Founded by Russian émigrés fleeing from the Bolshevik Revolution, Seminarium Kondakovianum faced the Communist regime’s strong opposition during its years of publication. This article recounts the stages of this troubling story - from the journal’s foundation with the support of the Ruská Akce (a policy developed in Czechoslovakia in the 1920s to welcome middle-class Russian refugees), through its relations with Soviet scholars and institutions affected by Soviet policy in 1920s and 1930s until the late aftermath at the end of World War ii, when the last remnants of the Kondakov Institute confronted the Soviet Army first, and, three years later, the Communist putsch in Czechoslovakia.
Communism vs. Seminarium Kondakovianum
Lovino, F.
2017
Abstract
Founded by Russian émigrés fleeing from the Bolshevik Revolution, Seminarium Kondakovianum faced the Communist regime’s strong opposition during its years of publication. This article recounts the stages of this troubling story - from the journal’s foundation with the support of the Ruská Akce (a policy developed in Czechoslovakia in the 1920s to welcome middle-class Russian refugees), through its relations with Soviet scholars and institutions affected by Soviet policy in 1920s and 1930s until the late aftermath at the end of World War ii, when the last remnants of the Kondakov Institute confronted the Soviet Army first, and, three years later, the Communist putsch in Czechoslovakia.I documenti in SFERA sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.