This essay analyzes the recent appearance in Russian letters of ultra-nationalist fantasies about the restoration of Russia's imperial or totalitarian status. This new trend has its roots not only in the increasingly patriotic tone of Russian society and politics, but also in the dynamics of the literary field itself. 'Imperialist writers' such as Aleksandr Prokhanov and Pavel Krusanov have both revived and reacted against postmodern themes and motifs from earlier decades. Relying on the legacy of sots-art and stiob, the 'imperialists' advance a new model in Russia's postmodern tradition, one that is balanced on the very borderline between irony and ideological militancy. In playing the game of ambiguous fanaticism, these writers have been ...
Although the early part of the twentieth century produced a variety of inventive satirical works on ...
This edited volume explores patriotism and the growing role of militarism in today’s Russia. During ...
To support the myth of Russian literature’s unique social mission, its critics, historians, and crea...
This essay analyzes the recent appearance in Russian letters of ultra-nationalist fantasies about th...
Post-Soviet Literature and the Search for a Russian Identity examines Russian literature’s engagemen...
When Aleksandr Prokhanov’s Mr. Hexogen appeared in 2001 most critics perceived it as a postmodern no...
This article discusses the role of representative strategies in twentieth-century Russian culture. J...
The present work analyses the fiction of the post-Soviet Russian writers, Vladimir Sorokin, Vladimir...
The article deals with two issues: research on the history of Russia in a post-colonial perspec...
Political trends in post-Soviet science fiction. The article surveys the main trends in post-soviet...
The diversity of Russian literature since "Glasnost" and the collapse of the Soviet Union shows that...
The return of Tsarist buildings, narratives and symbols has been a prominent facet of social life in...
After the collapse of communism, Russia became an ideological no man\u27s land, where advocates of n...
The return of Tsarist buildings, narratives and symbols has been a prominent facet of social life in...
Russian nationalism at the beginning of the 21st century, although partially rooted in an older trad...
Although the early part of the twentieth century produced a variety of inventive satirical works on ...
This edited volume explores patriotism and the growing role of militarism in today’s Russia. During ...
To support the myth of Russian literature’s unique social mission, its critics, historians, and crea...
This essay analyzes the recent appearance in Russian letters of ultra-nationalist fantasies about th...
Post-Soviet Literature and the Search for a Russian Identity examines Russian literature’s engagemen...
When Aleksandr Prokhanov’s Mr. Hexogen appeared in 2001 most critics perceived it as a postmodern no...
This article discusses the role of representative strategies in twentieth-century Russian culture. J...
The present work analyses the fiction of the post-Soviet Russian writers, Vladimir Sorokin, Vladimir...
The article deals with two issues: research on the history of Russia in a post-colonial perspec...
Political trends in post-Soviet science fiction. The article surveys the main trends in post-soviet...
The diversity of Russian literature since "Glasnost" and the collapse of the Soviet Union shows that...
The return of Tsarist buildings, narratives and symbols has been a prominent facet of social life in...
After the collapse of communism, Russia became an ideological no man\u27s land, where advocates of n...
The return of Tsarist buildings, narratives and symbols has been a prominent facet of social life in...
Russian nationalism at the beginning of the 21st century, although partially rooted in an older trad...
Although the early part of the twentieth century produced a variety of inventive satirical works on ...
This edited volume explores patriotism and the growing role of militarism in today’s Russia. During ...
To support the myth of Russian literature’s unique social mission, its critics, historians, and crea...