Although virtually unknown in literary studies today, Martha Wilmot\u27s The Russian Journals remains an important text on the material circulation of things in an increasingly global eighteenth-century world.The Russian Journals describes her stay in Russia from 1803 to 1808 with family friend and powerful political figure Princess Dashkova. In particular, the souvenirs that she exchanges with Princess Dashkova shed light on how cultural and political connections were formed between Russia and Britain as well as how national identity was redefined on a more global scale
This article discusses the implications of a previously unknown Romantic-period manuscript by Anglo-...
This article discusses the implications of a previously unknown Romantic-period manuscript by Anglo-...
Examines the 'Russian influence' on both Mansfield’s craft as a short story writer and her life choi...
In July 2016, I traveled to Dublin, Ireland to examine the works of Martha Wilmot (1775-1873) in the...
Princess Ekaterina Romanovna Dashkova (1743–1810) was one of the most remarkable women of her time. ...
This dissertation is about six British women writers who kept accounts of the French Revolution and ...
This article argues for a revisionist history of women through the lens of anthropological gift theo...
This article examines the origins of different attributions of the uniform that Catherine II wore on...
An ongoing collaboration between Illinois Wesleyan and Russian scholars inspires new research and ...
My intention here is to explore the connection between the Garnett family and Stepniak, to call atte...
In the late nineteenth century, France experienced concurrent revolutions in domestic politics and i...
This dissertation is a literary, cultural, and theoretical analysis of selected British and Russian ...
This paper explores portrayals of Catherinian Russia in British and American periodicals during her ...
This thesis explores the involvement of Russian emigres in disseminating and informing the reception...
The paper presents an outline of the history of Russian and French cultural alliance, beginning with...
This article discusses the implications of a previously unknown Romantic-period manuscript by Anglo-...
This article discusses the implications of a previously unknown Romantic-period manuscript by Anglo-...
Examines the 'Russian influence' on both Mansfield’s craft as a short story writer and her life choi...
In July 2016, I traveled to Dublin, Ireland to examine the works of Martha Wilmot (1775-1873) in the...
Princess Ekaterina Romanovna Dashkova (1743–1810) was one of the most remarkable women of her time. ...
This dissertation is about six British women writers who kept accounts of the French Revolution and ...
This article argues for a revisionist history of women through the lens of anthropological gift theo...
This article examines the origins of different attributions of the uniform that Catherine II wore on...
An ongoing collaboration between Illinois Wesleyan and Russian scholars inspires new research and ...
My intention here is to explore the connection between the Garnett family and Stepniak, to call atte...
In the late nineteenth century, France experienced concurrent revolutions in domestic politics and i...
This dissertation is a literary, cultural, and theoretical analysis of selected British and Russian ...
This paper explores portrayals of Catherinian Russia in British and American periodicals during her ...
This thesis explores the involvement of Russian emigres in disseminating and informing the reception...
The paper presents an outline of the history of Russian and French cultural alliance, beginning with...
This article discusses the implications of a previously unknown Romantic-period manuscript by Anglo-...
This article discusses the implications of a previously unknown Romantic-period manuscript by Anglo-...
Examines the 'Russian influence' on both Mansfield’s craft as a short story writer and her life choi...