Citations:Odesan

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English citations of Odesan and Odessan

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  • 2004: Harvard Ukrainian Studies, v 27, Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute, p 387:
    While the form and even much of the content of these papers were similar to analogous newspapers elsewhere, Sylvester does an excellent job of identifying the uniquely Odesan perspective on respectability, criminality, and gender in her principal sources.
  • 2007: Eastern Europe, Berkeley, CA: Lonely Planet, →OCLC p 885:
    With all these varied tongues lashing, it’s no wonder the lively Odesan patter is a wellspring of hip Russian slang.
  • 2008: Tanya Richardson, Kaleidoscopic Odessa: History and Place in Contemporary Ukraine, University of Toronto Press, →ISBN, p 199:
    Although he has focused mainly on Ukrainian publications from Odesa and some Ukrainian-Odesan artists such as Mykhailo Zhuk (1883–1964), Ambrosio Zhdakh (1855–1927), and Yury Korolenko (a contemporary Ukrainian artist in Odesa), he also collects items about Russians, Poles, and Jews, as well as Ukrainian publications in foreign languages.
  • 2014: Matthew D. Pauly, Breaking the Tongue: Language, Education, and Power in Soviet Ukraine, 1923–1934, University of Toronto Press, →ISBN:
    Was Galicia in western Ukraine the one place in an Odesan’s imagination that the Ukrainian language lived as something more than the rhetoric of public ceremony?
    However, this study does engage the idea of an Odesan construction of distinctiveness and adaptability.
  • 2022: Constantin Ardeleanu and Olena Palko, editors, Making Ukraine: Negotiating, Contesting, and Drawing the Borders in the Twentieth Century, McGill–Queen’s University Press, →ISBN:
    On 6 March 1924, the Odesan section of the KP(b)U proclaimed the formation of a Moldovan branch.

See also