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引用次数: 1
摘要
这本书是关于1814年至2014年俄罗斯-挪威接触点主题的两卷书中的第一卷,展示了一份巨大而非凡的学术工作。这是第一卷,从1814年到1917年,从挪威立宪之年到俄国革命之年。全书共600多页,分为21章,由17位历史学家撰写,其中8位来自俄罗斯。编辑,来自特罗姆瑟大学的延斯·皮特·尼尔森教授,除了对文本做出大量贡献外,还负责将所有不同的研究成果整合在一起,或者更确切地说,将所有不同的研究成果编织在一起。他的主要顾问是特罗姆瑟大学的Kari Aga Myklebost教授,他也对文本作出了重大贡献。在我对这项工作的介绍中,我将首先从特罗姆瑟大学的角度来评论俄罗斯和挪威历史学家之间合作的开始。只有到那时,我才会转向这本书本身,对它的主题和书中详细阐述的俄罗斯人和挪威人的许多接触点给出一个印象。其中一些发现将被提出,但不会被反对,因为本刊的篇幅和作者的能力都不允许。在挪威,我们有很多与波莫尔贸易有关的研究,以及当地历史写作中的描述。到目前为止,我们所缺乏的是俄罗斯方面,从俄罗斯期刊、传记、研究论文,尤其是档案中挖掘出来的俄罗斯人的描述和看法。
Russia and Norway: Research Collaboration and Comparison of Asymmetrical Relations
This book is a presentation of a vast and remarkable piece of academic work, the first of two volumes on the theme of Russian–Norwegian points of contact between 1814 and 2014. This is the first volume, from 1814 to 1917, from the year of the Norwegian constitution to that of the Russian revolution. It consists of more than 600 pages divided into 21 chapters, brought forth by 17 historians, eight of them from Russia. The editor, Professor Jens Petter Nielsen from the University of Tromsø, besides contributing heavily to the text, is also responsible for sowing together or rather weaving all the different research contributions into one fabric. His main consultant has been Professor Kari Aga Myklebost, University of Tromsø, who has also contributed substantially to the text. In my presentation of the work I will first comment on the beginning of the collaboration between Russian and Norwegian historians seen from the perspective of the University of Tromsø. Only then will I turn to the book itself to give an impression of its themes and the many contact points of Russians and Norwegians that are elaborated on in the book. Some of the findings will be presented, but not argued against, as neither the space in this journal nor the competence of the presenter allows it. In Norway we have a lot of research connected to the Pomor trade and descriptions in local history writing. What we have lacked, until now, has been the Russian side, the Russian descriptions and perceptions dug out of Russian journals, biographies, research theses and not least, the archives.