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         Russian Literature:     more books (100)
  1. Understanding Boris Pasternak (Understanding Modern European and Latin American Literature) by Larissa Rudova, 1997-04-01
  2. Russian Stories: A Dual-Language Book
  3. Slavic Excursions: Essays on Russian and Polish Literature by Donald Davie, 1990-06-11
  4. Literary Travelogue: A Comparative Study with Special Relevance to Russian Literature from Fonvizin to Pushkin by R.K. Wilson, 1974-02-28
  5. The Russian Revolutionary Novel: Turgenev to Pasternak (Cambridge Studies in Russian Literature) by Richard Freeborn, 1985-05-31
  6. Flesh to Metal: Soviet Literature and the Alchemy of Revolution by Rolf Hellebust, 2003-10
  7. Treasury of Russian Literature by Bernard G. Guerney, 1943-06
  8. The Cambridge Companion to the Classic Russian Novel (Cambridge Companions to Literature)
  9. HISTORY OF RUSSIAN LITERATURE FROM THE ELEVENTH CENTURY TO THE END OF THE BAROQUE by Dmitrij Cizevskij, 1962
  10. The Development of Russian Verse: Meter and its Meanings (Cambridge Studies in Russian Literature) (Volume 0) by Michael Wachtel, 2006-11-02
  11. Russian Literature Since the Revolution: Revised and Enlarged Edition by Edward J. Brown, 1982-10-29
  12. Reference Guide to Russian Literature
  13. Brodsky Through the Eyes of His Contemporaries (Vol 2) (Studies in Slavic and Russian Literatures, Cultures and History) by Valentina Polukhina, 2010-01-01
  14. EverythingLearning Russian Book with CD: Speak, write, and understand Russian in no time! (Everything: Language and Literature) by Julia Stakhnevich, 2007-11-01

61. Anastasia
You're at Home russian literature. russian literature has won considerablerecognition all over the world and become an integral part of its culture.
http://anastasia.boxmail.biz/cgi-bin/guide.pl?id_razdel=3080&action=article

62. Duke Slavic Graduate Program
The Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures offers graduate study leadingto the MA and Ph.D. degrees in russian literature and Slavic linguistics.
http://www.duke.edu/web/slavic/gradpage.html
General Introduction
The Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures offers graduate study leading to the M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in Russian literature and Slavic linguistics. Beyond the strong commitment to increasing the language proficiency of its students and giving them solid training in research, the faculty of the department are also preparing students in a variety of adjacent fields, such as area and cultural studies, gender studies, history, media and film, and aspects of comparative literature, theory, and translation. In order to expand the flexibility of its graduates on the rapidly changing job market, the department is actively engaged in making Russia and Russian language a practical experience. The department encourages its graduate students to apply for study and jobs and/or internships in Russia through its exchanges with Russian universities and other institutions.
Programs of Study
The Master of Arts Degree
For the Master of Arts Degree , students may concentrate in either Russian literature or Slavic linguistics . Students enter with the equivalent of four years of undergraduate courses in Russian language to enable them to do research in the original language. Reading knowledge of French or German is required for both concentrations. Master's candidates who are in residence should complete all requirements within two calendar years of their first registration.

63. Duke Slavic Department Faculty
Russian language, nineteenthcentury russian literature, translationand theory of translation. Author of pedagogical materials
http://www.duke.edu/web/slavic/faculty.html
Edna Andrews
Professor (Ph.D., Indiana University, 1984).
Chair, Slavic Languages and Literatures, Director, CSEEES.
Slavic and general linguistics, semiotics, poetics.
Author of Markedness Theory: The Union of Asymmetry and Semiosis in Language On Synthetism, Mathematics and Other Matters: Zamyatin's Novel We (with T. Lahusen and E. Maksimova); The Semantics of Suffixation ; coeditor (with Yishai Tobin) of Toward a Calculus of Meaning: Studies in Markedness, Distinctive Features and Deixis ; author of several textbooks on Russian grammar (including Russkij Jazyk, Moscow).
Carol Flath
Associate Professor of the Practice (Ph.D., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1987).
Russian language, nineteenth-century Russian literature, translation and theory of translation.
Author of pedagogical materials for the Russian language classroom; numerous scholarly articles on nineteenth-century Russian literature, including essays on Chekhov and Dostoevsky; translator of Intimacy and Terror: Soviet Diaries of the 1930s Labor-Camp Socialism: The Gulag in the Soviet Totalitarian System by Galina Ivanova, (from the Russian), and of two books by Satoko Kizaki (from the Japanese). Her translation of

64. Slavic Languages And Literatures At The University Of Chicago
Literature and culture courses are regularly offered with significant strengthin russian literature, Polish literature, and Czech literature.
http://humanities.uchicago.edu/depts/slavic/
var page = "slavblok.html"; var windowprops = "width=560,height=520,location=no,toolbar=no,menubar=no,scrollbars=yes,resizable=no"; var pop = window.open(page, "", windowprops, true); pop.open; * SLAVIC * Russian * Ukrainian * Czech * Polish * Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian * Bulgarian * Macedonian * Old Church Slavonic * * BALTIC * Lithuanian * * BALKAN * Albanian * Romani * * CAUCASIAN * Georgian * Lak * Contents Courses Undergraduate Program Alumni Biographies Library Resources ... Join our mailing list!
6th Midwest Medieval Slavic Workshop
Fri, May 2, 2003
More information...
Apply for Teaching Positions in the
Slavic Language Program
Russian, Czech, Polish,
Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian
Applications due April 25, 2003
More information...
For more information,
please contact:
Slavic Languages and Literatures
The University of Chicago 1130 E. 59th St., Foster 406 Chicago, IL 60637 PHONE: (773) 702-8033 FAX: (773) 702-7030 EMAIL: slavic-department@uchicago.edu SECRETARY: Kerolann Haslam Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of Chicago The Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures offers courses in Russian, Czech, Polish, Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian, Macedonian, and Bulgarian. In addition to these Slavic languages, other languages of Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union are available (Georgian, Yiddish, Lithuanian, Albanian, Lak, Romani). Literature and culture courses are regularly offered with significant strength in Russian literature, Polish literature, and Czech literature. (

65. University Of Glasgow - Department Of Slavonic Studies :: Staff Lists
Bob Porter, (BA, PhD), Professor, Lecturer in Czech and Russian. russian literatureof the late twentieth century; Czech twentiethcentury prose fiction;
http://www.arts.gla.ac.uk/Slavonic/slavonic3.html
Department of Slavonic Studies
Staff Lists
Permanent Academic Members of Staff
John A Dunn , (MA, DPhil), Head of Department, Lecturer in Russian
  • History of the Russian language, with particular reference to the 17th and 18th centuries Russian language in the post-Soviet period Developments in Russian television
telephone: +44 141 330 5591
electronic mail: J.Dunn @slavonic.arts.gla.ac.uk
Bob Porter , (BA, PhD), Professor, Lecturer in Czech and Russian
  • Russian literature of the late twentieth century Czech twentieth-century prose fiction Translation from Czech and Russian
telephone: +44 141 330 4731
electronic mail: R.Porter @slavonic.arts.gla.ac.uk
John M Bates , (BA, MPhil, PhD), Lecturer in Polish
  • Polish language and literature censorship in Poland Polish history and thought
telephone: +44 141 330 5596
electronic mail: J.Bates @slavonic.arts.gla.ac.uk
Jan Èulík , (prom. fil., PhDr), Lecturer in Czech
  • Czech literature Czech culture and politics Media in the Czech Republic
telephone: +44 141 330 5588
electronic mail: J.Culik

66. Russian Department @ Dartmouth College
31. russian literature of the Golden Age in Translation. Dist LIT;WCult EU. Gronas. 32. Modern russian literature in Translation
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~russian/courses.html

Main Menu

Russian Dept

Courses
Faculty

Students

Alumni

Resources
...
Russian Major

RUSSIAN COURSES
MAJOR IN RUSSIAN
Dartmouth College has over a dozen professors whose teaching and research relates to Russia and the countries of Eastern Europe. Within the Russian Department you will find the professors who teach Russian language, as well as the courses on literature, linguistics and culture. Students can choose from among three types of Russian majors . The Russian Area Studies program is also supported by the courses taught in a range of other departments. Other faculty members involved in the Area Studies Program conduct research in related disciplines: Russian history, the politics of the Soviet Union, the geography of Russia and the former Soviet Republics, and the sociology of the peoples of Eastern Europe Why Study Russian? Whether one's interest are in science, international studies, literature and culture, business, or simply language itself, the study of Russian provides both practical utility and the statisfaction of attaining skill that not many possess.
Russia, Eastern Europe, Eurasia: Culture and Civilization

67. Dalkey Archive Press: Russian Literature
Dalkey Archive Press. Russia n Fiction Aleshkovsky, Yuz Kangaroo Bitov,Andrei Pushkin House (Afterwords Susan Brownsberger) Shklovsky
http://www.dalkeyarchive.com/dalkey/russian.html
Dalkey Archive Press
R u s s i a n F i c t i o n
Aleshkovsky, Yuz
Kangaroo
Bitov, Andrei
Pushkin House (Afterwords Susan Brownsberger)
Shklovsky, Viktor
Zoo, or Letters Not about Love (Intro. Gerald L. Bruns)

SPECIAL SALEany 100 Dalkey titles for $500
About Us Library Alliance Program Funding a Series ... Links

68. CREES | Center For Russian And East European Studies
Imperial Russia) History 434 (History of the Soviet Union) ·Russian 449 (20thC. russian literature 18901921) Russian 450 (20th C. russian literature
http://www.umich.edu/~iinet/crees/courses/reesminors.html
Undergraduate Academic Minors
in Russian Studies and in East European Studies
The Center for Russian and East European Studies (CREES) offers two interdisciplinary academic minors to students who wish to: a) better understand the history and culture of either Russia and the former Soviet Union or Eastern Europe and b) gain insight into the political, economic, and social transitions taking place in this region. These minors in Russian Studies and East European Studies do not have prerequisites or require knowledge of a language of the region. Requirements . A minimum of 15 credits hours of CREES-approved courses distributed over three of the following fields: anthropology, art history, economics, film and video studies, history, literature, music, political science, and sociology. For examples of CREES-approved classes, see our course lists . Course selection must include: Minor in Russian Studies REES 395 , Survey of Russia: The Russian Empire, the Soviet Union and Its Successor States One of the following course sequences
History 433 (Imperial Russia)
History 434 (History of the Soviet Union)
Russian 450 (20th C. Russian Literature: 1920-present)

69. St Edmund Hall, Oxford
French language and literature Geography German History International Relationsand Politics Law Mathematics Philosophy Physics Psychology russian literature.
http://www.seh.ox.ac.uk/index.cfm?do=view_subject&subjectID=36

70. Russian Literature Subject Guide - Humanities And Social Sciences Library - McGi
Back HSSL Subject Guides russian literature. Library Guides russian literatureA Selective List of Reference Sources(PDF, 15K); Russian
http://www.library.mcgill.ca/human/subguide/russlit.htm
HSSL Subject Guides
Russian Literature LIBRARY GUIDES ELECTRONIC DATABASES INTERNET RESOURCES COLLECTION POLICY Library Guides Electronic Databases Most are accessible to McGill users only. See Remote Access for home access to web-based databases.
indicates Full-Text or Partial Full-Text Internet Resources Encyclopedias

71. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn By Katharena Eiermann, Solzhenitsyn, Russia, Russian Lite
simply told story of a typical, grueling day of the titular character's life in alabor camp in Siberia, is a modern classic of russian literature and quickly
http://www.mindpleasures.com/private/Alsolz/BookStore.shtml
Sign My Guestbook? Find Your Soul-Mate Poetry Contest Choose a Poet... Romantic Quotes Reality Check Photos by Katharena Nature Quotes Terrorism in Review Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Poets Robert Frost Pablo Neruda Aleksandr Pushkin William Butler Yeats Percy Bysshe Shelley Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Ralph Waldo Emerson Henry David Thoreau Edgar Alan Poe William Blake Robert Burns Nature, Forms, and Laws of Poetry Quotes by Poets at MindPleasures.com Choose a Philosopher Karl Barth Simone de Beauvoir Samuel Beckett Martin Buber Albert Camus Fyodor Dostoyevsky Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Martin Heidegger Franz Kafka Soren Kierkegaard Abraham H. Maslow Friedrich Nietzsche Blaise Pascal Jean Paul Sartre Paul Tillich Quotes by Philosophers at MindPleasures.com
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Books and Reviews
Life and Times In The News! Book Store One should never direct people towards happiness, because happiness too is an idol of the market-place. One should direct them towards mutual affection. A beast gnawing at its prey can be happy too, but only human beings can feel affection for each other, and this is the highest achievement they can aspire to. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn November 1916: The Red Wheel/Knot II
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich

Solzhenitsyn's first book, this economical, relentless novel is one of the most forceful artistic indictments of political oppression in the Stalin-era Soviet Union. The simply told story of a typical, grueling day of the titular character's life in a labor camp in Siberia, is a modern classic of Russian literature and quickly cemented Solzhenitsyn's international reputation upon publication in 1962. It is painfully apparent that Solzhenitsyn himself spent time in the gulagshe was imprisoned for nearly a decade as punishment for making derogatory statements about Stalin in a letter to a friend.

72. Centre For Russian Studies
also organises postgraduate Research Workshops as well as running seminar programmesin 19992000 on 'The Re-writing of History in russian literature', in 2000
http://www.ssees.ac.uk/russstud.htm
School of Slavonic and East European Studies
University College London
Centre for Russian Studies
The Centre for Russian Studies at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies (UCL) exists to promote research and teaching on Russia, the former USSR and the Russian Empire. The primary aim of the Centre is to create a more distinct focus within the School for cultural, historical, linguistic, literary and social sciences research into Russia, past and present, and thereby to improve the environment for joint and individual research on Russia, including interdisciplinary and comparative approaches. The Centre aims also to promote knowledge and discussion of Russia in the broader academic community and with the public at large. Its activities enhance the quality of both postgraduate and undergraduate teaching and at the same time provide a 'home' for the many SSEES research and MA students with an interest in Russia.
Activities
SSEES is the major centre for Russian studies in the UK. More than twenty full-time members of faculty language, literature and culture specialists, historians, social scientists devote all or most of their research and teaching to Russia. At the MA level, more than 60 students are taking Russian-based courses and/or writing their dissertations on a Russia-related topic and some 25 students are doing their postgraduate research on Russian and the former USSR, ranging from 17th-century priests to 20th-century poets, from Soviet cinema to post-Soviet politics. About 125 undergraduates are registered for degrees in Russian studies and combined degrees including Russian, with many more taking one or more courses with a Russian component, in particular politics, history and language. The

73. RUSSIAN
Minor in russian literature and Culture (in Translation). The minor consistsof six courses in russian literature and culture, all taught in English.
http://www.georgetown.edu/undergrad/bulletin/collegefll6russian.html
Undergraduate Bulletin 2002-2003 Table of Contents
THE FACULTY OF LANGUAGES
AND LINGUISTICS
RUSSIAN
Russian majors pursue coursework in Russian language, linguistics, literature, and culture. They are expected to develop fluency in spoken Russian, the ability to handle written materials, and an appreciation for Russian civilization.
Required Courses
12 General Education courses 10 Russian (unless lower placement requires additional language study) consisting of:
or
4 Russian Electives; 2 taught in Russian and 2 in English
(Senior Seminar strongly recommended) Electives Students should select their Russian electives in consultation with their adviser from 300-400 level courses in Russian language, literature and culture and from coursework completed in approved programs in the Russian Federation. Transfer students with previous college coursework in Russian will be awarded Russian credit based on performance on the departmental placement examination upon entrance.
Russian Minor
Students from other departments and schools are invited to minor in Russian. The minor includes the following six requirements:

74. Bucknell University - Russian Studies Department
Learn about courses and faculty members in this academic department. Features original materials on the history of Russia and the russian language. about every other aspect of the russian life and societyits politics, news, art, music, literature, and business.
http://www.departments.bucknell.edu/russian

75. Friends & Partners - Literature
literature. russian and American literature could be digitized and stored on a server (as is being done with the
http://www.friends-partners.org/oldfriends/literature/literature.html
Literature
Russian and American literature could be digitized and stored on a server (as is being done with the Gutenberg project and similar efforts world-wide). The server could also become a 'home' to electronic publication of contemporary literature. Through the generous gift of Thomas P. Whitney '37, Amherst College has acquired what has generally been considered the world's largest private holding of Russian books, manuscripts, newspapers, periodicals, drawings and artifacts. This collection is housed in the newly established Amherst Center for Russian Culture and reflects what Russian intellectuals were doing in the Soviet Union and all over the world for over 70 years. Russian Literature on the Net - Russkaya Literatura v Internete - Proza, Fantastika, Poeziya, Avtorskie Pesni, Rok-Gruppy. Natasha has prepared 4 books of poems from Russian poet Sasha Cherniy . There are a total of 228 poems in this collection. Here is a collection of poems by Anna Ahmatova which Natasha has prepared. Here is an excellent collection of Russian proverbs . Please send additional items for this listing to natasha@ibpm.serpukhov.su. Here are three "classics" written by Tolstoy and Dostoevsky. Tolstoy's works are available in hypertext (thanks to Ellee Margileth!) and we will soon be making "Brothers Karamazov" available in the same format to facilitate easier reading. (Please be warned that this is a large (2M) document!)

76. Literature
Go to Nabla Kvadrat page. MIP Company invites you to visit their page wherethey present what they publish russian controversial literature.
http://www.ibiblio.org/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.

77. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn By Katharena Eiermann, Solzhenitsyn, Russia, Russian Lite
Katharena Eiermann's tribute to the writer. Biography, list of works, reviews, articles, studyguides Category Arts literature russian Authors Solzhenitsyn, Alexander......russian Language Terrorism in Review russian Politics Stalin DailyQuotes russian History Classical Music/Russia Russia/Movies
http://members.aol.com/KatharenaE/private/Alsolz/alsolz.html
Russian Language Terrorism in Review Russian Politics Stalin ... Russia/Movies 05 January 2003, Nobel Prize-winning author Alexander Solzhenitsyn, who was expelled from Russia in the Seventies because of his books critical of communism, was admitted to a Moscow hospital yesterday suffering from a stroke. Solzhenitsyn's Russian Social Fund for Aid to Political Prisoners confirmed he was in hospital but did not elaborate on his condition. "He is feeling comfortable and works when he can," the fund's spokeswoman said. 08 January 2003 "We have no news except for good news. He is feeling better," an official at Solzhenitsyn's Russian Public Foundation said by telephone Wednesday. The Latest Details In The News Russian Language
Terrorism in Review

Russian Politics
...
Russia/Movies
Katharena Eiermann's tribute to Russian writer, poet, Nobel prize winner Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. Bio, Works, Reviews, Articles, Study-Guides, Links Life and Times In The News! Book Store "I am of course confident that I will fulfill my tasks as a writer in all circumstances— from my grave even more successfully and more irrefutably than in my lifetime. No one can bar the road to truth, and to advance its cause I am prepared to accept even death. But may it be that repeated lessons will finally teach us not to stop the writer’s pen during his lifetime? At no time has this ennobled our history." Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the chronicler of Stalinist terror, has written a book on Russian-Jewish relations that he calls an unvarnished account of the troubled history of the two peoples despite frequent accusations that he is anti-Semitic.

78. Online Russian Library
Collection of texts and audio, including works of Pushkin, Lermontov, Fet, Krylov, Esenin, Akhmatova Category Reference Libraries Digital......Online Library of russian classical literature offers works of Pushkin, Lermontov,Fet, Krylov, Esenin, Akhmatova, Chekhov in original and English translation
http://learningrussian.com/library/
Cyrillic fonts on your computer HOME RUSSIAN PHRASES PHONETIC COURSE ... GRAMMAR GUIDES BILINGUAL LIBRARY FORUM LINKS Friday, April 11, 2003 English-Russian Phrasebook
Online Phonetic Course

Daily Phrase E-mail

Personal Correspondence
...
Testimonials

Coming soon
Online Bilingual Library
The Online Russian Language Center
Russian Library
The online Russian Library is an educational bilingual resource for teachers and students of the Russian language and culture. It features great works of major Russian authors, such as Pushkin Lermontov Fet Yesenin Akhmatova Tsvetaeva, Krylov Chekhov , etc. Russian original texts are published alongside professional English translations. Selected poems are supplied with voice recordings each available in two formats: RealAudio and Flash.
The collection currently contains works by authors.
New materials are added to the library on a regular basis.
So do come back!
Listings: Authors Titles Newly added: 4 poems of Vladimir Vysotsky Coming soon: Osip Mandelstam in Russian and English Requirements: Windows-1251 encoding RealAudio Player Macromedia Flash Player ADVERTISEMENT Learn Russian with English-Russian Audio Phrasebook!

79. SovLit.com - Soviet Literature Summarized
Summaries of works of Soviet literature, including novels, short stories and children's books. With Category Arts literature World literature russian...... A few complete texts in English and russian. Bonus Material. Articles, interviews,etc., related to Soviet literature Anything that doesn't fit in the other
http://www.sovlit.com/
Works of Soviet Literature summarized for those unable or too lazy to read them in the original.
Artistic Literature Click on title for detailed summary
Nagibin, Yuri
"My First and Most Beloved Friend"

Two boys develop a deep and lasting relationship which carries them through the usual boyhood and adolescent experiences, adventures, and the search for identity. They are separated only by war, when one of them dies. Years later, an accidental visit by the surviving friend to the battlefield where the other died brings back memories as well as feelings of guilt for not also dying. (Complete Text in English)
Mikhalkov, Sergei
"I Want To Go Home"

In Germany following World War II, the evil British keep displaced Soviet children captive in their sector, lying about their existence and refusing to allow them to go home. They plan to turn the children into wage slaves and future spies. They resort even to murder in an attempt to keep their secrets hidden. Also, honest Germans, driven into poverty and despair by the bullying, land-grabbing, capitalist monopolist Americans, flee to freedom in the Soviet sector. ( Ya Khochu Domoi
Budantsev, Sergei F.

80. - Russian Gothic Page - Dark Mood Literature
The summary for this russian page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://literature.gothic.ru/main.htm

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