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         Russian Literature:     more books (100)
  1. The Russian Memoir: History and Literature (SRLT)
  2. Imperial Knowledge: Russian Literature and Colonialism (Contributions to the Study of World Literature) by Ewa M. Thompson, 2000-03-30
  3. The Heritage of Russian Verse
  4. Russian Children's Literature and Culture
  5. The Translator in the Text: On Reading Russian Literature in English (Studies in Russian Literature and Theory) by Rachel May, 1994-11-23
  6. Russian Literature, 1995-2002: On the Threshold of a New Millennium by N.N. Shneidman, 2004-10-13
  7. Jews in Russian Literature after the October Revolution: Writers and Artists between Hope and Apostasy (Cambridge Studies in Russian Literature) by Efraim Sicher, 2006-04-20
  8. History of Nineteenth-Century Russian Literature: Volume II: The Realistic Period (The Realistic Period, Vol. 2) by Dmitrij Cizevskij, 1973-09-01
  9. Biblical Subtexts and Religious Themes in Works of Anton Chekhov (Middlebury Studies in Russian Language and Literature, V. 18) by Mark Stanley Swift, 2003-12
  10. A History of Russian Literature by Victor Terras, 1991
  11. Russian For Dummies (For Dummies (Language & Literature)) by Andrew, Ph.D. Kaufman, Serafima, Ph.D. Gettys, et all 2006-04-24
  12. Toward Another Shore: Russian Thinkers Between Necessity and Chance (Russian Literature and Thought Series) by Aileen M. Kelly, 1998-06-16
  13. A History Of Russian Literature by Kazimierz Waliszewski, 2007-07-25
  14. The Cambridge Introduction to Russian Literature (Cambridge Introduction to Literature)

41. 19th-Century Russian Literature
19thCentury russian literature. At the beginning of the 19th century much of Western Europe viewed Russia as hopelessly backwardeven Medieval.
http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~brians/hum_303/russian.html
19th-Century Russian Literature
At the beginning of the 19th century much of Western Europe viewed Russia as hopelessly backwardeven Medieval. It was considered more a part of Asia than an outpost of European thought. During the first half of the century, indeed, peasants (called "serfs") were still treated as the property of their feudal masters and could be bought and sold, though they had a few more rights than slaves. Russian serfs gained their freedom only in 1861, two years before the American Emancipation Proclamation.
However, the nobility of Russia had looked to the West for ideals and fashions since the early 18th Century, when Peter the Great had instituted a series of reforms aimed at modernizing the country. Russian aristocrats traveled extensively in Western Europe and adopted French as the language of polite discourse. They read French and English literature and philosophy, followed Western fashions, and generally considered themselves a part of modern Europe.
St. Petersburg was created the new capital of Russia in 1721, and remained the most Westernized of Russian cities. Indeed, Dostoyevsky was to consider it an alien presence in the land, spiritually vacuous compared to the old Russian capital of Moscow.

42. IU Slavic Department Graduate Program In Russian Literature
Graduate Program in russian literature. russian literature Courses (Cluster 010 Russian). Survey Courses. russian literature MA Requirements.
http://www.indiana.edu/~iuslavic/slavlit.shtml
Graduate Program in Russian Literature
Russian Literature Courses (Cluster 010: Russian)
Survey Courses
R503, 3 cr., Old Russian Literature
R504, 3 cr., Eighteenth-Century Russian Literature
R505-R506, 3 cr.-3 cr., Nineteenth-Century Russian Literature I and II
R507-R508, 3 cr.-3 cr., Twentieth-Century Russian Literature I and II
R563, 3 cr., Pushkin to Dostoevsky (for non-SLAV literature graduate students only)
R564, 3 cr., Tolstoy to Solzhenitsyn (for non-SLAV literature graduate students only)
Author and Character Courses
R520, 3 cr., Twentieth-Century Russian Author: (Name Variable)
R530, 3 cr., Pushkin
R531, 3 cr., Gogol
R532, 3 cr., Dostoevsky
R533, 3 cr., Tolstoy
R534, 3 cr., Tolstoy and Dostoevsky R535, 3 cr., Chekhov R545, 3 cr., Jewish Characters in Russian Literature (joint with R345)
Genre Courses
R550, 3 cr., Russian Drama R551, 3 cr., Russian Poetry R552, 3 cr., Russian and Soviet Film R553, 3 cr., East European Film
Theory and Methods Courses
R500, 3 cr., Proseminar in Russian Literature R592, 3 cr., Methods of Teaching Russian Language

43. ISPP Homepage
Details Gogol's effects on russian literature and Society
http://www.pitzer.edu/~dward/Anarchist_Archives/kropotkin/literature/russianlit_
International Society of Political Psychology Home Search Join ISPP Committees Central Office ... ISPP Constitution ISPP LINKS Annual Meetings Announcements Archives Bibliographies ... Web Resources
ISPP HOMEPAGE
Welcome to the International Society of Political Psychology's Homepage
ISPP's purpose is to facilitate communication across disciplinary, geographic and political boundaries among scholars, concerned individuals in government and public posts, the communications media, and elsewhere who have a scientific interest in the relationship between politics and psychological processes. ISPP seeks to advance the quality of scholarship in political psychology and to increase the usefulness of work in political psychology. This page has been accessed by visitors 172115 times since September 16, 1997. ISPP [Home] [Join] [About ISPP] [Contact Central Office] [Contact Officers] ... [Constitution]

44. Ideals And Realities In Russian Literature
Ideas and Realities in russian literature. By Peter Kropotkin. New York Alfred A Knopf, 1915. Table of Contents. Click on the desired
http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/kropotkin/literature/russianlittoc
Ideas and Realities in Russian Literature
By Peter Kropotkin
New York: Alfred A Knopf, 1915.
Table of Contents
Click on the desired chapter on the image above or use links to the right Chapter One: Introduction: THE RUSSIAN LANGUAGE
Chapter Two:
Chapter Three:
Chapter Four:
Chapter Five:
Chapter Six: THE DRAMA
Chapter Seven: FOLK-NOVELISTS
Chapter Eight: Political Literature: Satire; Art-Criticism; Contemporary Novelists

45. Ideals And Realities Of Russian Literature: CHAPTER III
Ideals and Realities of russian literature. Peter Kropotkin. CHAPTER III. GÓGOL. With Gógol begins a new period of russian literature.
http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/kropotkin/literature/russianlit_ch
Ideals and Realities of Russian Literature
Peter Kropotkin
CHAPTER III
LITTLE RUSSIA , and -Village life and humour -Historical novel, -Drama, The Inspector-General Its influence Dead Souls: main types- realism in the Russian novel. His debut was in 1829, with little novels taken form the village-life of Little Russia. Nights , soon followed by another series of stories entitled Little It would How
, which recalls to life one of the most interesting periods in the history of Little Russiathe fifteenth century. Constantinople had fallen into the hands of the Turks; and although a mighty Polish-Lithuanian State had grown in the West, the Turks, nevertheless, menaced both Eastern and Middle Europe. Then it was that the Little Russians rose for the defence of Russia and Europe. They lived in free communities of Cossacks, over whom the Poles were beginning to establish feudal power. In times of peace these Cossacks carried on agriculture in the prairies, and fishing in the beautiful rivers of Southwest Russia, reaching at times the Black Sea; but every one of them was armed, and the whole country was divided into regiments. As soon as there was a military alarm they all rose to meet an invasion of the Turks or a raid of the Tartars, returning to their fields and fisheries as soon as the war was over.
The Little-Russian novels were followed by a few novels taken from the life of Great Russia, chiefly of St. Petersburg, and two of them

46. The Rise Of Prose Gogol
Details the change in russian literature after the introduction of Gogol's works
http://www1.umn.edu/lol-russ/hpgary/Russ3421/lesson6.htm
LESSON 6 The Rise of Prose: Nikolai Gogol
Study Notes
The Rise of Prose
The great achievement of this age of prose, from the 1840s to the 1890s, was Russian Realism (discussed in the sequel to this course, Russ 3422Russian Literature: Tolstoy to the Present). Our concern here is to have a look at the beginnings of Russian prose. We have seen that after 1830 Pushkin turned more and more to prose, a significant fact given that Pushkin was the greatest poet of the time. The writer who did most to establish prose as a force in Russian literary culture, however, was Gogol. Gogol's example, combined with the authoritative literary pronouncements of the greatest literary critic of the period, V. G. Belinsky, established prose as the literary medium of the future. The great novelist Dostoevsky is supposed to have said, referring to himself and his fellow Realists, "We have all come out from under Gogol's 'Overcoat'" (referring to the famous story by Gogol).
Nikolai Gogol (1809-1852)
Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol was born in the Mirgorod district of the Ukraine in 1809. His early life was spent on his father's country estate. Gogol's father was also a writer; his works, many of which were written for the Ukrainian puppet theater, are in Ukrainian, and he is classed as a Ukrainian writer. His son, however, decided to write in Russian. Nikolai Gogol moved to St. Petersburg in 1828 with the intention of becoming a full-time professional writer. His first published work, a long narrative in verse, was received with indifference by the critics, and the sensitive Gogol fled from Russia in shame. When he returned from Europe in 1829, Gogol first tried to find work as an actor, but was eventually forced to take a minor post in the civil service to support himself. His experiences in the government bureaucracy are reflected in some of his later stories, especially "The Nose" and "The Overcoat."

47. Russian Literature, Russian Books (book Reviews)
russian literature. Book Reviews. Yevgeny Zamyatin A Soviet Heretic* essays on russian literature from the decade after the Revolution. See also Russia.
http://dannyreviews.com/s/Russian_literature.html
Danny Yee's Book Reviews
Subjects
Titles Authors ... Latest
Russian literature
Book Reviews
See also Russia Subjects Titles Authors ...
Book Reviews by Danny Yee

48. Russian Literature: 1914-60
russian literature 191460. Isaac Babel. Osip Mandelstam. Andrey Bely. Vladimir Mayakovsky. Alexander Blok. Boris Pasternak. Valeri Bryusov. Boris Pilnyak.
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/RussiaLiterature.htm
Russia: 1860-1945
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Russian Literature: 1914-60 Isaac Babel Osip Mandelstam Andrey Bely Vladimir Mayakovsky ... Russian Revolution Online Lessons
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Leon Trotsky: History of the Russian Revolution
Anarchism and the Russian Revolution Internet History Sourcebook: Russian Revolution Joseph Stalin Reference Archive ... GoTo

49. Friends And Partners Russian Literature
Database of nineteenth and twentieth century works in Russian and English.
http://www.fplib.ru/

50. Weblist! Russia - Literature. Review.
? The literature of today view from the deep. The anthology of modern russian literature. The site also features
http://weblist.ru/review_e/Arts_and_Humanities/Literature/

weblist banner exchange
Home Arts and Humanities Literature ... Edit all of Weblist in Literature
Amateurish translation of Harry Potter

2. visshii klass
3. yra narodu
5. No commehts
Maksim Moshkow's library

The russian and foreign prose and poetry. Database contains thousands entries. About 355 Mb of miscellaneous texts. LitPage
The coplete works of Fyodor Dostoevsky

1. bednie ludy
Maksim Moshkow's library
The russian and foreign prose and poetry. Database contains thousands entries. About 355 Mb of miscellaneous texts. Lame Pegasus eKniga - Literary search system A.NAGEL A.Nagel`s poetry, songs and prose on his own literary site; together with already published works there`re some recent ones. ôÅËÓÔÙ Serge N.Kozintsev A little literary page by Serge N.Kozintsev. It features his short stories, tales, and other writing. Public Library of Vladimir Vysotsky This site features about 600 song lyrics by Vladimir Vysotsky - well-known russian bard, also you'll be prompted to take a part in real-time chat on the same subject. The literature of today: view from the deep. The anthology of modern russian literature. The site also features some short information about its authors, reviews of new releases, links; plus announcements and cronicles of Moscow`s literature life.

51. Russian Literature Subject Guide - Humanities And Social Sciences Library - McGi
russian literature. russian literature A Guide to Reference Sources (1987) Print copy only, available at the McLennan Reference Desk.
http://www.library.mcgill.ca/human/subguide/russlit.htm
HSSL Home McGill Libraries McGill University Internet Search ... Ask Us HSSL Subject Guides Subject Guides of all McGill Libraries Russian Literature LIBRARY GUIDES ELECTRONIC DATABASES INTERNET RESOURCES COLLECTION POLICY Library Guides Electronic Databases Internet Resources Accessible to anyone with an Internet connection.

52. ISPP Homepage
Pºshkin
http://www.pitzer.edu/~dward/Anarchist_Archives/kropotkin/literature/russianlit_
International Society of Political Psychology Home Search Join ISPP Committees Central Office ... ISPP Constitution ISPP LINKS Annual Meetings Announcements Archives Bibliographies ... Web Resources
ISPP HOMEPAGE
Welcome to the International Society of Political Psychology's Homepage
ISPP's purpose is to facilitate communication across disciplinary, geographic and political boundaries among scholars, concerned individuals in government and public posts, the communications media, and elsewhere who have a scientific interest in the relationship between politics and psychological processes. ISPP seeks to advance the quality of scholarship in political psychology and to increase the usefulness of work in political psychology. This page has been accessed by visitors 172114 times since September 16, 1997. ISPP [Home] [Join] [About ISPP] [Contact Central Office] [Contact Officers] ... [Constitution]

53. Introduction To Russian Literature - Course Description (including Web Assignmen
Introduction to russian literature. Some Links to russian literature on the Web. for some general links to russian literature try
http://it.stlawu.edu/~rkreuzer/ltrn101/ltrn101.htm
Introduction to Russian Literature
Daily Assignments for the course - Fall, 2002 (including links to individual authors and works)
General Information about the Course:
LTRN 101 "Introduction to Russian Literature." An introduction to the works of major 19th and 20th century Russian writers (Pushkin, Gogol, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Gorky, Solzhenitsyn and others), including a discussion of how Russian literature is translated into other languages and other media (such as film, music and art). All readings are in ENGLISH. This course has been designed especially for first-year college students, but it is open to all students. The course may be used towards fulfilling the Humanities Distribution Requirement . This course also may be used towards fulfilling the requirements for the European Studies Minor The purpose of the course is twofold: to give students a basic introduction to Russian literature and to develop in them an appreciation of good literature. To meet these goals we will talk about literature in general and different ways of approaching a literary work, we will also analyze an array of Russian literature from both the 19th and 20th centuries. We will read not only prose, but poetry and drama as well; we will also read some literary criticism. The course will introduce students to several special topics, such as 1) problems of literary translation, 2) adapting literary works to radio, TV and film, 3) the current literary scene in Russia.
I. Required Reading

54. Russian Literature Reviews
www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/03043479 Booker Prize mirror image of russian literature PRAVDA.Ru Booker Prize mirror image of russian literature. But at least it should be credited with offering a reliable picture of contemporary russian literature.
http://www.brothersjudd.com/webpage/russianlit.htm
RUSSIAN LITERATURE: REVIEWS
St. Petersburg
Andrey Bely [Boris Bugayev] 1880-1934)(translated by John Cournos The creative word creates the world
-Andrey Biely It was Vladimir Nabokov's opinion that this novel is "One of the four great masterpieces of twentieth-century prose," in company with The Metamorphosis Ulysses and Remembrance of Things Past . Andrey Bely (or Biely, I've found it spelled both ways) was the pen name of Boris Nikolayevich Bugayev. He was a leading figure of the Symbolist movement in pre-Revolutionary Russia and, in addition to Nabokov, influenced Boris Pasternak and Yevgeny Zamyatin, among others. St. Petersburg is certainly as innovative as the other works Nabokov ranks it with, using characters and even geography as allegorical symbols for ideas, and written in a nearly stream-of-consciousness prose. But to my very pleasant surprise, it is much more enjoyable than these other touchstones of Modernism. The action of the novel, and happily there is some action, occurs over the course of two days in 1905, when Russia, having lost the War with Japan, was wracked by strikes, conspiracy, violence and near revolution. Apollon Apollonovich Ableukhov is an elderly, but still devoted, Tsarist bureaucrat. His dilettantish son, Nikolai, who is dabbling in radical politics, has been given the task of murdering his own father; the chosen weapon, improbably enough, a bomb in a sardine tin. Just as the city of St. PetersburgPeter the Great's "window on the West"represents the point where the rational West meets the savage and mystical Orient, so this confrontation between father and son represents impending conflict between European reason and Asiatic barbarism, and the bomb itself represents the indiscriminately destructive forces about to be brought to bear on the decaying Tsarist state.

55. Russian Gay Literature
Russian Gay Literature. Some Modern russian literature and the Russian literary language date to the beginning of the 19th century. The
http://community.middlebury.edu/~moss/RGL.html
Russian Gay Literature
Some of the oldest original writing in the Russian tradition portrays gay love. The 11th century "Legend of Boris and Gleb" tells of George the Hungarian, who was "loved by Boris beyond all reckoning." George's brother, who was canonized as St. Moses the Hungarian, inspired part of the Kievan Paterikon, which dates to the 1220s. Moses refuses the advances of the Polish noblewoman who has bought him as her slave, preferring the company of her other male slaves. Most of the writing in Kievan Rus and Muscovite Russia was done by churchmen, and when they mention homosexuality, it is usually to condemn it as a sin.
Modern Russian literature and the Russian literary language date to the beginning of the 19th century. The undisputed greatest figure of this period is Alexander Pushkin (1799-1837), who set the standard for prose, poetry, and drama in Russian. Pushkin himself was not gay, but he was what we would call gay-friendly, confident enough to write to his gay friend Philip Vigel about the relative merits of the latter's potential male bedmates. Pushkin's references to homosexuality are light and humorous, but not disapproving. The second great writer of Russia's Golden Age, Mikhail Lermontov (1814-41) also had some familiarity with gay sex. In two bawdy poems written when he was 20, he describes the sexual antics of his fellow classmates in the Cavalry Cadet School.
A third major literary figure of the 19th century, Nikolai Gogol (1809-52) was exclusively gay, but as a religious man he never acted on his desires and spent his life repressing his sexuality. Gogol's stories and plays are full of his fear of marriage and of any kind of sexuality involving women, while his diary describes his strong romantic attachments to men. In his later years, Gogol fell under the spell of a religious fanatic who eventually induced him to fast and pray day and night until he starved himself to death.

56. 20th Century Russian Literature
Professor Thomas Beyer.
http://community.middlebury.edu/~beyer/courses/ru152s02/
Professor Thomas Beyer

57. Russian Literature --  Britannica Student Encyclopedia
russian literature Britannica Student Encyclopedia. russian literature has a long and rich tradition. The term russian literature
http://www.britannica.com/ebi/article?eu=298926&query=poetry&ct=ebi

58. Russian Literature
russian literature. Old russian literature consists of several sparse masterpieces written in Old Russian Language (not to mix with Old Church Slavonic).
http://www.fact-index.com/r/ru/russian_literature.html
Main Page See live article Alphabetical index
Russian literature
Old Russian literature consists of several sparse masterpieces written in Old Russian Language (not to mix with Old Church Slavonic Westernization of Russia (particularly associated with the name of Tsar Peter the Great coincided with reform of the Russian alphabet and increased tolerance of the idea of employing the popular language for general literary purposes. Writers like Dmitri Kantemir and Mikhail Lomonosov in the earlier 18th century paved the way for poets like Derzhavin, playwrights like Sumarokov and prose writers like Karamzin and Radishchev. Romanticism permitted a flowering of especially poetic talent: the names of Zhukovsky and Pushkin came to the fore, followed by Mikhail Lermontov Nineteenth-century developments included Ivan Krylov the fabulist; non-fiction writers such as Belinsky and Aleksandr Herzen; poets such as Evgeny Baratynsky, Konstantin Batyushkov, Alexander Nekrasov, Alexei Konstantinovich Tolstoy, Fyodor Tyutchev, and Afanasij Fet; Kosma Prutkov the satirist; and a group of widely-recognised novelists such as Nikolai Gogol Lev Tolstoy Fyodor Dostoevsky , Leskov, Ivan Turgenev , Saltykov-Shchedrin and Goncharov.

59. Russian Literature Resources At Questia - The Online Library Of
russian literature Resources at Questia The Online Library of Books and Journals. russian literature. Questia. Primary Content. russian literature.
http://www.questia.com/popularSearches/russian_literature.jsp

60. Russian Literature
Russian 161 Introduction to russian literature Funet Russian Archive Tolstoy Links; Tolstoy on the Web; Tolstoy Links; Online Literature Library;
http://www.und.edu/dept/lang/russian/161/literature.html
Russian 161
Introduction to Russian Literature
Photographs: The Empire That Was Russia
A. S. Pushkin (1799-1837)
  • Alexander Pushkin: Painting by Orest Kiprensky
  • The Pushkin Page
  • The Alexander Pushkin Home Page
  • Pushkin Genealogy ...
  • Onegin in Russian with English Vocabulary
    N. V. Gogol (1809-1852)
  • Nikolai Gogol: Painting by F. Moller.
  • Face of Russia Timeline
  • Gogol on a Page
  • The Rise of Prose: Nikolai Gogol ...
  • Gogol's Works in Russian
    I. S. Turgenev (1818-1883)
  • Portrait of Turgenev by Vasily Perov
  • Ivan Turgenev 1818-1883
  • Turgenev Biography
  • Ivan Sergeevich Turgenev ...
  • Two works in Russian with English vocabulary
    F. M. Dostoevsky (1821-1881)
  • Portrait of Dostoevsky by Vasily Perov
  • Dostoevsky Research Station
  • Fyodor Dostoevsky
  • Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky ...
  • Dostoevsky's Work On-Line L. N. Tolstoy (1828-1910)
  • Tolstoy: Portrait by Ivan Kramskoy
  • Leo Tolstoy
  • Lev Tolstoy
  • Tolstoy: The Columbia Encyclopedia ...
  • Orenburgskaia tolstovskaia entsiklopediia A. P. Chekhov (1860-1904)
  • Anton Chekhov (Yalta, 1900)
  • A Chekhov Biography
  • Anton Pavlovich Chekhov
  • Anton Chekhov ...
  • Stories in Russian with English Vocabulary Y. I. Zamyatin (1884-1937)
  • Evgenii Ivanovich Zamiatin [1884-1937]
  • Yevgeny Ivanovich Zamyatin (1884-1937)
  • Evgeny Zamiatin (1984-1937)
  • Yevgeny Ivanovitch Zamyatin ...
  • Zamyatin, Evgeny Ivanovich
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