Nadezhda Krylova

Karelian State Pedagogical University
Department of Foreign Languages

Petrozavodsk, Russia 185007

E-mail: nadya_krylova@hotmail.com

During the 2000-2001 academic year, Nadezhda Krylova was a visiting research professor at The George Washington University, affiliated with the Research Program in Social and Organizational Learning. Her stay in the USA was supported by the Junior Faculty Development Program, which is funded by the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. Her mentor at GW was Professor Heather Callow.

Nadezhda Krylova is a professor in the Foreign Languages Department at Karelian State Pedagogical University, Petrozavodsk, Russia. She teaches English (Conversation, Composition, and Text Interpretation) and lectures on style. Her research interests lie in the field of linguistics and teaching English as a second language.

Nadezhda graduated from Karelian State Pedagogical University, Petrozavodsk. She received a degree from the Russian State Pedagogical University, St.Petersburg, Russia. In 1998, she attended a CEBIT Exam Preparation course at Umea summer university. In July 1997, Nadezhda participated in the summer language camp at the College of Saint Scholastica, Duluth, MN, U.S.A. In 1995, she spent a J-term and a spring semester at Mt. Holyoke College, MA, as a Russian teaching assistant.

Publications:

1. Paronyms in Contemporary English: Idioethnic and Functional Aspects of the Phenomenon, Abstract of dissertation. St. Petersburg, 1993. p. 16.

2. To the Problem of Paronyms in the English Language. Gertzenovskiye Chteniya. St. Petersburg, 1992. p. 44.

3. Pun: A Play on Words Based on Paronyms in English. Russian State Pedagogical University. Abstracts. St. Petersburg, 1992. p. 13.

4. Linguistic Foundation of Stylistic Functioning of Paronomasia in English. Gertzenovskiye Chteniya. Abstracts. (May-7, 1993). St. Petersburg, 1993. p. 54.

5. Pun and Sound Association in Light of the Historical and Cultural Traditions of the Renaissance. Papers Arising from the 7th Conference of Young Scientists. Lipetzk, 1993. p. 43.

6. Types of Pun Based on Paronomasia: Syntagmatic and Paradigmatic Levels. Papers Arising from the Conference Convened on April 22-23, 1996. Petrozavodsk,1996. p. 6.

7. Semantic and Poetic Functions of Sound Imagery in the Lyric Poetry of W.H.Auden. Theory and History of Germanic and Romance Languages at the Universities of Russia: Abstracts. Kaluga, 1998. pp. 234-237.

8. Shakespeare’s Puns and the Carnival Culture of the Renaissance. Current Problems of Linguistics and Linguo Didactics. Krasnoyarsk,1999. pp. 89-98.

9. English Stylistics. Practical Recommendations for the Students of the Department of Foreign Languages, Karelian State Pedagogical University. Petrozavodsk, KGPU, 2000. p. 22