This guide is an in-depth listing of Russian & Slavic Studies resources available to students and faculty at the University of Minnesota
eBooks Added July to Nov. 2019 on Russian/Slavic Language and Literature
by Brian Vetruba on 2019-12-18T14:28:00-05:00 | 0 CommentsA selected list of eBooks for Russian and other Slavic Languages and Literature recently added. A complete downloadable list with Catalog links is available.
Call Number: eBook
ISBN: 9780231545846
Publication Date: 2019
English translation of Russian plays. This anthology offers an introduction to New Russian Drama through plays that illustrate the versatility and global relevance of this exciting movement. Both politically and aesthetically uncompromising, they chart new paths for performance in the twenty-first century.
Pushkin's Monument and allusion : poem, statue, performance by
Publication Date: 2019
Pushkin's Monument and Allusion is the first aesthetic analysis of Russia's most famous monument to its greatest poet, Alexander Pushkin.
Call Number: eBook
ISBN: 9781137348395
Publication Date: 2016
This book analyzes the creation of languages across the Slavophone areas of the world and their deployment for political projects and identity building, mainly after 1989. It offers perspectives from a number of disciplines such as sociolinguistics, socio-political history and language policy.
ISBN: 9780776627809
Call Number: eBook
Publication Date: 2019
Andrew Donskov takes a critical look not only at Tolstoy's attitude towards the peasant class he so often championed for their simple ways and freedom from upper-class sophistication and pretentiousness, but more importantly, gives voice to representatives of the peasant class itself.
ISBN: 9780299317607
Publication Date: 2018
Russia's provinces have long held a prominent place in the nation's cultural imagination. Lyudmila Parts looks at the contested place of the provinces in twenty-first-century Russian literature and popular culture, addressing notions of nationalism, authenticity, Orientalism, Occidentalism, and postimperial identity. Surveying a largely unexplored body of Russian journalism, literature, and film from the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, Parts finds that the harshest portrayals of the provinces arise within "high" culture. Popular culture, however, has increasingly turned from the newly prosperous, multiethnic, and westernized Moscow to celebrate the hinterlands as repositories of national traditions and moral strength. ALSO AVAILABLE IN PRINT
Contact Brian (bvetruba@umn.edu) with questions about these or other resources!
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