Academic literature on the topic 'Russian literature Country life in literature'

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Journal articles on the topic "Russian literature Country life in literature"

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Starikova, Nadezhda N. "Galina Yakovlevna Ilyina: On the occasion of her 90th Birthday." Slavic Almanac, no. 3-4 (2020): 519–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/2073-5731.2020.3-4.8.01.

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Galina Yakovlevna Ilyina is an outstanding Russian literary critic specializing in Yugoslav literatures. A researcher of the history and typology of the literatures of the South Slavs, she devoted her whole life to their study and popularization. Thanks to her efforts, the development of the literary process of the Bulgarian, Bosnian, Macedonian, Serbian, Slovenian, Croatian and Montenegrin literature has acquired a complex and systematic character in our country. Galina Yakovlevna can rightfully be considered the founder of the academic school of literary Yugoslav studies in Russia, the academic personnel trained by her are currently successfully continuing to develop the themes and problems of the literatures of the Yugoslav and post-Yugoslavian space. Galina Yakovlevna became the first Yugoslav literary critic in the Russian Federation who was awarded the academic title of Professor of the Russian Academy of Sciences with the qualification Literature of the Peoples of Foreign Countries.
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Морозова, Надежда, and Nadezhda Morozova. "The main interest of a memorial estate for modern people. Some aspects of the history of memorial estates in Russia." Service & Tourism: Current Challenges 9, no. 2 (2015): 86–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/11400.

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The article is dedicated to some problems of museum activity and tourism. The main idea of the work is conception and development of a literature museum in memorial context. There is historical and analytic review of a real meaning of Russian country estate for poets and writers in the 19"1 century in the article as well as a cultural aspect: from the basement of the traditions in country estate life at the end of the 17"1 century, through its functions in the 18"1 century, and at the end presentation of country estate culture in the literature of golden age in Russia. The article classifies the structure of the memorial estate complex, observes Russian country estate evolution from the 18"1 till the early 20"´ century, defines several types of Russian country estate and its historical and current importance.
 
 A memorial estate or reserve museum activity represents a comprehensive approach which is realized by museum keepers, animators and guides. A special thing is an excursion for single visitors or family groups and individual programs. The article characterizes the activities of the literature memorial estate and defines a specialization of its projects. The State Tyutchev Memorial estate «Mouranovo» is considered as a unique museum represented in European tradition of memorial estate culture.
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Ryabova, Lyudmila K., and Maria I. Kosorukova. "Russian émigré life in France as covered by Soviet literary magazines of the first half of the 1920s." RUDN Journal of Russian History 18, no. 3 (2019): 605–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2312-8674-2019-18-3-605-618.

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The authors consider the problem in which extent did the Bolshevik authorities allow a coverage of Russian émigré life and work in France, under conditions of ideological confrontation and censorship. The present study is based on materials of Soviet literary and socio-political magazines such as Book and Revolution and Krasnaya Nov’ of the fi rst half of the 1920s. These journals off ered chronicles of events, literary reviews, information in special sections (‘In the West,’ ‘Relations with Russia,’ ‘Russian literature and art abroad,’ and particularly in the section ‘France’) that off ered a fairly complete picture of cultural events in France and activities of Russian émigrés in the country. Characteristic was the reproduction of large fragments of works authored by emigrant authors, which acquainted readers with the development of emigrant thought of that time. The article concludes that with regard to the fi rst half of the 1920s, we can speak about a kind of dialogue between the Russian intelligentsia in France and that in Soviet Russia. This communication was not always politicized and often remained in the fi eld of literature and art theory. In those years the cultural life of France in general was subject of constant attention. It is argued that most publications on French literature and art were free from ideology, thereby continuing the tradition of pre-revolutionary cultural relations between the two countries.
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Karpushkina, Anna V., and Maria S. Pankratova. "Strategy for obesity prevention among school-age children (literature review)." Problems of Endocrinology 62, no. 2 (2016): 52–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.14341/probl201662252-60.

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Obesity is one of major threats to people health and life. It increases risk of many diseases, including type 2 diabetes, heart disease, arthritis, and several cancers. This is a serious problem for the Russian Federation. Half of adults in our country are considered to be overweight or obese. However, to assess objectively the prevalence of this pathology in children is very difficult. At present in Russia there is no single universally accepted system for child anthropometry. Several studies in Russian regions found that about 10% of children were overweight and obese. Main risk factors of obesity in intrauterine and perinatal periods: mother smoking during pregnancy, child accelerated weight gain during the first months of life, formula feeding and early complementary feeding. In older children main risk factors are high-calorie foods, lack of exercise and sedative behaviour. International expert community has defined preventive strategies that will support elimination of child obesity. These strategies include implementation of child development assessment system with body mass index measurement in accordance with the World Health Organization guidelines; training primary pediatricians on using this assessment system and effective obesity prevention counseling; and school-based obesity prevention programs. Physicians and teachers must understand how important obesity prevention for child health. Health and education stakeholders should actively support these preventive measures and ensure universal access to physical exercises and healthy diet in schools. Alfa-Endo Program will assist all these initiatives.
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Yakovenko, Natalya V. "A Textbook Pointing the Way to the Russian Classics." Two centuries of the Russian classics 3, no. 1 (2021): 284–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.22455/2686-7494-2021-3-1-284-293.

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The article is a review of the textbook in two parts under the title “Russian literature of the 19th century” by the well-known literary scholar Doctor of Philology Yuri Vladimirovich Lebedev. A brief description of the publication, its structure, some of the problems raised by the author, and the basic concept of the textbook continuing the whole line of the author's books published for schoolchildren and students are given. Yu. V. Lebedev emphasizes the uniqueness of the path of Russian literature, a special mission that has always been with our writers — to be spiritual authorities, especially in the most difficult times of our country. In this textbook presents not only the personalities of poets and writers. The author of the textbook also shows the integral literary process of the 19th century closely connected with philosophical thought in Russia and the life of society. In his textbooks Yu. V. Lebedev for the first time in the post-reform period in Russia speaks so vividly and accurately about the reviving and transforming power of Russian classical literature.
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Chepelevskaya, Tatyana. "From the history of Slovene studies in Russia: Maya Ilinichna Ryzhova — life in science." Russian-Slovenian relations in the twentieth century, no. IV (2018): 31–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/2618-8562.2018.4.1.2.

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The article is devoted to the memory of M. I. Ryzhova, a representative of the older generation of Russian Slovenians, a wellknown literary critic, a translator who devoted his life to the study of literature and culture of Slovenia, the history of Russian-Slavic literary relations. The author traces the creative path of the famous scientist, explores her contribution to the Soviet and Russian Slavonic studies of the second half of XX ― early XXI centuries, singling out her translation activities, which greatly contributed to the popularization of Slovenian literature in our country. Creating a portrait of the scientist, the author relies on his personal impressions of meetings and conversations with M. I. Ryzhova.
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Mayor, Alisa Gayle, and Priscilla Roosevelt. "Life on the Russian Country Estate: A Social and Cultural History." Slavic and East European Journal 41, no. 4 (1997): 718. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/309858.

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Andreeva, Ekaterina A. "An imaginary journey to an utopian anti-world (on the example of “The Tale of Luxurious Life and Fun”)." RUDN Journal of Studies in Literature and Journalism 25, no. 2 (2020): 207–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2312-9220-2020-25-2-207-213.

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The Tale of a Luxurious Life and Fun is a late composition of Old Russian literature, it includes some references to European sources (including Polish and Ancient Roman literature). Democratic literature of the 17th century offered the readers to get acquainted with other characters and plots: a person who is not distinguished by virtues becomes the main character of the story, which deals with staying in an amazing country of luxury and fun and the way to this country. With special care, the author draws a possible and desirable life of a hawk and a lazy person in a utopian world, but warns about the cost of staying in such an amazing place. Parodying the genre of walking known in Old Russia, in which the pilgrim was enriched spiritually, the writer tells about a new type of travel that devalues and depersonalizes a person, deprives him of the possibility of development. The absence of direct edifying and didactic digressions, however, does not deprive the text of depth: the hero is given the opportunity to choose, and he has the right to decide how to behave and which path to choose.
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Seysenbayeva, Zh. "DEVELOPMENT OF THE STUDENT'S LANGUAGE THROUGH LESSONS OF KAZAKH LITERATURE IN THE UPDATED CONTENT OF EDUCATION." BULLETIN Series of Philological Sciences 75, no. 1 (2020): 374–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.51889/2021-1.1728-7804.65.

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In the scientific article, a study of methods and methods of teaching Kazakh language and literature in schools with other languages was conducted. Through Kazakh stories, which are the main component of the educational content of Kazakh literature, ways of using it as a means of forming students ' worldview, attitude to life, and self-realization are determined. The purpose of teaching Kazakh literature in Russian schools is to introduce representatives of other nationalities to the rich literary heritage and history of the Kazakh people. The subject of literature helps to instill respect for the country in students who speak a different language. At the same time, it contributes to a deeper knowledge of the country, people around it, and a closer understanding of the life of the people. Each teacher is able to creatively and correctly organize work on the development of language in the lessons of the Kazakh language and literature, which creates conditions for the student to comprehensively understand the phenomena of everyday life, learn, and use what he has learned in spoken words.
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Averkina, Svetlana, Angelika Kalinina, and Tatiana Suchareva. "The German literature in American exile – great writers and their wives: perspectives from Russian scholars." SHS Web of Conferences 55 (2018): 04018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20185504018.

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The article focuses on the life and art of the famous Germane writers, namely Thomas Mann, Lion Feuchtwanger, and Franz Werfel. After the outbreak of WWII, when the Nazi forces invaded these lands, a lot of emigres managed to leave for the USA. For many of them, the escape route was extremely turbulent. The German writers in the USA settled closely together in California, forming a tight community. The famous Germane writers had to decide upon two principal questions: what they could do for the culture of their home country while staying in exile, and how to interact with the culture of the country where they live. In this connection, it is of great importance to analyze not their works, but the books of their wives. They took care of the house and children on a daily basis, as well as became secretaries, councilors, and closest associates of their great husbands. The authors also propose the main perspectives on a future research on this topic, focusing on the social and political phenomenon of “the community of German writers in American exile”, analyzing how the intellectual community was formed, discussing the documents of this age, studying the memories about their time in America in the context of the contemporary gender theory.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Russian literature Country life in literature"

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Bashmakova, Natalʹi︠a︡ Vanhala-Aniszewski Marjatta. "Re-reading Soviet and post-Soviet texts /." Joensuu : University of Joensuu, 2005. http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy0604/2005530487.html.

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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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Makarova, Olga. "'The woman question' in the life and works of Aleksei Sergeevich Suvorin." Thesis, Queen Mary, University of London, 2010. http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/502.

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This thesis traces the influence of ‘the woman question’ on the life and writings of Aleksei Sergeevich Suvorin (1834–1912), an eminent journalist, publisher and editor of the newspaper Novoe vremia. My research is based on Suvorin’s previously unexamined contribution to public debate on this question and also includes an overview of his fictional work. The thesis represents a case study and brings to light material critical to Suvorin’s biography. This is important because Suvorin’s personal case exemplifies the difficulties which up-and-coming men of the intelligentsia encountered in responding to the rapid and drastic social changes to which they were exposed, and in particular to the redistribution of influence and authority between men and women. Based on documentary sources and in particular on new archival material the thesis analyses the extent to which Suvorin’s life was affected by his relationship with strong and domineering women and examines the impact of these biographical factors on his writings. This case study provides an important insight into the development of the Russian liberal idea commonly referred to as the ‘emancipation of women’. The thesis is organized into an Introduction followed by three chapters, a Conclusion, a Bibliography, and an Appendix. Developing my argument, I apply a chronological principle, dividing Suvorin’s life and works into three periods presented in chapters 1–3; these periods can be matched up in approximate terms with the three stages of the women’s movement in Russia. The first period starts in 1858 and ends in 1873, the turning point in Suvorin’s life and career; within this period the women’s movement in Russia had worked out its ideology and some tactical moves. The second period (1874–1890) covers Suvorin’s career successes and his concomitant midlife crisis; during this time, the women’s movement was also experiencing a crisis of its own. The third period (1891–1912) marks Suvorin’s personal decline against the rapid politicization of the Russian women’s movement. In the Conclusion section I develop an overview of the contribution which Suvorin made to the emergence of ‘public opinion’ in late Imperial Russia and I end by attempting a definition of his ideological position within the context of Russian liberal thought. The material analysed in the thesis makes it possible to place Suvorin amongst the so-called conservative liberals, at least as regards his views on the emancipation of women. The Appendix includes translations of the Russian quotes used in the main text of the thesis.
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Chadwick, Philip. "The ethics of the novel in the life of the town : provincial communities in the works of Fyodor Dostoevsky and George Eliot." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2017. https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:22c60742-d0e1-4570-9360-b6b90e1abeaa.

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This thesis analyses the function of the provincial town in the novels of Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821-1881) and George Eliot (1819-1880). It demonstrates that the small town, far from being a neutral backdrop to their narratives, functions as a sociological space in which to appropriate or challenge the discourses of modernity with which Dostoevsky and Eliot were explicitly preoccupied. The first chapter examines how their provincial communities negotiate biblical narrative in a world in which, thanks to nineteenth-century attempts to historicise the Bible, an acceptance of the Bible's authoritative status is no longer a given. The instability of language itself is then interrogated in my second chapter, which shows that the transition from denotative, referential meaning to connotative, abstract forms causes ethical and narrative tension within the world of the novel, and which explores the aesthetics and ethics of gossip in the provincial town and novel. The third chapter details what becomes of the nineteenth-century discourse of heroism when characters seek to enact it in a provincial setting, showing that the environment of the provincial town proves hostile to heroic ambition, whilst the fourth argues that the provincial application of professional discourse (particularly that of medicine and the law) is critiqued and perfected by these authors. Through the analysis of this discourse, it is shown that Eliot and Dostoevsky's treatment of provincialism is ambivalent. As urban intellectuals who did not consent to inhabit the provincial milieu they depict, they in many respects censure the world they describe. However, this censure is not absolute, and through their chosen setting, as well as their chosen genre of the novel, they provide ethical instruction for their readers, then and now. Ethics, for them, are best tested in community, and explored in narrative.
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Kostetskaya, Anastasia G. "The Water of Life and the Life of Water: the Metaphor of World Liquescence in Russian Symbolist Poetry, Art and Film." The Ohio State University, 2013. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1367511847.

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Maltby, Deborah K. Phegley Jennifer. "Reading "Hodge" nineteenth-century English rural workers /." Diss., UMK access, 2007.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--Dept. of English and Dept. of History. University of Missouri--Kansas City, 2007.<br>"A dissertation in English and history." Advisor: Jennifer Phegley. Typescript. Vita. Title from "catalog record" of the print edition Description based on contents viewed Nov. 13, 2007. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 299-321). Online version of the print edition.
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Lubbe, Frances. "Telling stories not to die of life : myth, responsibility and reinvention in The smell of apples and Country of my skull." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/7705.

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Bibliography: leaves 63-70.<br>It is part of the human condition to continually develop and redevelop narrative structures through which identities are portrayed. As Daniel Schwarz explains: "we make sense of our lives by ordering [them] and giving [them] shape. [ ... J Each of us is continually writing and rewriting the text of our life [ ... ] To the degree that we are self-conscious, we live in our narratives – our discourse - about our actions, thoughts and feelings"(Schwarz, 1991, 108). Narrative and the identity created and maintained through it does not exist exclusively in the space of the individual, but is influenced by the cultural and socio-political context in which the individual operates as part of a group, be it a community, society or nation. There is therefore a complex relation between individual and collective identities, where each should ideally shape and reshape the other. Myths are defined as collective narratives of identity that give a group a sense of coherence and unity of origin. It is easy for myths to become fixed and oppressive, so that the reciprocal relation between the formation of individual and collective identity is broken down and individual senses of identity become, to a large extent, determined by the collective narrative. An example of a such an oppressive narrative is the myth of the Afrikaner group in South Africa. This paper aims to examine the contrasts between entrapment within this Afrikaner myth and escape from it, between the dictatorial nature of the old Afrikaner myth and possibilities for new and more dynamic myths to appear, as explored in contemporary South African literature. Specifically it looks at two Afrikaans writers whose texts explore the nature of Afrikaans myths of identity in post-apartheid South Africa. Mark Behr's The Smell of Apples evokes the silence and shame of those inextricably tied to the Afrikaner myth. Behr indicates, through his novel and through a personal confession, that he is unable, or perhaps even unwilling, to break free of the Afrikaner myth. In contrast, Antjie Krog's Country of My Skull indicates a desire to reconstruct the Afrikaner myth. While Behr exhibits a sense of shame, Krog experiences a sense of guilt and responsibility as an Afrikaner that ties her to the actions committed by others in her group. This sense of guilt is known as metaphysical guilt, which "is not based on a narrow construal of what one does, but rather on the wider concept of who one chooses to be" (May, 1991, 241, my emphasis). Krog chooses to be integrated into post-apartheid South Africa, but this does not mean that she leaves her sense of being Afrikaans behind. Instead, she individually reinvents herself as an Afrikaner in the 'new' South Africa. Her individual reinvention also has implications for the collectivity: "[by individuals reshaping themselves], they might be reshaping what it means for others to consider themselves as members of that group" (May, 1991,252).
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Kinnison, Dana K. "Defiant landscapes : space and subjectivity in early twentieth-century women's farm novels /." free to MU campus, to others for purchase, 1998. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/mo/fullcit?p9904853.

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Golden, Michelle. "The "roote of ciuil conuersation" redefining courtesy in book vi of The faerie queen /." unrestricted, 2006. http://etd.gsu.edu/theses/available/etd-02072007-111115/.

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Thesis (B.A. honors)--Georgia State University, 2006.<br>Dr. Robert Sattelmeyer, committee chair; Wayne Erickson, committee member. Electronic text (40 p.) : digital, PDF file. Description based on contents viewed May 7, 2007. Includes bibliographical references (p. 39-40).
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Diedrich, Antje. "The stage is not a different country, but an extension of the bathroom : George Tabori's theatre practice as an investigation into the relationship between art and life." Thesis, Liverpool John Moores University, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.326092.

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Books on the topic "Russian literature Country life in literature"

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Usadebnai︠a︡ poėzii︠a︡ v russkoĭ literature XIX veka: Monografii︠a︡. Izd-vo OGPU, 2004.

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Mir russkoĭ usadʹby v literature XVIII--nachala XX veka: Khrestomatii︠a︡. ANO IT︠S︡ "Moskvovedenie", 2006.

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Russian village prose: The radiant past. Princeton University Press, 1992.

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Shchukin, Vasiliĭ. Mif dvori͡a︡nskogo gnezda: Geokulʹturologicheskoe issledovanie po russkoĭ klassicheskoĭ literature. Wyd-wo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego, 1997.

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Krestʹi︠a︡nskiĭ kosmos v russkoĭ literature 1900-1930-kh godov: Uchebnoe posobie. Izdatelʹstvo Literaturnogo institua im. A.M. Gorʹkogo, 2013.

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Kuznet͡sov, Feliks Feodosʹevich. Samai͡a krovnai͡a svi͡azʹ: Sudʹby derevni v sovremennoĭ proze. 2-ге вид. Prosveshchenie, 1987.

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Shchukin, Vasiliĭ. Mit szlacheckiego gniazda: Studium geokulturologiczne o klasycznej literaturze rosyjskiej. Universitas, 2006.

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Mezhvuzovskai͡a nauchnai͡a konferent͡sii͡a "Provint͡sialʹnai͡a literatura v kontekste russkoĭ kulʹtury : poėzii͡a Ermila Kostrova v istoriko-literaturnom prot͡sesse" (2002? Vi͡atskiĭ gosudarstvennyĭ gumanitarnyĭ universitet?). Kostrovskiĭ sbornik: Provint͡sialʹnai͡a literatura v kontekste russkoĭ kulʹtury. Vi͡atskiĭ gos. gumanitarnyĭ universitet, 2002.

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Bolʹshakova, A. Derevni︠a︡ kak arkhetip: Ot Pushkina do Solzhenit︠s︡yna. Kom-t po telekommunikat︠s︡ii︠a︡m i sredstvam massovoĭ informat︠s︡ii Pravitelʹstva Moskvy, 1999.

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Z, Kokovina N., Stroganov M. V, Belousov A. F та Kurskiĭ gosudarstvennyĭ universitet, ред. "Vo glubine Rossii--": Statʹi i materialy o russkoĭ provint︠s︡ii : XIX Fetovskie chtenii︠a︡, Kursk, 7-9 okti︠a︡bri︠a︡ 2004 g. Kurskiĭ gosuniversitet, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Russian literature Country life in literature"

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Limonov, Eduard. "A Heroic Attitude to Life." In Late and Post-Soviet Russian Literature, edited by Mark Lipovetsky and Lisa Wakamiya. Academic Studies Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781618112231-036.

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Tabachnikova, Olga, and Natalia Vinokurova. "New Russian ‘Macho’ Between Literature and Life." In The Palgrave Handbook of Women and Gender in Twentieth-Century Russia and the Soviet Union. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-54905-1_28.

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Baraban, Elena V. "Excerpts from “A Country Resembling Russia”: The Use of History in Boris Akunin’s Detective Novels." In Late and Post-Soviet Russian Literature, edited by Mark Lipovetsky and Lisa Wakamiya. Academic Studies Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781618112231-040.

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Bladen, Victoria. "The Tree of Life in the Country Estate." In The Tree of Life and Arboreal Aesthetics in Early Modern Literature. Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003180043-5.

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Woodhouse, Jenny. "Pisemsky’s Sketches from Peasant Life: An Attempt at a Non-Partisan Reading." In The Golden Age of Russian Literature and Thought. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-22310-7_7.

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Marchesini, Irina. "The Presence of Absence. Longing and Nostalgia in Post-Soviet Art and Literature." In Biblioteca di Studi Slavistici. Firenze University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-6655-822-4.07.

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This article explores the phenomenon of nostalgia for the Soviet era found in contemporary Russian society and manifested both in contemporary art, such as in the installations of Il'ja Kabakov, Sergej Volkov, and Jevgenij Fiks, and in modern literature, especially in the prose of Andrej Astvacaturov. Such regret for a bygone past primarily mourns not the apparatus of the Soviet state, but the routine and the quality of familiar daily life. Insights from the fields of visual studies and trauma studies undergird this exploration of the relationship between a work of art's visual composition and its representation of toska, memory, and material culture in the Soviet era. By juxtaposing artwork with literary prose, we reveal the significant role had by 'reflective' toska-nostalgia (as defined by Svetlana Boym, 2001) in the formation of post-Soviet identity.
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Urbaniak, Anna, Anna Wanka, Kieran Walsh, and Frank Oswald. "The Relationship Between Place and Life-Course Transitions in Old-Age Social Exclusion: A Cross-Country Analysis." In International Perspectives on Aging. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51406-8_16.

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AbstractThe international literature presents growing evidence of the impact of life transitions in older age on experiences of social exclusion. Older people’s relationship with place potentially plays a mediating role in this interrelation. However, the specific mechanisms through which the older adult place relationship mediates exclusionary outcomes of life-course transitions remain poorly understood in the study of ageing. This chapter investigates how older adults’ relationship with place is interlinked with life-course transitions and old-age social exclusion. To address this interrelation, we present case studies from three different countries, Germany, Ireland and Poland, focusing on individual experiences of retirement and bereavement, and analyse the cases by drawing on the concepts of spatial agency and belonging. We conclude by examining how spatial agency and belonging can protect and empower older people at critical junctures in their lives.
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Széman, Zsuzsa, Elena Golubeva, and László Patyán. "Exclusion from Home Care Services in Central and Eastern European Countries: A Focus on Hungary and the Russian Federation." In International Perspectives on Aging. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51406-8_12.

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AbstractDue to demographic changes all European countries face significant challenges concerning the provision of home and community care for older people. While challenges in organising care services seem to be generally similar, the resources, values and responsibilities are different across countries. The purpose of this chapter is to investigate current knowledge and patterns concerning exclusion from home care services in Central and Eastern European countries, focusing especially on Hungary as a central EU member state and the Russian Federation, as a non-EU Eastern European country. As existing international research typically focuses on Anglo-Saxon contexts, this chapter draws on the national language literature of these two nations as sources of empirical data for the analysis. Our analysis indicates that there is a long-standing risk of exclusion from home care services in both countries, with a need for reform to existing provisions to address this exclusion. Despite this a differential impact of macro-level policy is evident within the two jurisdictions, with some new innovations within the Russian Federation.
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Ette, Andreas, Lenore Sauer, and Margit Fauser. "Settlement or Return? The Intended Permanence of Emigration from Germany Across the Life Course." In IMISCOE Research Series. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-67498-4_6.

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AbstractEconomic approaches and socio-cultural integration are still the most prominent frameworks applied to explain return migration and permanent settlement. In contrast to the bulk of literature focusing on established migrations from poorer to richer regions, the contribution analyses the permanence of emigration from economically highly developed countries. Based on a life-course approach, it highlights the interrelations between life-course domains shaping the intentions of German emigrants to settle permanently abroad, planning to return, and those who are still undecided. The analyses are based on the German Emigration and Remigration Panel Study (GERPS) surveying recently emigrated German citizens. The results show that almost half of those emigrants intend to return home after living for only a few years abroad, whereas every fifth reports permanent settlement intentions in the destination country. Multinomial logistic regressions demonstrate that the status within individual domains of the life course–particularly economic status, family arrangement, as well as existing social interactions–together with previous migration experiences shape the intended length of the current migration project.
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Salmon, Laura. "Melancholic Humor, Skepticism and Reflective Nostalgia. Igor’ Guberman’s Poetics of Paradox." In Biblioteca di Studi Slavistici. Firenze University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-6655-822-4.06.

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The poetry of Israeli émigré Igor' Guberman, comprising thousands of quatrains (‘gariki’), represents a hybrid genre at the junction of Jewish aphoristic tradition, Russian oral folklore, and classical Russian poetry. The theme of toska, which is central to the gariki, may be sharply distinguished from the ‘restorative nostalgia’ theorized by Svetlana Boym (2001): Guberman's toska is a thoughtful, melancholic, and paradoxical feeling. It expresses a particular variety of skepticism that characterizes the paradoxical humor of the Ashkenazi, the purpose of which is not to ridicule others' shortcomings, but to gently make fun of the sadness and painful absurdity that impermeates human existence. Such melancholic and paradoxical humor permits Guberman to look at life, at himself, even at God, with an indulgent ‘smile of reason’ that is absolutely devoid of arrogance. A subtle melancholic and deep skeptic, Guberman "laughs through his tears", for this is what Russian-Jewish tradition teaches, a lesson that has penetrated deeply and more generally into Russian literature: when the soul is beset by excessive sadness, its has recourse only to laughter.
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Conference papers on the topic "Russian literature Country life in literature"

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Öngel, Volkan, Erkut Altındağ, and Gökten Öngel. "The Effect of Health Expenditure per Capita over Health Indicators: Comparative Analysis of MINT and BRIC Countries." In International Conference on Eurasian Economies. Eurasian Economists Association, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.36880/c05.01172.

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Major positive effect on health indicators of a country is seen to arise from the increase in their income within historical perspective. But according to many studies in the literature the impact of such changes vary depending on the country's overall level of development. In terms of the positive changes over the health indicators of a country can be said to affect the developmental processes in the same way especially in developing countries. In this context, our study highlights the recent and emerging economies of two groups of countries; BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) and MINT (Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria, Turkey). The relationship between health expenditure per capita and life expectancy at birth time and mortality rates of children under age 1 are analyzed retrospectively.
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Mokienko, Valery. "«Czech-Russian phraseological dictionary»: life and destiny." In Slavic collection: language, literature, culture. LLC MAKS Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.29003/m.slavcol-2018/15-21.

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Abisheva, Ulbolsyn, and Lyudmila Safronova. "EMBRACEMENT OF PHILOSOPHY OF LIFE AND INTUITIONISM IDEAS BY RUSSIAN LITERATURE." In International Conference on Education, Culture and Social Development (ICECSD). Volkson Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.26480/icecsd.01.2018.90.97.

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Trishina, S. "The life of modern Russian poetry and literature – a look from the inside out." In Russian cultural space: language – mentality – understanding. XX International scientific and practical conference. LLC MAKS Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.29003/m1449.rcs_xx-2019/193-195.

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Ermakov, Dmitrij Nikolaevich. "Formation of Patriotic consciousness of Russian youth in the digital economy: according to the results of the sociological survey "Read-country»." In International Research-to-practice conference. Publishing house Sreda, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31483/r-75643.

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The formation of a Patriotic worldview of Russian youth is an important component of the state youth policy in Russia. Saturation of the book market with products of national and Patriotic themes is one of the priorities of socially oriented business. The article presents the results of a sociological survey conducted among Russian youth who demonstrated a high interest in literature of military - Patriotic content.
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Wijewickrama, MKCS, Nicholas Chileshe, Raufdeen Rameezdeen, and J. Jorge Ochoa. "The Role of Government towards a Circular Economy in the Construction Industry: A Systematic Literature Review." In World Conference on Waste Management. The International Institute of Knowledge Management, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.17501/26510251.2021.1102.

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A circular economy (CE) model provides an opportunity for the construction industry (CI) to keep the end-of-life materials in a closed loop with their maximum value while advocating the reduction of significant waste generation and natural resource extraction for the built environment. While previous studies in different geographical regions have been individually carried out on investigating the government engagement in the CE, no solitary study exists that holistically focus upon the role of government that steers the CI towards a CE. With this concern, the objectives of the current study are twofold. First, to investigate the roles through which the government contributes to implementing CE in the CI. Second, it outlines the potential research directions for future researchers to expand the domain under study. To achieve these objectives, a systematic literature review (SLR) was conducted based on the review protocol, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA). A total of 125 articles available in four search engines from 2002 to 2020 were incorporated for both descriptive and content analysis. Most articles (19) were published in the year 2019, and China is the dominant country for publishing most of the articles in the area under study. The study found that the government influences the CE in the CI by playing four significant roles: regulating, subsidizing, encouraging and informing. Herein, the government should play these four roles jointly with the amalgamation of government agencies, research institutions and nongovernment associations. The article concludes by outlining the future research priorities to advance the understanding in the domain under study. The value of the study is that it explores an overlooked area in the existing literature while providing a direction for the CI practitioners to understand the government role in paving the path to a CE. Keywords: Built environment, Circular economy (CE), Construction industry (CI), Government, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA), Systematic literature review (SLR)
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Permyakova, Margarita, Olga Vindeker, and Tat’yana Smorkalova. "Life Satisfaction and Happiness of Russians at a Mature Age." In Russian Man and Power in the Context of Dramatic Changes in Today’s World, the 21st Russian scientific-practical conference (with international participation) (Yekaterinburg, April 12–13, 2019). Liberal Arts University – University for Humanities, Yekaterinburg, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.35853/ufh-rmp-2019-sp04.

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The article describes the results of the empirical study into sociodemographic correlates and subjective correlates of happiness. The relevance of the study is determined by the fact that the modern world places exorbitant, often conflicting requirements (information-driven, need and motive-based, value-oriented, etc.) on the individual. Our study aimed to define the linkage between the happiness of mature Russians and their satisfaction with different aspects of life. We formed the hypothesis of a connection between happiness and satisfaction with the job, material situation, health, proper rest, inter-spousal relations, and relationships with their children and friends. The results revealed that the feelings of happiness are connected with both objective socio-demographic indicators and the level of satisfaction with different life aspects. Happiness positively correlates with the number of children in a family and income, and also with overall life satisfaction. With age, a subjective sense of happiness “fades” a bit, and the respondents estimate happiness slightly lower (it is more characteristic of the female part of the sample). Men and women do not differ in the level of being happy but there exist some peculiarities in the linkage of happiness with such factors as marital status (being married) and the number of children – unlike men, for women these correlations are statistically significant. Also, men, compared to women, are more satisfied with the material situation and inter-spousal relations and less satisfied with their relations with friends. In general, the obtained results complement the data published in academic literature. Thus, it was found that not all factors considered as predictors of happiness in the public mind correlate with the feelings of happiness. For instance, it was revealed that such an essential factor of material wellbeing as homeownership has nothing to do with a sense of happiness: the respondents with and without own homes are equally happy
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Roman, Monica, Bogdan Ileanu, and Mihai Roman. "A comparative analysis of remittance behaviour between East European and North African migrants." In International Conference on Eurasian Economies. Eurasian Economists Association, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.36880/c01.00189.

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The labour migration in Europe is a phenomenon with multiple effects, both positive and negative. Money sent by emigrants to their families is increasing their quality of life and has positive effects on the family relations; therefore it can be identified an increasing interest in the literature in studying such aspects. &#x0D; The purpose of the paper is to conduct a comparative analysis of the migrants’ propensity to sending money to the origin country.&#x0D; The study is based on data coming from the National Immigrant Survey of Spain (in Spanish: Encuesta Nacional de Inmigrantes – 2007). A total of 15,475 interviews were carried out. Moroccans, Romanians, and Ecuadorians represent 30% of the total number of immigrants resident in Spain.&#x0D; We employ a binary logistic regression model in order to identify the impact of socio-demographical factors on the probability of sending money abroad from Spain. Our aim is to identify cultural discrepancies in remittances sending, according to origin of migrants. We are mainly focusing on two large groups of respondents, which are North African and South Eastern Europe migrants. The variables employed are age of respondent, education, Intention to return in the country of origin, The period spent in Spain, gender of respondent, and the relation with the country of origin defined by the frequency of visits in the country. We identified similar patterns and also significant differences among the two groups.
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Semkina, Valeriya, and Galina Semenova. "Problems and Prospects for the Development of the Ethno-Sports Movement in the Sverdlovsk Region." In The Public/Private in Modern Civilization, the 22nd Russian Scientific-Practical Conference (with international participation) (Yekaterinburg, April 16-17, 2020). Liberal Arts University – University for Humanities, Yekaterinburg, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.35853/ufh-public/private-2020-79.

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In order to identify existing problems and prospects for the development of the ethno-sports movement in order to further expand the sphere of physical culture and sports in the region, the article analyses the formation and development of ethnic sports in the Sverdlovsk region. The study has been conducted for several years with the employement of such methods as questionnaires and social surveys, the analysis of literature and official documents, the projection method. The survey questions concerned the awareness of students of the Institute of Physical Education regarding the development of ethno-sports in the country and in the region. A low level of awareness of the development of the ethno-sports field among Bachelors of Physical Education was identified, which is a main problem of the subject matter. As a result of the deep research into problems of the promotion of ethnic sports, it was decided to elaborate and implement the pilot project ‘ETHNIC Festival’ aimed at the popularisation of ethnic sports in the city of Yekaterinburg. An analysis of official documents has shown that the region is now actively developing federations for traditional Russian sports, however, they are not very popular among the population. The current activities in the field of ethno-sports are not sufficient to attract the general public to the process. The obtained data indicated the urgency of the popularisation and cultivation of national sport disciplines and competitions. A sociological survey of EthnoFestival participants showed that one of the ways to revive national games and sports is to hold mass events to popularise ethno-culture.
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Dülger, Fikret, Kenan Lopcu, Almıla Burgaç, and Esra Ballı. "Is Natural Resource-Rich Russia Suffering from the Dutch Disease?" In International Conference on Eurasian Economies. Eurasian Economists Association, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.36880/c03.00488.

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“Dutch Disease” phenomenon is defined as the increase in the price of natural resources, such as oil and natural gas, which causes the appreciation of the real exchange rate and leads to the decline of manufacturing and ultimately to increases in service prices. Since the 1980s there has been a great body of “Dutch Disease” empirical literature, and as a natural resource-rich country Russia is a good case for the exploration of this phenomenon. The Russian economy experienced some difficulties after the collapse of the Soviet Union in the adaptation to a free market economy model. In the process of moving towards a free market economy, Russia failed to diversify its economic structure despite increases in natural resource revenues. In the last decades, while the share of natural resources in export revenues has significantly increased, the share of manufacturing output has decreased. According to the United Nations Development Program Russia report 2009, increases in energy income have resulted in the decline of other sectors of the Russian economy. Furthermore, the report claims that these indicators may trigger a recession in the Russian economy in the future. In fact, in recent years the Russian economy has exhibited some typical symptoms of “Dutch Disease” along with increases in oil prices accompanied by a reduction in the share of manufacturing output and an increase in service prices. Using Gregory Hansen cointegration method, this paper finds that Russia is in fact might be suffering from the “Dutch Disease” in the post Soviet Union-era.
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Reports on the topic "Russian literature Country life in literature"

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Näslund-Hadley, Emma, Michelle Koussa, and Juan Manuel Hernández. Skills for Life: Stress and Brain Development in Early Childhood. Inter-American Development Bank, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0003205.

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Learning to cope with disappointments and overcoming obstacles is part of growing up. By conquering some challenges, children develop resilience. Such normal stressors may include initiating a new activity or separation from parents during preschool hours. However, when the challenges in early childhood are intensified by important stressors happening outside their own lives, they may start to worry about the safety of themselves and their families. This may cause chronic stress, which interferes with their emotional, cognitive, and social development. In developing country contexts, it is especially hard to capture promptly the effects of stressors related to the COVID-19 pandemic on childrens cognitive and socioemotional development. In this note, we draw on the literature on the effect of stress on brain development and examine data from a recent survey of households with young children carried out in four Latin American countries to offer suggestions for policy responses. We suggest that early childhood and education systems play a decisive role in assessing and addressing childrens mental health needs. In the absence of forceful policy responses on multiple fronts, the mental health outcomes may become lasting.
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Barbuscia, Anna, and Chiara Comolli. Gender and socioeconomic inequalities in health and wellbeing across age in France and Switzerland. Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1553/populationyearbook2021.res2.2.

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There is increasing evidence that wellbeing is unequally distributed across sociodemographicgroups in contemporary societies. However, less is known about thedivergence across social groups of trajectories of wellbeing across age groups.This issue is of great relevance in contexts characterised by changing populationstructures and growing imbalances across and within generations, and in whichensuring that everyone has the opportunity to have a happy and healthy life courseis a primary welfare goal. In this study, we investigate wellbeing trends in Franceand Switzerland across age, gender, and socioeconomic status groups. We use twohousehold surveys (the Sant´e et Itin´eraires Professionnels and the Swiss HouseholdPanel) to compare the unfolding inequalities in health and wellbeing across agegroups in two rich countries. We view wellbeing as multidimensional, followingthe literature highlighting the importance of considering different dimensions andmeasures of wellbeing. Thus, we investigate a number of outcomes, includingdifferent measures of physical and mental health, as well as of relational wellbeing,using a linear regression model and a linear probability model. Our findings showinteresting country and dimension-specific heterogeneities in the development ofhealth and wellbeing over age. While our results indicate that there are gender andeducational inequalities in both Switzerland and France, and that gender inequalitiesin mental health accumulate with age in both countries, we also find that educationalinequalities in health and wellbeing remain rather stable across age groups.
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