40,880 research outputs found
Special Libraries, January 1962
Volume 53, Issue 1https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl_1962/1000/thumbnail.jp
Special Libraries, May-June 1958
Volume 49, Issue 5https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl_1958/1004/thumbnail.jp
Computer Technology for the Benefit of the Rule of Law: Communication and Research
This Essay suggests a number of ways in which rule of law partners in the United States and abroad with modest technical background might more easily communicate, plan, coordinate, and research joint projects. Without the new computer technologies it would be very difficult to conduct rule of law projects between partners in the United States and Russia. Recent advances in technologies now make communication with colleagues across the world by computer easier than ever
Special Libraries, April 1959
Volume 50, Issue 4https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl_1959/1003/thumbnail.jp
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Re-membering Armenian Literature in the Soviet Borderlands
This article focuses on Armenian literature during the Soviet period and engages with the varied responses of Armenian writers to the Soviet imperialism from its periphery, with a particular eye to poets like Hovhannes Shiraz and Eghishé Charents, who, despite the censor’s unrelenting efforts to silence national discourse and remembrance of the Armenian Genocide, sought to rekindle the Armenian sense of self. This article also attempts to highlight the poetic sensitivity and daringness of those Armenian literati, such as Derenik Demirchian, Gurgen Mahari, and Kostan Zarian, who believed it was their duty to faithfully depict the current historical moment, even in the face of its inhumanity, as under Stalin, in order to preserve and re-member their nation’s past. Although a nation with millennia of literary history, Armenian literature remains virtually unknown outside the small group of Armenian speakers within the country and in its diaspora. This article hopes to shed some light on twentieth-century Armenian literary development and in the process counter the continued monopoly of Russian literature on Soviet and post- Soviet literary discourse by expanding its imaginative territory
Special Libraries, July-August 1958
Volume 49, Issue 6https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl_1958/1005/thumbnail.jp
Special Libraries, February 1960
Volume 51, Issue 2https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl_1960/1001/thumbnail.jp
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