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- W2306551504 abstract "Andreyevich Zayonchkovsky. Compendium of Articles and Reminiscences to Mark the Historian's 100th Birthday, Moscow, ROSSPAN, 2008, 879 pp. ... Zayonchkovsky (1904 - 1983) died for a quarter of a century ago, but memories of him, his ideas and methods are alive, the trend he created in science is successfully and occupies a prominent place in modern historical studies, as witnessed by the book under review (compiled by Larisa Zakharova, Sergey Mironenko and Terence Emmons). ... The publication is based on the proceedings of an international conference devoted to the scientist's 100th anniversary held at the Lomonosov Moscow State University's Department of History on September 25 - 30, 2004. Zayonchkovsky taught at the University for more than 30 years. ... Taking part in the conference were not only scholars from Moscow and St. Petersburg, but historians from many Russian cities and foreign countries - Great Britain, Germany, the US and Japan - people of different generations aged between 20 and 80. absolute majority of them were Zayonchkovsky's disciples or the pupils of his disciples; his colleagues from libraries, archives and museums who had worked under Zayonchkovsky's guidance on bibliographies and publications of sources; translators and publishers of his books; the staff of the Chair with which he held a professorship (p. 7). ... His former student Yury Kukushkin, who later was the dean of the Department of History for many years recalls: Perhaps the only problem for the dean's office staff was that there were too many undergraduate, postgraduate and trainees students wishing to major under Zayonchkovsky so that his workload was way above the standard professor's load. But at the same time he was well placed to select the most capable pupils who formed Professor Zayonchkovsky's scientific and pedagogical school. There were many factors why his school has thrived. But the main one is that it had assimilated the rich her- ... The review was first published in Russian in the journal Voprosy istorii, No. 8, 2008. ... itage and successfully developed the best features of its founder's scientific and pedagogical skills (p. 12). ... Larisa Zakharova addressing the conference recalled that Pyotr Andreyevich always told his pupils that... he valued two things: the writing of books and the creation of a scientific school. Both these strands are still developing (p. 13). Characterizing Zayonchkovsky's work she singled out an important circumstance: Pyotr Andreyevich must be credited with raising the problem of the history of the autocracy and internal policy in the 19th century in Soviet (which preferred other topics), for turning to the personalities that made history: Alexander III and the people around him and the role of the subjective factor in history. Even if Alexander Ill's personality was painted in dark colors and his domestic policy was described as 'the era of countereforms' it was still, by the standards of that time, a new departure in the traditional thematic range of Soviet historiography (p. 14). ... Boris Ananich stressed that Zayonchkovsky attached great importance to various reference books. He presided over the publication of such valuable books as Reference books on the history of pre-Revolutionary Russia and the five-volume History of pre-Revolutionary Russia in Diaries and Reminiscences. Annotated index of books and publications in journals (p. 18). ... S. Mironenko spoke about the methodology of Zayonchkovsky's work: Zayonchkovsky think about methodology? Undoubtedly. Did he accept the Marxist-Leninist methodology? Absolutely not. His colleagues criticized Zayonchkovsky for being a collector of facts without paying enough attention to theoretical problems. There may be a point there. It was probably because Andreyevich resented the prevailing simplified and primitive interpretation of Marxism that he always tried to oppose it with something. He did not declare it in his lectures, seldom spoke about it in his seminars, but he demonstrated by his own research work how he understood the essence of historical studies. We all remember well that his first requirement was work in the archives, because in his opinion a historian could not exist without archive materials (p. 23). ... The section of P. Zayonchkovsky's Unpublished Manuscripts includes diverse materials. The work On the Conquest of Central Asia (kindly made available by American historian B. Brooks to whom Zayonchkovsky gave it in the mid-1960s when Brooks was an exchange student at Moscow University) is essentially a manuscript. B. Brooks gives an account of their relationship in his preface with a telltale title Not Only the Conquest of Central Asia. Explaining why the paper remained unpublished, Brooks said: The work demonstrates the realities of historical science in the Soviet Union in the last years of Stalin's rule." @default.
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