KOSTRHUN, Petr. MEZINÁRODNÍ KONGRES ASOCIACE PRO VÝZKUM KVARTÉRU V LENINGRADĚ V ROCE 1932. Dokumenty k účasti Karla Absolona a recepci sovětské meziválečné paleolitické archeologie a ideologické propagandy (INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF EUROPEAN QUATERNARY IN LENINGRAD IN 1932 Documents on the participation of Karel Absolon and the reception of Soviet interwar Palaeolithic archaeology and ideological propaganda). Acta Musei Moraviae, Scientiae Sociales. Brno: Moravské zemské muzeum, 2015, vol. 100, No 2, p. 179 - 206, 27 pp. ISSN 0323-0570.
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Basic information
Original name MEZINÁRODNÍ KONGRES ASOCIACE PRO VÝZKUM KVARTÉRU V LENINGRADĚ V ROCE 1932. Dokumenty k účasti Karla Absolona a recepci sovětské meziválečné paleolitické archeologie a ideologické propagandy
Name (in English) INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF EUROPEAN QUATERNARY IN LENINGRAD IN 1932 Documents on the participation of Karel Absolon and the reception of Soviet interwar Palaeolithic archaeology and ideological propaganda
Authors KOSTRHUN, Petr.
Edition Acta Musei Moraviae, Scientiae Sociales, Brno, Moravské zemské muzeum, 2015, 0323-0570.
Other information
Type of outcome Article in a journal
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
Keywords (in Czech) Historie archeologie, sovětská archeologie Karel Absolon, česká archeologie, propaganda a ideologie
Keywords in English History of archaeology, Soviet Archaeology, Czech Archaeology, Karel Absolon, Propaganda and Ideology.
Tags Reviewed
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Petr Kostrhun, Ph.D., učo 4794. Changed: 11/1/2018 11:50.
Abstract (in English)
The text evaluates the participation of the Moravian archaeologists Karel Absolon and Josef Skutil at the Second International Congress of the Association for the Study of European Quaternary, which took place in Leningrad in September 1932. The work starts from the study of the unpublished archival fund from the legacy of Karel Absolon, deposited at the Moravian Museum. Besides a description of the course of the congress and extensive twenty-day excursion around the European parts of Russia, the congress is evaluated in the wider historical and political context. Despite the fact that the congress took place at the time of the Great Famine in Ukraine and in the adjacent areas, which the participants visited, the image of life in the Soviet Union was perceived positively. The Leningrad congress is also observed as a successful project of Soviet international ideological propaganda.
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