Language-sword : the November 2023 Slavonic item of the month

This month, the Modern and Medieval Languages and Linguistics Faculty Library and the UL received their copies of the 2023 book Mova-mech : i︠a︡k hovoryla radi︠a︡nsʹka imperii︠a︡ [Language-sword : how the Soviet empire spoke] by I︠E︡vhenii︠a︡ Kuzni︠e︡t︠s︡ova.  The book had been requested by the Language Teaching Officer in Ukrainian at the Faculty, and the libraries had agreed to buy a copy each.

The 374-page book contains 87 short chapters covering the history and various aspects of Soviet language policy and its effect, including on Ukraine and Ukrainian.  The book’s table of contents can currently be seen as snapshots on the publisher’s page for the titleContinue reading “Language-sword : the November 2023 Slavonic item of the month”

Untangling a record for a Ukrainian book

It crossed my mind today to look up in our staff cataloguing system books published in Ukraine and coded as being in Russian, to see whether any of them had been incorrectly coded.  The fifth result was exactly that – a Ukrainian title mangled in transliteration performed in keeping with the rules for Russian:

  • Мистецтво стародавнього Києва [by]  Ю.С. Асєєв –>
  • Mystet︠s︡tvo starodavnʹoho Kyi︠e︡va [by]  I︠U︡.S. Asi︠e︡i︠e︡v (correct)
  • Mistet︡s︠tvo starodavnʹogo Kieva [by] I︠U︡.S. Aseev (very incorrect)

Continue reading “Untangling a record for a Ukrainian book”

Recent Ukrainian language and literature additions in the University Library

This post looks in brief at some of the most recent Ukrainian arrivals in the UL.  For obvious and awful reasons, we do not expect more books from Ukraine for some considerable time, but we will keep back money for Ukrainian material so that we can support publishers and vendors through purchases when Ukraine can again turn to peace-time activities. Continue reading “Recent Ukrainian language and literature additions in the University Library”