Scientists worldwide had been endeavouring to decipher Maya writings since the middle of the XIX century without any success. The first person to decipher the Maya hieroglyphic script was Yury Knorozov, a Russian scientist. The material translated made it possible to understand the lifestyle and spiritual concepts of Ancient Indians: the meaning and calendar plan for rituals and economic work, the mechanism of the government and procedure for power consolidation of governors, principles of foreign policy and warfare, basic astronomy and meteorology. Galina Ershova, an internationally recognised scientist, Doctor of Historical Sciences, Professor, disciple of Yuri Knorozov and Director of the Yu. Knorozov Centre for Mesoamerican Studies of the Russian State University for the Humanities, author of major articles on Maya script, told us what various written sources of Ancient Indians, including the Maya calendar, reveal.
Recent events |
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Galina Ershova
Life of the Ancient Maya as revealed by hieroglyphic texts |
March, 3
Life of the Ancient Maya as revealed by hieroglyphic texts
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Alexander Logunov
A Russian between rights and rules: specific features of the Russian legal culture |
March, 3
A Russian between rights and rules: specific features of the Russian legal culture
It has been deemed that Russian mentality is particularly characterised by hearty dislike for legal values. Alexander Logunov, Doctor of Historical Sciences, professor, Dean of the History, Political Science and Law Department at the Russian State University for the Humanities, told us about distinctive features of a Russian person’s attitude towards rights and rules, and about the steps that need to be taken to form a true law-governed state and a true civil society in our country.
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Andrey Maximov
How to get your vis-à-vis talking? |
February, 25
How to get your vis-à-vis talking?
Any person may face situations wherein they need to get the interlocutor talking in order to obtain necessary information or, at least, simply keep the conversation going. According to our guest, Andrey Maximov, a TV and radio presenter, playwright and director, there is a certain system of principles, which help in building of any type of communication. He told us how to look in a new light at interpersonal relations and how to reach the utmost quality of communication with people regarding their age, mentality, and activity areas.
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Ilya Strebulaev
MBA in Russia and worldwide. What is it necessary for? |
February, 25
MBA in Russia and worldwide. What is it necessary for?
The first prototypes of modern MBA programmes emerged in the USA at the end of the XIX century, the time when firms were in need of specialists having expertise in scientific management approach. In the middle of the XX century, the first MBA programmes appeared in Europe. Today educational institutions granting their graduates this degree operate with success all over the world. But what is MBA in particular? Ilya Strebulaev, professor of Stanford Business School, holder of the Russian Economic School Diploma, told us how the world´s best business schools are organised and what Russia needs to learn in this sphere, what programmes fit you personally, and answers the key question: what is the essence of business education?
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Sergei Guriev
Independent directors in state-run companies: a new management method? |
February, 18
Independent directors in state-run companies: a new management method?
In 2008 Russian state-run companies started inviting independent directors to sit on their boards. Why are independent board members needed in state-run companies? Who do they work for? How successful has such experience proved to be? Sergei Guriev, a well-known economist, member of several boards of directors of state-run, private companies and non-profit organisations, shared with us his own experience and that of his colleagues from the viewpoint of a corporate management theorist and practitioner.
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Alexei Malenkin
Pitfalls of Russian Tax Law |
February, 18
Pitfalls of Russian Tax Law
The Russian tax system is relatively young and it has been developing for the last twenty years. Although considerable work has been done during this period to resolve significant contradictions between the tax authorities and the business community, and important results have been obtained in all spheres related to regulating tax legal relationship, there are still a number of problems to be solved. Alexei Malenkin, Ernst & Young partner, helped us in sorting out some of them. He highlights the matters to be paid attention to and the steps to be taken to settle conflicts between business and tax authorities: starting from changing the approach to the analysis of the taxpayer´s operations to the general approach to habitual operations with companies.
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Alexandra Konnikova,
Albert Albert
Phenomenon and Utopia of Joint Creation |
Phenomenon and Utopia of Joint Creation
A creative team is a special environment in which standard rules and project management models often do not work. Alexandra Konnikova and Albert Albert are dancers, choreographers, teachers and founders of the Po.V.S.Tanzy Dance Company, participants of the Russian and international projects in contemporary choreography, improvisation and legitimate theatre. They spoke of the ways to organize the work process within a team of creative people so that the potential for personal and professional growth of every individual could be kept and that the process, at the same time, would cause the general concept to be turned into reality; the ways of allocating responsibility and giving up temporary leadership in a team.
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Mikhail Korobko
“The Unknown Moscow” |
“The Unknown Moscow”
Mikhail Korobko, architectural historian, author of more than one hundred publications about Moscow, its environs and the heritage of the Russian province, spoke of the unknown nooks of Moscow with a special focus on old manor houses. In our guest’s opinion, manors are of particular interest as the quintessence of art, architecture and lifestyle of the past. There are a lot of monuments of manor architecture within and beyond Moscow apart from the well known Arkhangelskoye, Kolomenskoye, Ostankino and Tsaritsyno. The roads that lead to other monuments are closed to visitors for a variety of reasons. Mikhail shared the secrets of those places and showed rare pictures and photographs to illustrate his story.
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Zinaida Bonami
Per Aspera ad Astra: the Chronicles of the Exhibition Life |
Per Aspera ad Astra: the Chronicles of the Exhibition Life
Exhibitions are like a clock dial hiding the clockwork movement but reflecting the passing of time. They evidence the invisible work, which constitutes the goal and public purpose of any museum. Since it was established, the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts has opened about one thousand five hundred exhibitions. Many have been really “star-spangled” but not a single one has avoided aspera while being created. Zinaida Bonami, Deputy Director for Exhibitions and International Relations of the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts, told how the museum has overcome all the adversities and obstacles that have come its way. She shared the unique experience of creating great exhibitions and described the expositions that have proven emblematic and which trends have been set by the Pushkin Museum.
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Andrey Tolstoy
The Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts. Where Art Meets Science |
The Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts. Where Art Meets Science
Andrey Tolstoy, Deputy Director for Science of the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts, told how the artefacts already represented in the current collections are investigated and how the new ones get there, how scientific ideas about a given epoch in the art history evolve in time, how the principles of presentation of the permanent exposition change. Andrey devoted some time also to the theme of creation of temporary exposition concepts and talked in detail about the School of Paris exhibition dedicated to the international community of several generations of artists from the 1900s to the 1960s, for whom Paris was not only the cultural capital of Europe but also sort of a school.
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Linor Goralik
Modern Poetry |
Modern Poetry
Modern Russian poetry is so diverse that someone exposed to it for the first time is bound to have difficulty deciding which path to follow. Linor Goralik talked to us from the point of view of an interested reader about why modern poetry needs to be studied in the first place and about how to find one’s way around it. In the opinion of our guest, poetry is an expansion of human experience through words. There are two mechanisms that make people more introspective – the first one is getting new experiences and the second one is reliving old experiences.
One obstacle to appreciating poetry is resistance to the new forms that modern poets tend to choose for their work. But this is little more than a prejudice that hides the rich world of the new literary works from the reader. Linor told us about some interesting ways to find modern poetry.
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Efim Iosifovich Pivovar
Russians and Russian culture abroad: new challenges and opportunities |
Russians and Russian culture abroad: new challenges and opportunities
Since the late 19th century many Russians have been moving abroad in search of a better life. Efim Pivovar, the president of the Russian State University for the Humanities, doctor of philosophy in history, professor, an associate of the Russian Academy of Sciences, presented a lecture on Russians abroad as a cultural and socio-historic phenomenon; how Russians have been living abroad; what reasons they have had for emigration and how a Russian diaspora abroad can develop.
The lecture opens a series of lectures by leading lecturers of the Russian State University for the Humanities. The lectures are devoted to the 100th anniversary of A. Shanyavsky People’s University, whose original buildings are now part of the campus of the Russian State University for the Humanities.
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Irina Alexandrovna Antonova
The Past, Present and Future of the Museum |
The Past, Present and Future of the Museum
Next year the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts will be celebrating its 100th anniversary. Today the Pushkin Museum has the largest collection of foreign art on display that is viewed by about half a million people every year. Irina Antonova has been the chief executive officer of the museum since 1961 and so she knows about the museum more than anybody else. Live on the Rain TV Channel, Irina Antonova told us about the museum’s past as well as about where it’s headed in the future. Those participating in the discussion learned about how the art masterpieces now found in the museum were saved during the Second World War and how the museum’s buildings are going to be rebuilt and turned into an art campus.
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Andrei Logvin
Words as Symbols, Symbols as Words. |
Words as Symbols, Symbols as Words.
Andrei Logvin is a legendary Russian graphic artist, poster artist, designer, laureate of more than 30 Russian and international design and advertising contests, founder and CEO of the logvindesign creative group. Andrei told us about symbolic communication systems and how old signs and symbols get rejuvenated and acquire new power, about verbal and non-verbal perception of symbols and about the impact of symbols on human history.
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Evgeny Ponasenkov
Collapse of civilisations: things to do when it is too late |
Collapse of civilisations: things to do when it is too late
One of the greatest mysteries of the history of mankind is the emergence and collapse of empires and civilisations. Our guest considers that our generation, too, has to go through similar ordeals. Evgeny Ponasenkov, a historian and theatre director, academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences and Arts, has given his view on the causes and essence of what is happening, on how the situation will develop in the near future and what we can do.
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Marat Guelman
On success |
On success
Success is quite a relative concept, but it is unquestionably linked to the state of mind and to the attitude towards the things around us. Our guest, Marat Guelman, a publicist, political consultant, collector of modern art pieces, gallery owner, director of the Centre for Contemporary Arts and the Perm Museum of Contemporary Art “PERMM”, is convinced that no obstacle can impede your progress once you are determined. Marat has shared with us his idea of how to be ready for unexpected turns of fate and to learn to gain positive experience from every mistake, citing examples from his own life.
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Aleksandr Gordon
Conflictology |
Conflictology
Interacting with lots of people and attempting to communicate your point of view to them, it is important to keep your auditory attentive and make it interested. Aleksandr Gordon, a TV host, director, and journalist, believes that there is nothing more effective to reach these goals than creating a conflict or provocation that would make it possible to focus attention on the necessary topic. One person’s action is an event for another, and throwing in certain elaborate events, you can drive your interlocutor to do what you need or expect. It is necessary to learn how to understand well what people need and to recognize their types and characters. This can be achieved through daily simple exercises; for example, watching different people in public places, paying attention to each detail of their images, and writing down your observations. Even if these notes do not form the basis for a story or a film, they will definitely make you a more sensitive and interesting interlocutor capable of steering a conversation into the right direction.
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Alexander Turkot,
Aleksey Chernyshov
“Intelligence Versus Hydrocarbons” |
“Intelligence Versus Hydrocarbons”
Alexander Turkot, Executive Director of the Information and Computer Technology Cluster of the Skolkovo Foundation, and Aleksey Chernyshov, Head of the Center for Strategic Initiatives and Forecasts, argued with each other in a live broadcast over Russia’s destiny. Will this country be able to stop being a resource-dependent economy and switch to its intelligent potential? In Alexander’s opinion, efforts should be focused on high-tech production. Aleksey noted that we can no longer use our hands to create anything or produce any natural commodity. He thinks that this may result in a real catastrophe, and even high technology will not help … . The discussion included the showing of a film about young entrepreneurs’ trip to the Silicon Valley.
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Tigran Keosayan
“How you ask is what you get” |
“How you ask is what you get”
Your success in business and everyday life is directly linked to the ability to correctly word your questions. A well-made question will encourage your business interlocutors to answer. It will enable them to answer or will make them think it over. Tigran Keosayan, a Russian film director, actor, writer, and a TV host, shared his secrets of this important artistry. To become a good questioner, our guest believes, you should above all learn how to relax before the audience. Keosayan also thinks that you can try to find something of interest to you even in a topic that, at first glance, seems unworthy of your attention. In this case, it is necessary to get the measure of your interlocutors, watch their behavior and emotions, and ask a question that can make them tell you much more than in reply to any leading question.
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Yevgeny Mitta and Aleksandr Sheyn
The Role of an Artist in Post-Soviet Society |
The Role of an Artist in Post-Soviet Society
What is the role of a contemporary artist? What is an artist’s mission? These are the questions answered in a live broadcast by the directors and producers of an arts film series, Yevgeny Mitta and Aleksandr Sheyn. Looking back onto the days twenty years back in time, Yevgeny and Aleksandr noted that one of the most significant things that distinguished the 1990s artists was that they did not have any specialized education. On the one hand, this is a negative factor, but on the other, this allowed them to go beyond certain limits and standards existing in the arts and develop their originality. This was also facilitated by the almost complete absence of relations with the foreign art environment. Now everything has changed; but the artists’ goal of showing what and how they see, expressing their feelings and pain remains the same. The meeting included a showing and discussion of the film Vinogradov and Dubossarsky: a Tailor-made Painting about these two famous Russian contemporary artists.































