Encyclopedia

Chapaev

The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Chapaev

 

(until 1939, the village of Lbishchensk), a city and the administrative center of Chapaev Raion, Ural’sk Oblast, Kazakh SSR. Chapaev is a landing on the Ural River, 130 km south of Ural’sk. An industrial combine and the V. I. Chapaev Memorial Museum are in the city.

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mentioned in
References in periodicals archive
It is interesting to note that in USSR the process of desecration was accompanied by an increasing ridicule of revolutionary relics It all started with anti-Khrushchev anecdotes and a series of anecdotes about Chapaev (which indicate a rising disillusionment with "heroic" epic of Civil War).
Instead of considering postwar trophy films as a product of a revived 1920s distinction between entertaining and enlightening cinema, this study examines the place of trophy films in a cinema tradition that had striven since the release of Chapaev (dir.
Film characters like the machine-gunner Anka in Chapaev (1934) and the sword-swinging Vasilisa in Alexander Nevsky (1938) provided captivating images of women willing, able, and eager to kill.
Rosa Elena Perez-Sanchez * (2), Manuel Lopez-Rodriguez (1), Erick Chapaev Bautista-Guzman (1), Antonio Garcia-Valladares (1), Rafael Maria Roman-Bravo (3) y Ruy Ortiz-Rodriguez (1)
Chapaev and his comrades; war and the Russian literary hero across the twentieth century.
In 1945, communist Poland is a world in "ruins, rags, and lies." We get a crash course in current events, from the Kielce pogroms to Lysenko, from Chapaev to Stalin's seventieth birthday, from drunk party officials to the building of the Palace of Culture.
Turning from the Jewish experience to the language of the Soviet state, Michael Gorham's brilliant contribution juxtaposes Red Cavalry with Dmitrii Furmanov's Chapaev, a foundational text in the Soviet literary canon instrumental in developing a new revolutionary discourse.
BORN, INTERNATIONAL COMMERCIAL ARBITRATION 580-619 (2009); Guillermo Aguilar Alvarez, Article II(2) of the New York Convention and the Courts, in IMPROVING THE EFFICIENCY OF ARBITRATION AND AWARDS: 40 YEARS OF APPLICATION OF THE NEW YORK CONVENTION, at 67, 68-81 (Albert Jan van den Berg ed., 1999) [hereinafter EFFICIENCY]; Marc Blessing, The Law Applicable to the Arbitration Clause and Arbitrability, in EFFICIENCY, supra, at 168, 172; Roman Chapaev & Veronica Bradautanu, International Commercial Arbitration in the CIS and Mongolia, 17 AM.
Copyright © 2003-2025 Farlex, Inc Disclaimer
All content on this website, including dictionary, thesaurus, literature, geography, and other reference data is for informational purposes only. This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional.