Comparing WWI and WWII reveals their major discrepancies. The first started as a European conflict; German endeavours to split it up only produced results in 1917 when the revolutionary events in Russia knocked this state out of the collective war. The similar project in the west – in Mexico – failed. WWII was the sequel to a series of conflicts in the Far East, Africa and Europe, which only gradually evolved towards a collective conflict.
F.02 Acquisition of new scientific knowledge
COBISS.SI-ID: 38630445The article, which was published in conference proceedings (SGEM), addresses the narrative strategy in historiographic monographs; in his “Catilinarian Conspiracy”, the Roman historian Sallust treated a non-event (the so-called first conspiracy of Catiline) as a real danger, thus psychologically supporting the idea of the grave danger to the Republic during the second conspiracy.
F.02 Acquisition of new scientific knowledge
COBISS.SI-ID: 39772973Neža Zajc on March 23rd, 2016 at the Prešeren Hall of Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts organized a scientific-poetic symposium entitled "Poetry and Death." The scientific conference consisted of ten lecturers, of poets, scholars, and translators who delivered important thoughts on the concept of poetry. Among them it is worth mentioning academician Janko Kos and a poet Niko Grafenauer, the Prešeren Prize winner (2015) translator Marjan Strojan, translator and researcher Nada Grošelj, poet Brane Senegačnik and eminent literary historian Igor Grdina. The symposium attracted more than 40 alert listeners, among whom were academicians, renowned Slovenian poets and philosophers. A book featuring all the presented contributions will be published in 2017 by The Publishing House of SRC SASA.
B.01 Organiser of a scientific meeting
COBISS.SI-ID: 40305453Contribution explored a series of texts written by the cultural and political historian and publicist Josip Puntar (1884–1937), which were published in Slovenec (1935). In this way Puntar presented to the Slovenian public "documents" (newspaper articles of (un)known Slovenian correspondents from the areas around Kobarid, Tolmin and Gorica, but also some outstanding individuals like Andrej Marušič (1828–1898), Maks Pleteršnik (1840–1923), Andrej Einspieler (1813–1888), Janez Bleiweis (1808–1881), Julius Fröbel (1805–1893) etc.) from the period after the war in 1866, representing a significant contribution to the understanding of the Slovenian political mind-set at that time.
B.04 Guest lecture
COBISS.SI-ID: 63095138The author notes that by Gestrin in accordance with his Marxist view of historiography the question of economic development of societies was semantically covered with the question of studying the deep structures of their general historical development.
B.04 Guest lecture
COBISS.SI-ID: 40839469