lack of political control in the districts not least of all, for most of 1918, because of the influence of the Left SRs. However, despite political, economic, social and military crises the Bolsheviks gained more experience in power as the civil war progressed and a semblance of order emerged from the chaos. They gained enough control over the food supply shortages for the population to subsist and increased their control in key Soviet institutions, such as the provincial security police (the Cheka) and the Red Army, which ultimately ensured the survival of the Bolshevik regime and victory in the civil war.
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Sapwell, Mark Andrew. "Art of accumulation : the role of rock art palimpsests in Fennoscandia 4500-1200 BC." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2014. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.648511.

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Cvejnová, Barbora. "Finsko-ruské vztahy po vstupu Finska do EU." Master's thesis, Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze, 2009. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-15473.

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The master thesis describes the Finnish-Russian relations after 1995, that means the year when Finland joined the EU. The current mutual relations are considered to be excellent even in spite of Finland's negative experience from the past. The aim of the thesis is to analyze Finnish-Russian relations and to outline their individual fields. The question is whether the excellent relations will be continued or if there are any factors that could impair the development of the relations. The question might also be to which extent the experience from the past could determine some of the issues, such as Finland's joining the NATO or the Karelian question.
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Anders, Rainer-Elk. "Global change, regional response : the (trans)formation of Russian borders : a case study of the Republic of Karelia and Khabarovskiy kray, 1992-2006." Thesis, University of Warwick, 2008. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/2266/.

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This thesis is about the renegotiation of Russia’s Far Eastern and Northwestern borders as political and economic spaces. The disintegration of the Soviet Union was accompanied by the opening of these formerly closed borders which provided Russia’s border-regions with opportunities to develop links within the post-Soviet, as well as international political and economic landscapes. From 1992 onwards, their ability to cope with unfolding economic crisis and political uncertainty, which characterized the process of transition in Russia, was considered to be tied to establishing economic and political cross-border links with neighbouring European and Northeast Asian countries. Using the Republic of Karelia and Khabarovskiy kray as case studies, their development and that of their borders as political and economic spaces is analysed, applying the analytical framework developed in this thesis, according to which the complexity of borders can be best grasped by assessing the activities of border actors and institutions at all levels of governance, as well as the interaction of factors pertaining to the border’s spatio-infrastructural, economic, political and socio-cultural dimensions. The findings show that both regions’ borders have been renegotiated to different extents, but that neither the Republic of Karelia nor Khabarovskiy kray have been able to utilise their borders as opportunity structures to the extent originally anticipated. Main problems have been the distinct lack of scope for regional and local state and non-state actors to get sufficiently involved in the governance of their borders as well as the imbalance between the Asian and European vectors in Russian policy-making. The thesis concludes by proposing a system of multi-layered, heterarchic political and economic governance on both regions’ borders with the development of border-spanners and border-spanning institutions at the centre of such a strategy.
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Tew-Street, Fraser Lewis Edward. "Narratives of history and the discursive construction of national identity in the Russian Republic of Karelia." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/11703.

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Although an element of our quotidian existence the manner in which national identity is produced is one of the most contested problems in the contemporary social sciences. One method of examining the production of national identity is to study the mechanism through which such identities are constructed in discourse. This study considers the use of historical narratives in the construction of differing formulations of national identity in the Russian Republic of Karelia. Using the tools of critical discourse analysis this study surveys the production of varying historical narratives in the Republic of Karelia and the fashion in which such narratives contribute to producing or deconstructing competing conceptions of national identity. This thesis uses an analysis of both mass media discourse and interview data to provide a thorough illustration of the production of narratives of Karelian history on public and private levels and their use in engendering or refuting opposing notions of Karelian identity. It shall examine how various historical events and tendencies are incorporated into contrasting narratives of the historical development of the Karelian people and their Russian, Finnish and Vepsian counterparts and how such narratives are used to justify or invalidate current political and social realities. The relationship between such narratives of history and other aspects of identity production is investigated alongside the difficulties of ethnic Karelians in producing and promoting such narratives to sustain an image of Karelian national identity. It shall also demonstrate the manner in which Karelian identity can be positioned through the use of such historical narratives as closer to or more distant from Russian or Finnish national identity. The narration of a history of Karelia as an area and the manner in which this can be deployed to incorporate or distance the region from conceptions of Russian or Finno-Ugric identity is also made evident.
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Carius, de Barros Karina. "THE KARELIA CROSS-BORDER COOPERATION PROGRAMME : A soft space on the Finnish-Russian hard borders." Thesis, Blekinge Tekniska Högskola, Institutionen för fysisk planering, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:bth-16751.

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The study analyzes the Karelia cross-border cooperation programme and its activity under the theoretical framework of soft spaces, exploring the processes through which it overcomes the administrative and political boundaries of the Finnish-Russian ‘hard borders’. The ability of these cross-border areas to cooperate may appear to conflict with the geopolitical context in which they are embedded. The historical path, however, reveals a process where conflicts over changes of borders and political scenarios coexisted with the sharing of spatial identities and development challenges. The study demonstrates how stakeholders are motivated both by functional needs of cooperation towards regional development, as well as desires to change existent practices in the Russian side. Through informal and semi-formal processes of negotiation employed by several stakeholders, the regions attempt to overcome the clashes between EU, Finnish and Russian political and administrative discourses. Thus, it is argued that the cross-border cooperation programme constitutes a soft space in-between regional, national and supranational levels, as well as an enabler of other soft spaces in the local crossborder level.
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Shurilov, Alexander Cuney Michel Lespinasse Marc Kushnerenko Vladimir. "Métallogenèse de l'uranium dans la région de Ladoga (Karélie, Russie)." S. l. : Nancy 1, 2008. http://www.scd.uhp-nancy.fr/docnum/SCD_T_2008_0022_SHURILOV.pdf.

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Avalon, Jillian. "Life and Death: Spiritual Philosophy in Anna Karenina." Scholarship @ Claremont, 2013. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/772.

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This paper examines the structure, title, epigraph, and spiritual philosophy of Leo Tolstoy’s great novel, Anna Karenina. The intricate structure of the novel can leave more questions than it answers, and as the novel was written at such a critical, complex time of Tolstoy’s life, the ideas the characters struggle with in Anna Karenina are of both daily and cosmic importance. Considering influences and criticism of the novel, the method of Tolstoy’s vision of living well as shown in Anna Karenina leads to a very specific and intricate spiritual philosophy. It is also found that the novel’s structure and title are in conflict.
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Books on the topic "Karelia (Russia)"

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Kordi︠u︡kova, Tatʹi︠a︡na Nikolaevna. Prokuratura Respubliki Karelii︠a︡: Istorii︠a︡ i sovremennostʹ. Izdatelʹskiĭ dom PIN, IP Markov N.A., 2012.

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Hokkanen, Lawrence. Karelia: A Finnish-American couple in Stalin's Russia. North Star Press of St. Cloud, 1991.

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Melʹnikov, I. V. (Igorʹ Valerʹevich) and Spiridonov, A. M. (Andreĭ Mikhaĭlovich), eds. Osnovy arkheologii Karelii: Uchebnoe posobie. PetrGU, 2004.

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Vogeler, Heinrich. Heinrich Vogeler in Karelien, 1925-1936: Aquarelle und Zeichnungen : Katalog zu den Ausstellungen in Neubrandenburg, Worpswede, und Tübingen mit Leihgaben aus dem Staatlichen Karelischen Landeskundemuseum Petrosawodsk. Edited by Hoffmeister Christine. Worpsweder Verlag, 1992.

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Baron, Nick. Soviet Karelia: Politics, planning and terror in Stalin's Russia, 1920-1939. Routledge, 2007.

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Putkinen, Niko. Late Weichselian deglaciation chronology and palaeoenvironments in northern Karelia, NW Russia. Geological Survey of Finland, 2011.

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Baron, Nick. Soviet Karelia: Politics, planning and terror in Stalin's Russia, 1920-1939. Routledge, 2007.

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Sihvo, Hannes. Karjalan kuvat: Maalaustaidetta vanhasta Karjalasta. Tammi, 1986.

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Saksa, A. I. Drevni︠a︡i︠a︡ Karelii︠a︡ v kont︠s︡e I-nachale II tysi︠a︡cheletii︠a︡ n. ė.: Proiskhozhdenie, istorii︠a︡ i kulʹtura naselenii︠a︡ letopisnoĭ Karelʹskoĭ zemli. Nestor-Istorii︠a︡, 2010.

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Russia) Mezhdunarodnai͡a nauchno-prakticheskai͡a konferent͡sii͡a "Tolerantnostʹ: iskusstvo zhitʹ vmeste" (2006 Petrozavodsk. Толерантность: Iskusstvo zhitʹ vmeste : materialy Mezhdunarodnoĭ nauchno-prakticheskoĭ konferent͡sii (15-16 noi͡abri͡a 2006 goda). Izd-vo PetrGU, 2007.

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Book chapters on the topic "Karelia (Russia)"

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Antoshchenko, Aleksandr V., Valentina V. Volokhova, and Irina S. Shtykova. "War Memorials in Karelia: A Place of Sorrow or Glory?" In War and Memory in Russia, Ukraine and Belarus. Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-66523-8_16.

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Mastalerz, M., M. Glikson, B. A. Stankiewicz, I. B. Volkova, and R. M. Bustin. "Organic and mineral matter in a Precambrian shungite deposit from Karelia, Russia." In Organic Matter and Mineralisation: Thermal Alteration, Hydrocarbon Generation and Role in Metallogenesis. Springer Netherlands, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-015-9474-5_6.

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Liikanen, Ilkka. "Civil Society and the Reconstitution of Russian Political Space: the Case of the Republic of Karelia." In Media, Culture and Society in Putin’s Russia. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230583078_2.

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Biske, N. S., T. P. Bubnova, and A. G. Nikiforov. "Micron-Sized Mineral Inclusions and Impurity Phases in Graphite from the Ihala Deposit, Karelia, Russia." In Springer Proceedings in Earth and Environmental Sciences. Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-23390-6_54.

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Matveeva, Tatiana, Yury V. Fedorenko, and Eystein S. Husebye. "The Karelian Regional Seismic Network in NW Russia." In NATO Science Series: IV: Earth and Environmental Sciences. Springer Netherlands, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6815-7_11.

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Kardanova, Nataliya. "Верительная грамота Петра Первого в Светлейшую Республику в контексте российско-венецианских дипломатических отношений." In Biblioteca di Studi Slavistici. Firenze University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-6453-723-8.07.

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In 1710-1711, at the time of preparation for the Prut campaign, Peter I sent three envoys to Venice, namely Urbich, Boris and Karetta. In 1716-1720, Becklemishev was appointed permanent Russuan economic representative in Venice. The article presents an analysis of credential letters of Peter the Great’s envoys in Venice in connection with the pre-existing tradition and with due regard to the specifics of the Russian diplomatic ceremonial. The author aims to describe stylistic specifics of Peter I’s credential letter and to determine its role for the subsequent tradition.
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Sundelin, Anna. "Settling Down and Setting Up: Itinerant Peddlers from Russian Karelia as Shopkeepers in Late Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century Finland." In Encounters and Practices of Petty Trade in Northern Europe, 1820–1960. Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-98080-1_13.

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AbstractThe chapter analyzes mobile traders from Russian Karelia who abandoned their itinerant livelihood and settled down in Finland in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. Many of these former peddlers opened up stores in the Finnish countryside, making use of their skills as traders and previously formed networks to keep their stores well supplied. The analysis revolves around the relationship between local residents and strangers settling down. By combining ethnographical sources with newspaper writings and advertisements the chapter offers new insights into the transition from itinerant peddling to storekeeping as well as the experiences of migrant entrepreneurs in Finland at the turn of the twentieth century.
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Kostiainen, Auvo. "The Finns of Soviet Karelia as a Target of Stalin’s Terror." In Ethnic and National Issues in Russian and East European History. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230596931_14.

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Kosterov, Andrei, Elena S. Sergienko, Petr V. Kharitonskii, Svetlana Yu Yanson, and Irina A. Vasilieva. "Low-Temperature Magnetic Properties and Magnetic Mineralogy of the Ropruchey Sill (Russian Karelia)." In Springer Geophysics. Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-90437-5_16.

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Morson, Gary Saul. "10. Texts with Blanks. This Page Left Intentionally Blank: Absences in Anna Karenina." In Teaching Nineteenth-Century Russian Literature, edited by Deborah Martinsen, Cathy Popkin, and Irina Reyfman. Academic Studies Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781618113603-014.

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Conference papers on the topic "Karelia (Russia)"

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Nikiforov, Alexander. "ENGINEERING GEOLOGICAL ZONING OF KARELIA (RUSSIA)." In 19th SGEM International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference EXPO Proceedings. STEF92 Technology, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2019/1.2/s02.023.

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Shchiptsov, Vladimir. "QUARTZ OF THE KARELIA-KOLA REGION (RUSSIA)." In 15th International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference SGEM2015. Stef92 Technology, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2015/b11/s1.050.

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Dubovikova, Z., and Y. Polekhovsky. "Some Special Features of Kimozero Kimberlites of Onega Flexure (Karelia, Russia)." In 3rd France-Russia Seminar. EDP Sciences, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/names2007020.

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Nikiforov, Alexander. "MINERAGENY OF GRAPHITE OF THE IHALA FIELD (NORTH RUSSIA,KARELIA)." In 19th SGEM International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference EXPO Proceedings. STEF92 Technology, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2019/1.1/s01.040.

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Skamnitskaya, Lubov. "MINERALOGI-TECHNOLOGICAL EVALUATION OF GIRVAS OCCURRENCE VEIN QUARTZ (KARELIA, RUSSIA." In 19th SGEM International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference EXPO Proceedings. STEF92 Technology, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2019/1.3/s04.113.

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Yakovlev, Evgeny, Igor Tokarev, Galina Borodulina, Igor Kamensky, and Vladimir Skiba. "Chemical Stability vs. Isotope Changes in Ferrous Mineral Water (Karelia, Northwest Russia)." In Goldschmidt2020. Geochemical Society, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.46427/gold2020.2960.

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Shchiptsov, Vladimir. "GEOLOGICAL AND ECONOMIC EVALUATION OF QUARTZ FROM THE REPUBLIC OF KARELIA, RUSSIA." In 14th SGEM GeoConference on SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGIES IN GEOLOGY, EXPLORATION AND MINING. Stef92 Technology, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2014/b11/s1.019.

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Shchiptsov, Vladimir. "HIGH-MAGNESIAN RAW MATERIALS: MINERAL PRODUCTS OF THE KARELIA-KOLA REGION (RUSSIA)." In 15th International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference SGEM2015. Stef92 Technology, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2015/b11/s1.028.

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Stepanova, S., та E. Kropinova. "ПРОГРАММЫ ПРИГРАНИЧНОГО СОТРУДНИЧЕСТВА КАК ИНСТРУМЕНТ СТИМУЛИРОВАНИЯ РАЗВИТИЯ ИННОВАЦИЙ В СФЕРЕ ТУРИМА". У Perspektivy social`no-ekonomicheskogo razvitiia prigranichnyh regionov 2019. Институт экономики - обособленное подразделение Федерального исследовательского центра "Карельский научный центр Российской академии наук", 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.36867/br.2019.94.26.061.

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Рассмотрены конкретные примеры проектов, реализуемых в рамках Программ приграничного сотрудничества Литва Польша Россия и Карелия по направлению туризм с позиции внедрения инноваций в сферу туризма Республики Карелия и Калининградской области. The authors present specific projects implemented in the framework of the LithuaniaPoland Russia and Karelia crossborder cooperation Programs in the field of tourism. Special attention is paid to analysing tourism innovations that have emerged as a result of the projects aimed at cooperation and tourism development in the border regions such as of the Republic of Karelia as welll as Kaliningrad regionand the EU countries.
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Ibragimova, Aisylu. "SUBFOSSIL CLADOCERA FROM BOREAL LAKE GAHKOZERO (THE REPUBLIC OF KARELIA, RUSSIA) AS PALEOENVIRONMENTAL PROXIES." In 17th International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference SGEM2017. Stef92 Technology, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2017/41/s19.075.

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Reports on the topic "Karelia (Russia)"

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Berlina, Anna, and Alexey Trubin. Transition to a bioeconomy in Northwest Russia: regional cases of the Republic of Karelia and Murmansk oblast. Nordregio, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.6027/r2019:10.1403-2503.

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Berlina, Anna, and Alex Trubin. Transition to a bioeconomy in Northwest Russia: regional cases of the Republic of Karelia and Murmansk oblast. Nordregio, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.30689/r2019:10.1403-2503.

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