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Lydia Ginzburg’s Alternative Literary Identities
A Collection of Articles and New Translations©2012 Edited Collection -
American Experience – The Experience of America
©2013 Edited Collection -
World War I from Local Perspectives: History, Literature and Visual Arts
Austria, Britain, Croatia, France, Germany, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Poland and the United States©2015 Edited Collection -
Kaliningrad and Cultural Memory
Cold War and Post-Soviet Representations of a Resettled City©2019 Monographs -
Vladimir Nabokov and the Ideological Aesthetic
A Study of his Novels and Plays, 1926–1939©2017 Monographs -
Dungan Folktales and Legends
©2021 Monographs -
The Nihilist Imagination
Dmitrii Pisarev and the Cultural Origins of Russian Radicalism (1860-1868)©2003 Monographs -
Poetics of Becoming
Dynamic Processes of Mythopoesis in Modern and Postmodern Hebrew and Slavic Literature©2005 Monographs -
Literature, History and Identity in Post-Soviet Russia, 1991-2006
©2007 Monographs -
Unacknowledged Legislators
Studies in Russian Literary History and Poetics in Honor of Michael Wachtel©2020 Others -
Flight from the Red Hell
©2020 Monographs -
Wiener Slawistischer Almanach Band 86/2021
Tamizdat: Publishing Russian Literature Across Borders©2021 Edited Collection -
A Culture of Discontinuity?
Russian Cultural Debates in Historical Perspective©2023 Edited Collection -
Russian Transformations: Literature, Culture and Ideas
ISSN: 1662-2545
Russian Transformations publishes studies across the entire extent of Russian literature, thought and culture from the medieval period to the present. The series gives special emphasis to the kinds of transformation that characterise Russian, Soviet and post-Soviet writing. Transformation has often been under the stimulus of (and resistance to) foreign traditions. Acts of cross-cultural and cross-literary reception mark Russia's sense of creative development and national identity. Transformation has often been the result of the on-going dialogues between writers working within the Russian literary tradition through polemic and subtle use of intertextuality. Similarly, the stunning political and social changes that have been characteristic of Russian history generated radical transformation in the institutions of literature and in forms of literature from Modernism to post-Perestroika as writers react to official policy on freedom of expression.
7 publications