TRADITIONS OF STUDYING AND TEACHING MODERN MONGOLIAN LITERATURE AT ST. PETERSBURG STATE UNIVERSITY
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
Study of Mongolian literature at St. Petersburg University began in the 19th
century. In 1855, as part of the reorganization of Oriental studies in Russia, Faculty
of Oriental Languages was transferred from Kazan to St. Petersburg. A. M. Pozdneev
(1851–1920) was the first to systematically study Mongolian literature at the department.
Academician B. Ya. Vladimirtsov (1884–1931) significantly developed and
deepened research in the field of Mongolian literature. An outstanding academician
S. A. Kozin (1879–1956) made a huge contribution to the study of Mongolian literature.
From 1937 to 1976 T. A. Burdukova (1912–1987) taught at the Department of Mongolian
Philology. In 1953, after completing her postgraduate studies at the Department
of Mongolian Philology, L. K. Gerasimovich (1923–2015) began her teaching career. In
1987, M. P. Petrova (born 1964) was hired as an assistant at the Department of Mongolian
Philology. For more than half a century of the existence of the Faculty of Asian and African Studies within the walls of St. Petersburg University, the Department of
Mongolian Philology (later — department of Mongolian Studies and Tibetology) has
developed a strong tradition of studying and teaching new and latest Mongolian literature.
And today we can talk about the presence at St. Petersburg State University of its
own scientific school of research into the history of the development of literature of the
Mongolian-speaking peoples of the world.