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The Institute of Russian Studies at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies was established as the Institute of the Soviet Union and East European Issues on January 13, 1972 in Seoul. In those days, the international community was dominated by cold war ideology, which made any communication or exchange between the Republic of Korea and the Communist bloc virtually impossible. The IRS was the first research center that began collecting and examining periodicals from the Soviet Union, North Korea, and other socialist states. Being the only Soviet Union and East European Issues research institute in Korea, the IRS was able to obtain an unrivaled position in this field. In a country where little research was being conducted on socialism, the IRS exerted a strong influence on the direction of these studies, leading the discourse on communism. From the early 1990s the IRS began to narrow its research subjects to Russia and the CIS region. Concentrated studies on the economies, politics, societies and cultures of the CIS region and Russia became the focus of the Institute. In 1993, the Institute officially changed its name to the Institute of Russian Studies, and in July of 1999, due to space constraints, the IRS relocated to Hankuk University’s Global Campus in Yongin.

The IRS regularly invites distinguished scholars from Russia and other parts of the world to give special talks.
Invited speakers come from diverse academic fields, including politics, economics, and literature.

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Seocho-gu Banpo Library held humanities lecture

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2024.02.19
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Seocho-gu Banpo Library held humanities lecture

 

A total of eight online humanities lectures were held at the Banpo Library in Seocho-gu, Seoul from Monday, November 13, 2023 to Wednesday, December 20, 2023. In this course, which was conducted as part of the National Research Foundation of Korea's HK+ Project Regional Humanities Center project, Seoul National University Professor Seungmoo Baek and Dr. Seohyun Yoon each lectured four times.


Professor Baek Seung-moo will deliver a lecture on the theme of “Chekhov's Psychotherapy: Love, Forgive!”, seeking to understand the core content contained in Chekhov's four major plays, and specifically discussing the meaninglessness of life and intellectualism. Focusing on [Uncle Vanya], which deals with isolation, [The Seagull], which depicts the frustration and ruin of a father's absence, [Three Sisters], which depicts cruel times and pushed lives, and [The Cherry Blossom Garden], which depicts historical time and the downfall of generations. The story unfolded. Professor Baek said Chekhov said, “Before I experienced real love, I thought I knew everything about love. The same goes for life. You don't really know what life is until you live it. I encourage you to be humble in front of life. He mentioned that “when you bow your head before life like that, you can love and forgive yourself,” and emphasized that we should experience a life of humility, love, and forgiveness through Chekhov’s four stage plays.







Dr. Seohyun Yoon gave a lecture on the topic “Reading Russian Novels: Who Doesn’t Know This Person?” and looked for similarities between us and our contemporaries in the characters of classical Russian novels and through this process, learned about the things that do not change even as times change. I wanted to approach the essence of humanity. Specifically, in the first lecture, “Gogol <The Overcoat>: The One Who Saved,” Dr. Yoon looked into our desires revealed in the story of a 9th-rank civil servant seduced on a night in St. Petersburg when purchasing an overcoat, and in the second lecture, “Dostoevsky, Notes of an Underground Dweller.” >: In “A person oppressed by self-consciousness,” we looked at the closedness of human thinking through the appearance of a character full of entitlement and delusions of grandeur. In the third lecture, “Tolstoy's <Anna Karenina>: A person who is 'all or nothing'," the meaning of a life without lies was examined in the images of Anna Karenina and Konstantin Ryovin, and in the fourth and final lecture, "Chekhov's <The Man with the Dog' In “Woman>: A person who lived life the way it is meant to be lived,” we captured moments in which the truth about human essence is revealed in banal everyday occurrences.


This event, which was thought to have sublimated the limitations of the awkwardness and inconvenience of online lectures into lively Q&A in the chat window, was so successful that all lecture attendees requested that follow-up lectures be opened as soon as possible.




 




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