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  1. 78 Mihhail Lotman This is exactly what Annensky had in mind in his sonnet: in 18th-century Russian neoclassicist poetry I4 appears, first of all, in odes (“flattery”), during the 19th century – in elegies and romantic poems (“dreams”). Here he asks the question: do the differences in the rhythmics of the 18th and 19th cen-

  2. Juri Lotman (28. veebruar 1922 Petrograd – 28. oktoober 1993 Tartu) oli vene päritolu Eesti semiootik, kirjandusteadlane ja kulturoloog, üks Tartu-Moskva semiootikakoolkonna rajajaid, Eesti Teaduste Akadeemia liige (alates 1990).

  3. 190 Mihhail Lotman Seda, kes uurib hirmu semiootikat kultuuris, varitseb lai spekter ohte alates metaforismist ja lõpetades reduktsionismiga. Muide tihtilugu langevad need vastandid ühte ning kultuuris toimuvate semiootiliste protsesside metafoorse tõlgendamisega kaasneb järelduste sirgjooneline publitsistlikkus.

  4. Studia Metrica et Poetica 7.2, 2020, 110–117 Kiril Taranovsky and his Greatest Work Mihhail Lotman, Igor Pilshchikov*1 The name Kiril Taranovsky (1911–1993) has much less acclaim outside the Slavic world than it deserves. Even his book on Mandelshtam, which was published in English in 1976, mainly attracted the attention of Slavists as the ...

  5. Mihhail Lotman. Mihhail Lotman (Born September 2, 1952, Leningrad) is an Estonian literature researcher and politician, son of Yuri Lotman and Zara Mints. Mihhail Lotman's research fields include general semiotics and semiotics of culture as well as text theory and history of Russian literature. Lotman was a member of the board of Russian ...

  6. Mihhail Lotman. 2001, Tartu : Tartu University Press eBooks. See Full PDF Download PDF. See Full PDF Download PDF. Related Papers. THE STRUCTURE OF SIGN COMPONENTS (in Russian) 2012 • Dmitriy Lyashenko. Basic properties and relations between components of a sign are analyzed.

  7. 19 de feb. de 2020 · "History is war and needs to be won." These rather noteworthy words were uttered by Russian President Vladimir Putin when meeting with historians on June 22, 2016. No historian dared argue. The utterance concerned the battles of the so-called Great Patriotic War. Putin's logic seems to suggest these battles are still raging, among other things, in treatments of history, Mihhail Lotman writes.