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Teorija Knjizevnosti Ivo Tartalja Pdf Download

  • phuncforheipisteda
  • Jun 9, 2022
  • 2 min read




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Teorija Knjizevnosti Ivo Tartalja Pdf Download Ivo Tartalja_Teorija književnosti_Zavod za udžbenike (1998.npdf) or view presentation slides online.npdf) presentation slides on the Internet.pdf), and then translate them into Russian (I have added a few more original sources and translators that may be useful). a) Diaries and articles, published or lost (maybe even copies of them) Links like in this presentation will help you find some of the diaries and studies that have been published or lost. This is useful because some diary entries are essential to understanding the story. Unfortunately, many of the lost diaries were very modern or written around the same time. An additional aspect is that some diaries containing secret information (confidential information) were afraid to share with others, and therefore were forced to publish only some of them. In these diaries, the Germans were supposed to become less masculine, one might say, more feminine. Therefore, there are differences between diaries and such publications or comments by German researchers. For example, the diary of Yulia Domanskaya, who writes how the German army began to exterminate all Jews in Ukraine and makes additional remarks about the Jews to show that they should all disappear (link at the beginning of the text). In another diary, which represents the diary of another woman about the Bolsheviks who killed her father, but did not touch her mother (translated by D. Klyuev). In this diary, the woman also mentions her mother. Or a diary of memoirs of a German civil engineer who describes the floods that occurred in Germany in 1944 due to bombing, and many records of defeats in the battle of Leningrad (translations by N. Voropaev, M. Bantysh-Kamenskaya and K. Krylov). a-) "Blacklists" and "unwanted lists" In the concentration camps, as was said in this book, people who could not be deported to concentration camps were not on the list for deportation from the camps. In the first quarter of the 20th century, mostly from Soviet occupation, people on this list were deported from the camps and sent to labor camps in Germany. Similarly, there were deported Jews from Poland who worked in Germany before the war and returned home at the beginning of the war, and other German Jews who ended up in a labor camp or were depopulated 3e8ec1a487


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