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From Realism to the Silver Age
  • Language: en

From Realism to the Silver Age

This volume of thirteen essays presents rigorous new research by western and Russian scholars on Russian art of the nienteenth and early-twentieth centuries. Over More than three decades after the publication of Elizabeth Valkenier's pioneering monograph, Russian Realist Art, this impressive collection showcases the latest methodology and subjects of inquiry, expanding the parameters of what has become an area of enormous intellectual and popular appeal. Major artists including Ilia Repin, Valentin Serov, and Wassily Kandinsky are considered afresh, as are the Peredvizhnik and Mir iskusstva movements and the Abramtsevo community. The book also breaks new ground to embrace subjects such as Ru...

Russian Realist Art
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 280

Russian Realist Art

  • Categories: Art

**** BCL3 lists the Ardis edition of 1977 which carried the series note "Studies of the Russian Institute, Columbia University". On the original motivations of the realist painters, how they evolved, and the falsification that impinged upon such works after 1932. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

History and Myth in Pictorial Narratives of the Russian ‘Patriotic War’, 1812–1914
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 279
Soviet Foreign Policy in a Changing World
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 978

Soviet Foreign Policy in a Changing World

No detailed description available for "Soviet Foreign Policy in a Changing World".

Russian Realisms
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 283

Russian Realisms

One fall evening in 1880, Russian painter Ilya Repin welcomed an unexpected visitor to his home: Lev Tolstoy. The renowned realists talked for hours, and Tolstoy turned his critical eye to the sketches in Repin's studio. Tolstoy's criticisms would later prompt Repin to reflect on the question of creative expression and conclude that the path to artistic truth is relative, dependent on the mode and medium of representation. In this original study, Molly Brunson traces many such paths that converged to form the tradition of nineteenth-century Russian realism, a tradition that spanned almost half a century—from the youthful projects of the Natural School and the critical realism of the age of...

Ilya Repin and the World of Russian Art
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 248

Ilya Repin and the World of Russian Art

  • Categories: Art
  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1990
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Soviet Studies 900823

The Life of Musorgsky
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 220

The Life of Musorgsky

Modest Musorgsky is Russia's greatest musical dramatist. When he died in 1881 in St Petersburg at the age of forty-two, in poverty and relative obscurity, he was known for a single opera, Boris Godunov and a handful of eccentric 'realistic' songs set to prosaic Russian texts. He had no institutional connections, no 'degree', no family of his own, not even a permanent address. Except for Franz Liszt, no composer of stature knew of him outside Russia. Through the loyal (if controversial) intervention of his friends, his works survived in various editings into the early twentieth century, when revivals and evolving musical tastes restored him to new life. This account of his life, first published in 1999, emphasizes the psychological and economic factors that contributed to the composer's remarkable rise and tragic, premature end and is the first brief biography in English to make use of materials published in the new, de-Sovietized Russian academic climate.

Nationalism, Marxism, and Modern Central Europe
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 353

Nationalism, Marxism, and Modern Central Europe

Timothy Snyder opens a new path in the understanding of modern nationalism and twentieth-century socialism by presenting the often overlooked life of Kazimierz Kelles-Krauz, an important Polish thinker at the beginning of the twentieth century. During his brief life in Poland, Paris, and Vienna, Kelles-Krauz influenced or infuriated most of the leaders of the various socialist movements of Central Europe and France. His central ideas ultimately were not accepted by the socialist mainstream at the time of his death. However, a century later, we see that they anticipated late twentieth-century understanding on the importance of nationalism as a social force and the parameters of socialism in political theory and praxis. Kelles-Krauz was one of the only theoreticians of his age to advocate Jewish national rights as being equivalent to, for example, Polish national rights, and he correctly saw the struggle for national sovereignty as being central to future events in Europe. This was the first major monograph in English devoted to Kelles-Krauz, and it includes maps and personal photographs of Kelles-Krauz, his colleagues, and his family.

Globalization, Negotiation, and the Failure of Transformation in South Africa
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 246

Globalization, Negotiation, and the Failure of Transformation in South Africa

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2006-07-21
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  • Publisher: Springer

The book explains the social forces, forms of consciousness and structural constraints that undermined Apartheid, preserved national unity and yet, later constrained democratic sovereignty, as the imperatives of global markets clashed with the prior aspirations of the democratic revolution.

Russian Literary Politics and the Pushkin Celebration of 1880
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 254

Russian Literary Politics and the Pushkin Celebration of 1880

In an event acknowledged to be a watershed in modern Russian cultural history, the elite of Russian intellectual life gathered in Moscow in 1880 to celebrate the dedication of a monument to the poet Alexander Pushkin, who had died nearly half a century earlier. Private and government forces joined to celebrate a literary figure, in a country in which monuments were usually dedicated to military or political heroes. In this richly detailed narrative history of the Pushkin Celebration and the developments that led up to it, Marcus C. Levitt explores the unique role of literature in nineteenth-century Russian intellectual life and puts Russian literary criticism, and Pushkin's posthumous reputa...