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2010, Slavic Review
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From the Slavic Review Editorial Board: Slavic Review publishes signed letters to the editor by individuals with educational or research merit. Where the letter concerns a publication in Slavic Review, the author of the publication will be offered an opportunity to respond. Space limitations dictate that comment regarding a book review should be restricted to one paragraph of no more than 250 words; comment on an article or forum should not exceed 750 to 1,000 words. When we receive many letters on a topic, some letters will be published on the Slavic Review Web site with opportunities for further discussion. Letters may be submitted by e-mail, but a signed copy on official letterhead or with a complete return address must follow. The editor reserves the right to refuse to print, or to publish with cuts, letters that contain personal abuse or otherwise fail to meet the standards of debate expected in a scholarly journal.
Slavic & East European Information Resources, 2016
Slavica Publishers has played an important role in the fields of Slavic languages and literatures and Slavic area studies for 50 years. This article provides a brief history of the publishing house, focusing on key book and journal publications; the transition in 1997 from closely held privately owned corporation to not-for-profit status as a unit of Indiana University; evolution from predominately self-produced authors' CRC to professionally typeset and edited volumes; and plans to keep Slavica relevant in the future. It is implicit that Slavica might serve as a model for other struggling small academic presses in this time of rapid change and chaos in scholarly publishing.
Slavic Review, 1992
The letter questions indiscriminate and unscholarly application of the western imports (like Said's theory of Orientalism) to Russian fiction of XIX century, Lermontov in particular.
This book is comprised of a collection of essays that treat the topic of the apocalypse in Slavic thought. It investigates the philosophical, literary and aesthetic idea of apocalypse in the Slavic world from the nineteenth to the twentieth centuries. This book conveys the various approaches which have been taken toward the theme of the apocalypse in Slavic culture.
American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy, 2013
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