Search: onr:"swepub:oai:DiVA.org:uu-518851" >
Cross-Cultural Comm...
-
Waugh, Daniel C.,1941-University of Washington, Seattle, USA
(author)
Cross-Cultural Communication in Early Modern Russia : Foreign News in Context
Publisher, publication year, extent ...
-
Seattle, Uppsala :University of Washington libraries,2023
-
893 s.
-
electronicrdacarrier
Numbers
-
LIBRIS-ID:oai:DiVA.org:uu-518851
-
https://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-518851URI
-
https://doi.org/10.6069/XCSQ-BF71DOI
Supplementary language notes
-
Language:English
-
Summary in:English
Part of subdatabase
Classification
-
Subject category:vet swepub-contenttype
-
Subject category:bok swepub-publicationtype
Notes
-
This is a work about the acquisition of foreign news in Russia, an attempt to determine its significance not only for government decision making but also for the cultural changes which were underway there during the seventeenth century. The core material for the study is the 'kuranty', the Russian translations from periodical newspapers and separates, most of them published in Dutch or German in the major European commercial centers. However, the Muscovite government regularly acquired foreign news from many other sources, both written and oral. Their analysis is essential too if one is to understand the importance of the kuranty. What was the institutional context within which such news was being obtained and processed? Who were the individuals involved? How accurate were the translations, and how accurate was the news? Contextualization also invites serious consideration of how the foreign news was treated and understood in Europe, where there was a communications ‘revolution’ underway. Might there not be some similarities with what was happening in Russia, at the same time that there are significant differences? Do we see here evidence of ‘influence’, or might it not be better to think of ‘creative adaptation’ within a framework of existing pragmatic solutions to the challenges of obtaining essential information? The book thus has a broad comparative aspect which should offer new insights into the cultural, intellectual, and social history of early modern Russia and contribute as well to the study of the information revolution elsewhere in Europe.
Subject headings and genre
Added entries (persons, corporate bodies, meetings, titles ...)
-
Maier, Ingrid,professor emer.1951-Uppsala universitet,Slaviska språk(Swepub:uu)ingemaie
(author)
-
University of Washington, Seattle, USASlaviska språk
(creator_code:org_t)
Internet link
Find in a library
To the university's database