Boris Uspenskij Explained

Boris Uspenskij
Native Name:Бори́с Андре́евич Успе́нский
Birth Date:1 March 1937
Birth Place:Moscow, Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, Soviet Union
Nationality:Soviet Union (until 1991) / Russian (since 1991)
Field:linguistics,
semiotics,
philology,
history of culture
Work Institution:National Research University – Higher School of Economics,
Russian State University for the Humanities
Alma Mater:Moscow State University
Known For:linguist,
philologist,
semiotician,
historian of culture

Boris Andreevich Uspenskij (Russian: Бори́с Андре́евич Успе́нский) (born 1 March 1937, in Moscow) is a Russian linguist, philologist, semiotician, historian of culture.

Biography

Uspenskij graduated from Moscow University in 1960. He delivered lectures in Moscow until 1982, but later moved on to work in Harvard University, Cornell University, Vienna University, and the University of Graz. Full professor of Russian literature at the Naples Eastern University, he was elected to many scholarly societies and academies of Europe.

Uspenskij worked with Juri Lotman and was influenced by his ideas as a member of Tartu-Moscow semiotics school. His major works include Linguistic Situation in Kievan Rus and Its Importance for the Study of the Russian Literary Language, Philological Studies in the Sphere of Slavonic Antiquities, and The Principles of Structural Typology.

Uspenskij is well known in the study of icons for his work The Semiotics of the Russian Icon (Lisse, 1976), among others.

Uspenskij is the member of the editorial boards of the following academic journals: Sign Systems Studies, Arbor Mundi (Moscow), Zbornik Matice srpske za slavistiku (Novi Sad), and Slověne. International Journal of Slavic Studies.

Fellowships, grants, awards

Memberships of associations, honorary titles

Publications

Author of 550 publications in the fields of general linguistics, philology, semiotics, slavistics, history. Author of the following books:

External links