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Words, Deeds and Values : The Intelligentsia in Russia and Poland during the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries

Editor

Summary, in English

Fiona Björling Introduction

Andrzej Xalicki Polish conceptions of the intelligentsia and its calling

Steven J. Seegel Cartography and the collected nation in Joachim Lelewel’ Lelewel’s geographical imagination: a revised approach to intelligentsia

S. I. Michal´cenko xxx

V. B. Evarouskij (Evorovskij) xxx

Michail Dolbilov Stereotypes of the Pole in Russian public discourse: the case of Russification in the empire’ empire’s Western region in the mid-nineteenth century Catherine Evtuhov The provincial intelligentsia and social values in Niznij Novgorod, 1838– 91

Eugene Avrutin The Jewish intelligentsia, state administration, and the myth of conversion in tsarist Russia

Alan P. Pollard The origins of terrorism among the Russian narodniki

Anita Schlüchter Law and morality morality: the Russian debate at the turn of the century

Julie Hansen Images of madness in visual art: a Russian Symbolist iconography

Irina Kupcova The First World War and the crisis in the mentality of the art intelligentsia

Natalija Resetova The non-Bolshevik intelligentsia of the Don in 1917 and the early 1920s

A. V. Kvakin xxx

N. A. Bogomolov xxx

Geoffrey Hosking The intelligentsia and Russia’s twentieth-century crisis of trust Oksana Sarkisova Cine-intellectuals or cine-proletariat? Ideological allegiances and professional identities in early Soviet cinema

G. A. Jankovskaja xxx

Tatjana Kudrjavtseva Fazil’ Iskander: cultural bilingualism and the writings in Russian of the non-Russian intelligentsia

Mark Sandle Drafting the Third Party Programme: the intelligentsia and the de-Stalinisation of Soviet ideology ideology, 1952–61

E. M. Swiderski ‘Sociomorphs’, Soviet social theory theory, and philosophy: an essay on intellectual practices

Flemming Splidsboel-Hansen

The construction of a European identity in post-Soviet Russia: another elite project?

Inna Naletova How religious is the contemporary Russian intelligentsia?

Sociological aspects of the religious situation in Russia

Jonathan Sutton A ‘religious intelligentsia’ in present-day Russia? Towards responsibility and engaged reflection

Krzysztof Stala The Polish intelligentsia and modernity: the search for new moral sources

Nina Witoszek & Andrew Brennan New Middle Ages or new Renaissance: rethinking the humanist legacy in the post-communist world

Publishing year

2005

Language

English

Publication/Series

Slavica Lundensia

Volume

22

Document type

Book

Publisher

Lund University

Topic

  • History and Archaeology

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0346-8712
  • ISBN: 91-970201-9-2