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Why Study Russian?
Russian is spoken:
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by millions of people from Eastern Europe
to the Pacific Ocean;
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by those interested in international affairs and business
opportunities in the East;
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by those interested in science and mathematics
where Russia still
leads;
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by those wanting to explore the Russian heritage in
this
country, particularly in Brooklyn and the neighbourhood
of Brighton Beach.
Top Ten Reasons to Study Russia & Russian
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Russia is the world's largest country. Stretching across
two continents, it is almost double the size of either
the United States or China.
Found within that huge land mass is a wide diversity of peoples,
religions, climatic
and geographic conditions.
Other
Useful Links
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Click
here for
a web site put together by teachers of Russian that
will give you more information on the benefits of learning
Russian.
Why
Study Russian: A
Student’s Perspective
By Adam “Sputnik” Grode.
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There are an estimated 279 million speakers
(native plus nonnative) of Russian. That puts Russian in fifth
place on the list of languages spoken
by the most people, trailing only Mandarin, English, Hindi, and Spanish.
(Source: The World Almanac and Book of Facts, 1998).
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Russia is home to
some of the worldâs best composers such as Tchaikovsky,
Stravinsky, Prokofiev, Mussorgsky, Rimsky-Korsakov, Rachmaninoff,
etc.
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Russia is currently engaged in a grand experiment in political, social,
and economic transformation. How it fares will help determine the
character of the 21st century not only for Russia but for the world
as a whole.
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Lots of Americans have seen the Eiffel Tower,
visited Buckingham Palace, and toured the Vatican. A lot fewer have
strolled within the
Kremlin
walls, experienced the "white nights" of St. Petersburg,
or spent an afternoon sampling the treasures of the Hermitage. Studying
Russia will
not only give you the excuse and opportunity to engage in such adventures,
but will insure that you more fully understand and appreciate them
when
you do.
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Ivan the Terrible, Peter the Great, Rasputin, Lenin, Stalin,
Gorbachev, Yeltsin, etc. Can you think of a more intriguing set of
historical characters?
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Russia is in economic crisis. Yet its vast resources and
highly educated population suggest that it is a country of great
economic potential.
Boom or bust, the size of Russia alone suggests that its economic
course will
have global repercussions.
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Since the end of the Cold War, the number
of people studying Russian in the US has declined. That may mean
less competition in the job market
for
those who do study and master the language-- especially if the economic
revitalization that some expect to see in Russia does in fact materialize.
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Russia remains a nuclear superpower armed with thousands of weapons
of mass destruction. For this reason alone, the character of the
Russian government and its ability to exercise command and control
over its nuclear
arsenal
is a primary concern (perhaps the primary concern) of US national
security policy.
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Some of the world's most famous authors are Russian: Tolstoy,
Dostoevsky, Chekhov, Gogol, Pushkin, Solzhenitsyn, Nabokov, Pasternak,
etc. Need one
say more?
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