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Slavic () or Slavonic () studies, also known as Slavistics, is the academic field of area studies concerned with peoples, languages, history, and culture. Originally, a Slavist or Slavicist was primarily a or researching Slavistics. Increasingly, historians, social scientists, and other humanists who study Slavic cultures and societies have been included in this rubric.

In the United States, Slavic studies is dominated by . , a professor of Slavic studies at , described the situation of non-Russian Slavic studies as "invisible and mute".


History
Slavistics emerged in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, simultaneously with Romantic nationalism among various Slavic nations, and ideological attempts to establish a common sense of Slavic community, exemplified by the movement. Among the first scholars to use the term was Josef Dobrovský (1753–1829).

The history of Slavic studies can be divided into three periods. Until 1876 the early Slavists concentrated on documentation and printing of monuments of Slavic languages, among them the first texts written in national languages. At this time the majority of Slavic languages received their first modern dictionaries, grammars, and compendia. The second period, ending with World War I, featured the rapid development of Slavic philology and linguistics, most notably outside of Slavic countries themselves, in the circles formed around August Schleicher (1821–1868) and around (1840–1916) at the University of Leipzig. At this time, Slavonic scholars focused on .

After World War II, centers of Slavic studies were created at various universities around the world, with much greater expansion into other humanities and social science disciplines. This development was partly due to political concerns in Western Europe and the North America arising from the Cold War. Slavic studies flourished in the years from World War II into the 1990s, though university enrollments in Slavic languages have declined since then.


Subfields
Following the traditional division of Slavs into three subgroups (eastern, southern, western), Slavic studies are divided into three distinct subfields:
  • East Slavic studies, encompassing the study of East Slavic peoples and their linguistic, literary, and other cultural and historical heritages.
    • Belarusian studies, or Belarusistics ();
    • , or Russistics ();
    • studies, or Rusynistics (); Kassianova (2002), p. 1001: " Rusinistica, or Carpatho-Rusyn studies - a social science discipline focusing on the history of an Eastern Slavic people inhabiting the northern and southern slope of the Carpathian mountains and living within the borders of several Eastern and Central European countries."
    • Ukrainian studies, or Ukrainistics ();
  • South Slavic studies, encompassing the study of South Slavic peoples and their linguistic, literary, and other cultural and historical heritages.
    • studies, or Bosniacistics ();
    • Bulgarian studies, or Bulgaristics ();
    • , or Croatistics ();
    • Macedonian studies, or Macedonistics ();
    • Montenegrin studies, or Montenegristics ();
    • , or Serbistics ();
    • Slovene Studies, or Slovenistics ();
    • , or Yugoslavistics ();
  • West Slavic studies, encompassing the study of West Slavic peoples and their linguistic, literary, and other cultural and historical heritages.


Slavic countries and areas of interest


Notable people
Historical

  • Johann Christoph Jordan, the author of an early scholarly work in Slavic studies
  • Josef Dobrovský (1753–1829) from
  • (1780–1840) from Slovenia
  • Alexander Vostokov (1781–1864) from Russia
  • Vuk Stefanović Karadžić (1787–1864) from Serbia
  • Pavel Jozef Šafárik (1795–1861) from Slovakia
  • Mykhaylo Maksymovych (1804–1873) from Ukraine
  • Izmail Sreznevsky (1812–1880) from Russia
  • (1813–1891) from Slovenia
  • (1818–1898) from Russia
  • August Schleicher (1821–1868) from Germany
  • Đuro Daničić (1825–1882) from Serbia
  • Anton Janežič (1828–1869) from Slovenia
  • Alexander Potebnja (1835–1891) from Ukraine
  • Vatroslav Jagić (1838–1923) from Croatia
  • (1840–1916) from Germany
  • Jan Niecisław Baudouin de Courtenay (1845–1929) from Poland
  • Filipp Fortunatov (1848–1914) from Russia
  • Ivan Milčetić (1853–1921) from Austro-Hungary
  • Aleksander Brückner (1856–1939) from eastern Galicia
  • (1861–1952) from Slovenia
  • Lyubomir Miletich (1863–1937) from /Macedonia
  • Aleksey Shakhmatov (1864–1920) from Russia
  • (1866–1936) from France
  • Holger Pedersen (1867–1953) from Denmark
  • 1869–1942) from Russia
  • (1872–1954) from Slovenia
  • (1874–1926) from Macedonia/Bulgaria/Russia
  • Aleksandar Belić (1876–1960) from Serbia
  • (1881–1967) from France
  • (1886–1962) from Russia
  • André Vaillant (1890–1977) from France
  • Dmytro Chyzhevsky (1894–1977) from Ukraine
  • (1896–1982) from Russia
  • (1897–1974) from Austria
  • Zdzisław Stieber (1903–1980) from Poland
  • (1906–1999) from Russia
  • (1908–2002) from Ukraine
  • Jaroslav Rudnyckyj (1910–1995) from eastern Galicia
  • (1912–1969) from Bulgaria
  • Horace G. Lunt (1918–2010) from the United States
  • Karel van het Reve (1921–1999) from the Netherlands
  • Blaže Koneski (1921–1993) from North Macedonia
  • (1922–1993) from Soviet Union/Estonia
  • (1925–2002) from Poland/United States
  • Vladislav Illich-Svitych (1934–1966) from Russia
  • Thomas Schaub Noonan (1938–2001) from the United States
  • (1927–2003) from Germany
  • Isabel de Madariaga (1919–2014) from UK
  • John Simon Gabriel Simmons (1915–2005) from UK
  • (1930–2023) from Russia
  • Pavle Ivić (1924–1999) from Serbia
  • Edward Stankiewicz (1920–2013) from Poland/United States
  • Nicholas V. Riasanovsky (1923–2011) Russian-American
  • Alexander M. Schenker (1924–2019) from the United States
  • Zoe Hauptová (1929–2012) from the Czech Republic
  • (1935–2017) from Russia
  • (1937–1992) from the United States
  • Zbigniew Gołąb (1923–1994) from Poland
  • (1928–2006) from Poland
  • (1937–2005) from Russia
  • Tadeusz Lehr-Spławiński (1891–1965) from Poland
  • Blaže Ristovski (1931–2018) from North Macedonia
  • Radoslav Katičić (1930–2019) from Croatia
  • Ivan Dorovský (1935–2021) from Czech Republic
  • (1939–2021) from Poland
  • Šárka B. Hrbková (1878–1948) Czech-American slavologist
  • Charles E. Townsend (1932–2015) from the United States
  • Charles E. Gribble (1936–2016) from the United States

Contemporary

  • (born 1928) from the United States
  • Zuzanna Topolińska (born 1931) from Poland
  • Hakan Kırımlı (born 1958) from Turkey
  • (born 1932) from Bulgaria
  • (born 1937) from Germany
  • Branko Mikasinovich (born 1938) from the United States
  • (born 1945) from Italy
  • Frederik Kortlandt (born 1946) from Netherlands
  • Gary Saul Morson (born 1948) from the United States
  • (born 1949) from the United States
  • (born 1950) from the United States
  • (born 1952) from the Czech Republic
  • Alexander F. Tsvirkun (born 1953) from Ukraine
  • Snježana Kordić (born 1964) from Croatia
  • Charles S. Kraszewski (born 1962) from the United States
  • Marek Jan Chodakiewicz (born 1962) from Poland and the United States
  • (born 1959) from Russia
  • (born 1959) from UK
  • (born 1947) from Austria


Journals and book series
  • Archiv für slavische Philologie
  • Canadian Slavonic Papers, published by the Canadian Association of Slavists
  • The Russian Review
  • Slavic and East European Journal, published by the American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages
  • , published by the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies
  • Studies in Slavic and General Linguistics
  • The Slavonic and East European Review
  • Wiener Slawistischer Almanach


Conferences
  • American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies
  • American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages
  • Formal Approaches to Slavic Linguistics


Institutes and schools
Academic
  • Institute for Slavic Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia
  • Jan Stanislav Institute of Slavistics, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava, Slovakia
  • Institute of Slavic Studies, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
  • Institute of Slavonic Studies, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague, Czechia

University

Others


Organisations
  • American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages (AATSEEL)
  • Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies (ASEEES)
  • American Council of Teachers of Russian (ACTR)
  • North American Association of Teachers of Polish (NAATPl)


See also
  • Indo-European studies
  • Byzantine studies
  • List of linguists
  • Outline of Slavic history and culture


Sources
  • (2025). 9780191514555, Oxford University Press. .


External links


Library guides

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