| Annual Newsletter of the Slavic Research Center, Hokkaido
            University | 
          Japanese English  | 
          -->List
              of All Publications-->Annual
              Newsletter-->no.18 | 
        |
| No.18, February 2011 | 
        |||
| Remarks from the Director of the SRC | 
        
| Global COE Program “Reshaping
              Japan’s
              Border Studies” | 
          Speakers of the Symposium (Dec. 3–4,
              2010) | 
        
| Essays by Foreign Fellows | 
        ||
| Feng Yujun | 
          Alexander Morrison | 
        |
Park Hyun-Seop (visiting professor from Korea), September 2009 – September 2010. His research theme at the SRC is “Eisenstein’s Film Theory: A Cognitive Approach.” 
Beatrice Penati (JSPS postdoctoral fellow from Italy), October 2009 – October 2011. Her research project at the SRC is “The Land-and-Water Reform in Uzbekistan: Sovietisation of Rural Society before Collectivisation.” His research theme at the SRC is “Eisenstein’s Film Theory: A Cognitive Approach.” 
Yang Cheng (visiting research fellow from China), October 2009 – July 2010. His research project at the SRC is “Russian and Great-power Relations, Civilization Model and Diplomatic Behavior.” His research theme at the SRC is “Eisenstein’s Film Theory: A Cognitive Approach.” 
Alexander Petrov (Japan Foundation fellow from Russia), December 2009 – February 2010. His research project at the SRC is “Japanese in the Context of Demographic, Social and Economic Development of the Russian Far East: 1855–1991.” His research theme at the SRC is “Eisenstein’s Film Theory: A Cognitive Approach.” 
Mirzohid Rahimov (Institute of History, Uzbekistan Academy of Sciences), March 10 – April 22, 2010. His research project at the SRC is “Japan and Central Asia: Present Conditions and Perspectives of Cooperation between Countries.” His research theme at the SRC is “Eisenstein’s Film Theory: A Cognitive Approach.” 
Paul Richardson (graduate student, University of Birmingham, UK), April 2010 – March 2011. His research project at the SRC is “At the Edge of the Nation: The Southern Kuril Islands and the Search for Identity in Post-Soviet Russia.” His research theme at the SRC is “Eisenstein’s Film Theory: A Cognitive Approach.” 
Dmitrii Moskalev (Institute of Oriental Studies, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Ukraine), June 2010 – July 2011. His research project at the SRC is “Structure and Functioning of Modal Constructions in Modern Japanese.”