01267nam--2200409---450-99000234291020331620130213090719.00521-20807-6000234291USA01000234291(ALEPH)000234291USA0100023429120050110d1976----km-y0itay0103----baenglatIT||||||||001yyAgamemnonSenecaedited with a commentary by R. J. TarrantCambridgeCambridge University Press1976VIII, 409 p.23 cmCambridge classical texts and commentaries18Con il testo originale2001Cambridge classical texts and commentaries18Agamemnon19579SENECA,Lucius Annaeus<4 a.C.-65>7130TARRANT,Richard JohnITsalbcISBD990002342910203316Coll EOI 1858151 G.Coll EOIXV.8. 1201225493 L.M.XV.8.BKGIUFSOSIAV51020050110USA011010IANNONE9020130213USA010907BATCH-UPD9020150428USA011540Agamemnon19579UNISA03264nam 22006495 450 991048453470332120230810171835.09783030595463303059546310.1007/978-3-030-59546-3(CKB)4100000011902695(MiAaPQ)EBC6571565(Au-PeEL)EBL6571565(OCoLC)1249473237(DE-He213)978-3-030-59546-3(EXLCZ)99410000001190269520210426d2021 u| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe Historiography of the First Russian Antarctic Expedition, 1819-21 /by Rip Bulkeley1st ed. 2021.Cham :Springer International Publishing :Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,2021.1 online resource (331 pages)9783030595456 3030595455 Includes bibliographical references and indexes.1. Introduction -- 2. The Cultural Context -- 3. The First Assessment -- 4. Shifting Grounds -- 5. Lazarev's Letter -- 6. Transformation -- 7. Attempted Consolidation -- 8. The Latter Soviet period -- 9. Modern Russia -- 10. Conclusions.This book looks at the different ways in which Russian historians and authors have thought about their country's first Antarctic expedition (1819-21) over the past 200 years. It considers the effects their discussions have had on Russia's Antarctic policy and may yet have on Antarctica itself. In particular, it examines the Soviet decision in 1949, in line with the cultural policies of late Stalinism, to revise the traditional view of the expedition in order to claim that it was Russian seamen that first sighted the Antarctic mainland in January 1820; this claim remains the official position in Russia today. The author illustrates, however, that the case for such a claim has never been established, and that attempts to make it damaged the work of successive Russian historians. Providing a timely assessment of Russian historiography of the Bellingshausen expedition and examining the connections between the priority claim and national policy goals, this book represents an important contribution to the history of the Antarctic. .RussiaHistoryEurope, EasternHistorySoviet UnionHistoryScienceHistoryWorld politicsRussian, Soviet, and East European HistoryHistory of SciencePolitical HistoryRussiaHistory.Europe, EasternHistory.Soviet UnionHistory.ScienceHistory.World politics.Russian, Soviet, and East European History.History of Science.Political History.526.0979809033947.0072Bulkeley Rip53286MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910484534703321The Historiography of the First Russian Antarctic Expedition, 1819-211892911UNINA