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         Russian Literature:     more books (100)
  1. Russian Literature in Exile: the Life and Work of Gajto Gazdanov by Laszlo Dienes, 0000
  2. Guide to Russian Literature, 1820-1917 by Moissaye J. Olgin, 1971-06
  3. Russian Literature and Its Demons (Studies in Slavic Literature, Culture, and Society, V. 8)
  4. The Russian Theme in English Literature from the Sixteenth Century to 1980 by Anthony Cross, 1985-06
  5. Harvest of Russian Children's Literature, A by Miriam Morton, 1968
  6. The Cambridge Introduction to Russian Poetry (Cambridge Introductions to Literature) by Michael Wachtel, 2004-09-13
  7. Voices of Russian Literature: Interviews with Ten Contemporary Writers
  8. The Cossack Hero in Russian Literature: A Study in Cultural Mythology (Studies of the Harriman Institute) by Judith Deutsch Kornblatt, 1993-01-15
  9. Journey from Petersburg to Moscow (World Classics Literature, Russian Language Edition) by Radishchev, 1995-06
  10. Up from Bondage: The Literatures of Russian and African American Soul by Dale E. Peterson, Dale E. Peterson, 2000-07
  11. Trio:Pushkin, Lermontov, Gogol(Intermediate Level Adaptations from The Golden Age of Russian Literature) by Tatiana Bobrinskoy, Irina Gsovskaya, et all 1979-06
  12. Best Russian Short Stories by Anton Chekhov, Alexander Pushkin, et all 2008-01-25
  13. And Quiet Flows the Vodka: or When Pushkin Comes to Shove: The Curmudgeon's Guide to Russian Literature with the Devil's Dictionary of Received Ideas by Alicia Chudo, Gary Saul Morson, 2000-05-15
  14. Anthology of Russian Literature: From the Tenth Century to the Close of the Eighteenth Century by Leo Wiener, 2001-05

61. Russian Life Guide To Russian Literature Online
If you are interested in writing or shooting photos for Russian Life, read on.
http://www.rispubs.com/bksonline.cfm
current issue
Table of Contents
and order info
Links to Russian Literature Online
Let’s be frank: online books and zines will never replace the real thing. Sure, you can crawl into bed with a laptop, take one to the beach with you if you are slightly insane, or even read the web version of TIME on the train. But sooner or later your batteries run down, eye-strain takes its toll, or your hard drive crashes. And, let’s face it, the cool, hard surface of a computer screen will never compare with the warm vellum texture of a good novel, or the crisp sheen of a fine magazine. Moreover, you can’t roll up a computer to swat a mosquito, and roaming the aisles of a used computer store somehow just lacks the romance of an afternoon spent at a good used bookstore. Case closed. On the other hand, let’s give the internet its due – it is The Great Enabler. It may well be the greatest research and information storage device we will see in our lifetimes. This makes it ideally-suited to store hard-to-find or out-of-print literature. And that is just one of the many things it is doing quite well. All over the world, fanatics, idealists, pirates and lovers of literature are doing the hard work of digitizing novels, short stories and all manner of fiction, so that it can be publicized on the web and accessible to all. Usually for free. So, let’s say you want to read a novel or a short story in Russian, but there is no Russian bookstore near where you live. Well, of course you could order a good, old-fashioned printed book online through one of several reputable internet booksellers (see box). But that is so 20th century! (Plus, it might be nice to sample an author in Russian before making the commitment of buying an entire book.)

62. The Cambridge History Of Russian Literature
The Cambridge History of russian literature. Edited by on the latest developments in russian literature and additional bibliographical information.
http://www.litencyc.com/php/adpage.php?id=144

63. Russian Literature And Empire
russian literature and Empire This is the first book to provide a synthesising study of Russian writing about the Caucasus during the nineteenthcentury
http://www.litencyc.com/php/adpage.php?id=160

64. Browse The Directory Of CDL-Licensed Content
TOPIC russian literature FORMAT Electronic Journal CAMPUS Available to UC Santa Barbara. You can change your selections below for example,
http://www.cdlib.org/cgi-bin/browse_topic?campus=UCSB&format=Electronic Journal&

65. WWW.GAY.RU: Russian Gay Literature
The classic russian literature is commonly referred to as the Great russian literature. The unrivalled Alexander Pushkin, the mystic Nikolai Gogol,
http://www.gay.ru/english/literat/
RECOMMENDED READING
Authors Books Magazines Language
RUSSIAN GAY LITERATURE

The classic Russian literature is commonly referred to as the Great Russian literature. The unrivalled Alexander Pushkin, the mystic Nikolai Gogol, the fundamental Lev Tolstoi, the sophisticated Fedor Dostoevsky, the controversial Vladimir Mayakovsky - they all are known and acclaimed world-wide for their writings. What is much less known, if ever mentioned, is the 'gay' side of their lives and works. Writings of classic Russian writers were butchered to hush up homosexual overtones and their biographies were edited to obscure 'non-conventional' episodes in their lives. Needless to say that the twentieth century Russian and, later, Soviet gay writers and poets glorifying male love stood no chance to see their works published. Years of Soviet ban on any mention of homosexuality rendered gay-themed writing virtually invisible. The names of Kuzmin, Kharitonov, Trifonov, and others have passed into oblivion for many years, they did not ring a bell to an average Soviet gay unaware of the riches of domestic gay literature. Now the time has come to pay homage to our classic writers by revealing to you the full and untouched texts of their works and retell their life stories without outtakes. We will not forget the contemporary gay writers who composed their works uninhibited by the stuffy air of the Soviet-time closet.

66. Imperial Knowledge: Russian Literature And Colonialism
A fresh perspective on the culture of russian literature from the time of Pushkin to the postSoviet period, Imperial Knowledge is a timely challenge to the
http://www.postcolonialweb.org/poldiscourse/ewt/5.html
Imperial Knowledge: Russian Literature and Colonialism
Ewa M. Thompson, Professor of Slavic Studies, Rice University
Publishing Information
Westport, CT. Greenwood Press. March 2000. 248 pages. ISBN 0-313-31311-3. $59.95
Endorsements
"In this thought-provoking, well-written, and fairminded book, Ewa Thompson addresses the complicity of Russian literature and even literary scholarship in furthering the goals of Russian colonialism and imperialism. A fresh perspective on the culture of Russian literature from the time of Pushkin to the post-Soviet period, Imperial Knowledge is a timely challenge to the usual ways Russian literature is read and taught." Harold B. Segel
Professor Emeritus of Slavic and Comparative Literature, Columbia University "A pioneering bookvigorous, provocative, broadly informed and crisply written. Not to be ignored by anyone concerned with Russian culture." Donald Fanger
Harry Levin Research Professor of Literature, Harvard University "An erudite and magisterial study." Richard F. Staar

67. OUP: Russian Literature: A Very Short Introduction: Kelly
Dr Kelly is in the forefront of scholars of russian literature she will make her readers Rather than a conventional chronology of russian literature,
http://www.oup.co.uk/isbn/0-19-280144-9
NEVER MISS AN OXFORD SALE (SIGN UP HERE) VIEW BASKET Quick Links About OUP Career Opportunities Contacts Need help? News oup.com Search the Catalogue Site Index American National Biography Booksellers' Information Service Children's Fiction and Poetry Children's Reference Dictionaries Dictionary of National Biography Digital Reference English Language Teaching Higher Education Textbooks Humanities International Education Unit Journals Law Medicine Music Online Products Oxford English Dictionary Reference Rights and Permissions Science School Books Social Sciences Very Short Introductions World's Classics Advanced Search UK and Europe Book Catalogue Help with online ordering How to order Postage Returns policy ... Table of contents
Free online access to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
To find out more visit www.oxforddnb.com
Russian Literature: A Very Short Introduction
Catriona Kelly
Publication date: 23 August 2001
Oxford Paperbacks 182 pages, 20 halftones, 2 maps, 178mm x 111mm
Series: Very Short Introductions
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68. Russian And East European Studies
Russian OnLine Literary Society (pointers to russian literature pages); Robert Beard s Bucknell russian literature Links Oslo Corpus of Bosnian Texts
http://clover.slavic.pitt.edu/~djb/slavic.html
Russian and East European Studies
Slavic Information Resources
Medieval Slavic Studies
General Medieval Slavic Studies

69. Glbtq >> Literature >> Russian Literature
Since the eleventh century, russian literature has included treatments of homosexual themes.
http://www.glbtq.com/literature/russ_lit.html
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Alpha Index: A-B C-F G-K L-Q ... T-Z Subjects: A-B C-E F-L M-Z
Russian Literature
page: Like Russian history, Russian literature can be conveniently divided into three periods: the Kievan (tenth to thirteenth centuries A.D.), the Muscovite (fourteenth to seventeenth centuries), and modern (eighteenth century and later). The Kievan Period Kievan history began with the unification in the 860s of twelve East Slavic tribes (ancestors of the modern Russians, Ukrainians, and Belarussians) into a nation with its capital in Kiev. The country was converted to Christianity in 988. The new religion, which came from Byzantium, brought with it the Slavic alphabet, devised earlier by Byzantine missionaries. The earliest Russian literature, which was also the literature of other East and South Slavic peoples, consisted mainly of historical (chronicles) and religious (prayer books, sermons, lives of saints) genres. Sponsor Message.

70. Yale > Slavic Languages & Literatures > Graduate Program
The Department offers the Ph.D. in russian literature, Medieval Slavic Students specializing in russian literature take a minimum of sixteen term
http://www.yale.edu/slavic/gradprogram.html

About the title image
The Department offers the Ph.D. in Russian literature, Medieval Slavic literature and philology (by special arrangement), and Polish literature (by special arrangement). The Department also offers, in conjunction with the Program in Film Studies, a joint Ph.D. in Slavic Languages and Literatures and Film Studies. Applicants to the joint program must indicate on their application that they are applying both to Film Studies and to Slavic Languages and Literatures. All documentation within the application should include this information. Competence in Russian
All entering students should have a sufficient knowledge of Russian to permit them to do satisfactory work at the graduate level, and are required to pass a departmental proficiency examination in Russian at the beginning of the first semester of study. Students who do not have adequate preparation will be required to make up the deficiency in undergraduate classes.

71. Yale College Programs Of Study
Two terms of russian literature read and discussed in the original, At least two term courses in russian literature of the nineteenth century and two in
http://www.yale.edu/yalecollege/publications/ycps/chapter_iv/slavic.html
Home Publications Yale College Programs of Study 2005-2006 Chapter IV Yale College
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Serbian and Croatian courses
Director of undergraduate studies: John MacKay, 2702 HGS, 432-7202, john.mackay@yale.edu ; language coordinator: Irina Dolgova, 2704A HGS, 432-1307, irina.dolgova@yale.edu FACULTY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF SLAVIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES Professors Vladimir Alexandrov ( Chair ), Katerina Clark, Laura Engelstein, Harvey Goldblatt, Robert Greenberg ( Adjunct ), Benjamin Harshav, Tomas Venclova Associate Professors Hilary Fink, John MacKay Assistant Professor Kate Holland, Ilya Kliger Senior Lectors Irina Dolgova, Rita Lipson, Constantine Muravnik, Slobodan Novak, Julia Titus, Karen von Kunes Students majoring in Russian may concentrate exclusively on Russian language and literature (Program I), or they may elect to study Russian literature in the context of comparative studies of literature (Program II). For Program II, credit is given for work done in other departments. Specific courses in each program must be arranged with the director of undergraduate studies. Students interested in specializing in Russian or Slavic linguistics may arrange a special concentration in linguistics with the director of undergraduate studies.

72. Crime And Pulp - The New Russian Literature: More Elmore Leonard Than Leo Tolsto
Russia was once known for its brooding and principled writers In the 19 th century, there were Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, and Chekhov; more recently,
http://slate.msn.com/id/2090622/
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Crime and Pulp

The new Russian literature: more Elmore Leonard than Leo Tolstoy.
By Vijai Maheshwari
Posted Monday, Nov. 3, 2003, at 9:13 AM PT
Tolstoy's heirs churn out pulp fiction, not War and Peace Russia was once known for its brooding and principled writers: In the 19 th century, there were Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, and Chekhov; more recently, there were samizdat writers whose work was linked to their resistance to the Soviet state, including Alexander Solzhenitsyn—whose The Gulag Archipelago exposed the horrors of Stalin's camps to the Western public—and the poet and Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky But with the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russian writers were suddenly left to fend for themselves in a harsh free market and with no state to write against. Even Solzhenitsyn was not exempt from the hardship this imposed: Although he returned to Russia in the early '90s, he has been largely ignored by a public that has little time for his high-minded novels. Other well-known dissident writers also lost their audience in the confusion and turmoil of the post-Soviet era. This fall was the year of Russia at the famous Frankfurt Book Fair. With more than a decade having passed since the Soviet collapse, it was expected that Frankfurt would help herald the rise of a new, and mature, Russian literature. Those visitors hoping Frankfurt's organizers would trot out modern-day Tolstoys crafting the great Russian novel in the isolation of a remote Siberian village were disappointed. The most interesting names on the list of writers at Frankfurt—Aleksandra Marinina, Boris Akunin, and Victor Dotsenko—had one thing in common: They all wrote thrillers. The official essay on Russian literature on the fair's Web site devoted its longest paragraph to "Contemporaneity as a Crime" or "Crime Literature."

73. Slavic Languages & Literatures (University Of Michigan)
The Department offers courses on Russian poetry and prose, Old russian literature, 18thcentury russian literature, 19th-century russian literature,
http://www.lsa.umich.edu/slavic/
About Undergraduates Graduates Michigan Slavic Publications The Department offers courses on Russian poetry and prose, Old Russian literature, 18th-century Russian literature, 19th-century Russian literature, 20th-century Russian literature, literary theory (Formalism, Structuralism, semiotics, reception theory, and cultural studies), cultural and intellectual history, interdisciplinary studies, Polish literature, Czech literature, Slavic linguistics, and Slavic film. Interested in the Russian language? History? Literature? Learn more about our Russian program. Our students place very well in graduate programs and are competitive in professional schools... ( more more
Site Design:
3040 Modern Languages Building
812 East Washington
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1275
P: 734.764.5355 F: 734.647.2127 slavic@umich.edu

74. Russian Literature Subject Guide - Humanities And Social Sciences Library - McGi
Subject Guides russian literature PDF format russian literature A Selective List of Reference Sources; PDF format russian literature French English
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.

75. SEOUL NATIONAL UNIVERSITY- Russian Language And Literature
From the 19th century up to the present, russian literature has had a great Survey of historical development of russian literature from Romanticism to
http://www.snu.ac.kr:6060/sc_sne_c/sc_sne_c_c/sc_sne_c_ca/1173689_3664.jsp

76. Russian Literature
Russian 161, Fall 2004 Introduction to russian literature / 1 On Voltaire From Letters of a Russian Traveler Poor Liza (Russian)
http://www.und.nodak.edu/dept/lang/russian/161/literature.html
Russian 161, Fall 2004
Introduction to Russian Literature / 1
M. V. Lomonosov (1711-1765) Biography
Works
N. M. Karamzin (1766-1826) Biography Works
A. S. Pushkin (1799-1837) Biography Works
N. V. Gogol (1809-1852) Biography Works
M. Yu. Lermontov (1814-1841) Biography

77. RUSSIAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE 860    Ivan Iakovlevich Bilibin
The option in russian literature fosters language proficiency and exposes 860435 Sexuality and the Construction of Gender in russian literature
http://seell.rutgers.edu/majmin/russian_maj.htm
RUSSIAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE 860
Ivan Iakovlevich Bilibin, Fairytale Kremlin The George Riabov Collection of Russian Art, Zimmerli Art Museum, Rutgers University
We wish to thank the Zimmerli Art Museum for their kind permission to reproduce this image

INTRODUCTION
Dear Student,
In an effort to better meet your particular needs and interests, we offer three major options, which take advantage of several existing strengths at Rutgers. These include the unique collections of Russian and Soviet art at the Zimmerli Art Museum, our strong programs in Linguistics and Russian History, a dynamic Center for Russian Central and East European Studies and a strong faculty in Russian language and literature who are committed to undergraduate education.
The option in Russian Literature fosters language proficiency and exposes students to a wide variety of literary works in the original language. The option in Russian Literature and History examines the constant and extensive interaction between literature and history. The option in Russian Language and Linguistics is intended for students who are primarily interested in studying language. The study of Russian gives their study of Linguistics a more practical and immediate perspective, while their study of Linguistics informs their study of Russian with a deeper view of the ways in which a language works. All three major options emphasize language proficiency and we actively encourage our students to apply for study in Russia.

78. Selected Literatures And Authors Pages - Russian Literature
Russian and Russian Emigre Literature and Authors (and Some Literary Critics, Linguists, The Jew in Polish and russian literatures. By Harold B. Segel.
http://learning.lib.vt.edu/slav/lit_authors_russian.html
Slavic, East European, and Former USSR Resources
Selected Literatures and Authors Page - Russian Literature
Russian and Russian Emigre Literature and Authors (and Some Literary Critics, Linguists, etc.)
INDEX BY LITERATURE TYPE
General Russian Literature
Russian Literature by Genre 19th and Early 20th Century Literature Other Russian Literature Sites INDEX BY AUTHOR A - E F - K L - R S - Z Afanasiev, Aleksandr Ehrenburg, Ilya Lavrenev, Boris Saltykov-Shchedrin, Mikhail ... Kuzmin, Mikhail

Return to Top of Page Literature Web Sites General Russian Literature Sites

79. Literature
russian literature Britannica Student Encyclopediarussian literature russian literature has a long and rich tradition. The term russian literature is used to describe the literature of different areas at
http://metalab.unc.edu/sergei/Literature/Literature.html
This section collects samples of Russian litarature. Of course, you won't be able to find Tolstoy around here: get the book and read it. What is presented is mostly an "art of ordinary people" that I have collected but famous people are peresented as well.
The materials here are not produced by me. They are collected all over the net. In some cases of books that were prohibited for publishing during the Soviet era, electronic versions appeared in Samizdat. Sometimes it was even encouraged by authors.

80. The Beginnings Of Russian Literature (from Russian Literature) --  Britannica S
The Beginnings of russian literature (from russian literature) Beginning in ancient times folk poetry flourished among the Eastern Slavs.
http://www.britannica.com/ebi/article?tocId=207586&ct=

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