Osnova and the Origins of the Valuev Directive Cover Image

Osnova and the Origins of the Valuev Directive
Osnova and the Origins of the Valuev Directive

Author(s): Michael Moser
Subject(s): Language studies, Social history, Sociolinguistics, 19th Century
Published by: Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies at The University of Alberta
Keywords: modern Ukrainian standard language; journal Osnova (The Foundation); standardization of the Ukrainian language; polyfunctionality of the Ukrainian language; discourse on the Ukrainian language;

Summary/Abstract: After the Crimean War, Ukrainian intellectuals utilized the temporary liberalization in the Russian Empire to extend the use of the Ukrainian language beyond the spheres of folklore and fine literature, to develop Ukrainian into a modern standard language, and to set measures to disseminate this language among speakers of Ukrainian. These processes were reflected, inter alia, in the journal Osnova (The Foundation) of 1861-62. As my study shows, when the Russian administration issued the Valuev Directive in 1863, it did not ban the Ukrainian language as such, but it effectively banned its standardization and dissemination.

  • Issue Year: 4/2017
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 39-95
  • Page Count: 57
  • Language: English