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The Russian Review

An American Quarterly Devoted to Russia Past and Present

Edited by:
Eve Levin


For the last half-dozen years The Russian Review has reigned as a premier journal in Slavic Studies. Its prescient receptivity to cultural studies, its admirable emphasis on intellectual and scholarly quality, and its unusually rigorous adherence to publication schedules have made The Russian Review a model of academic scholarship and professionalism. The Russian Review teems with stimulating, original insights, and invariably explores new ground.

TopNews and Announcements

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Electronic Archive
Back issues of The Russian Review are available electronically from JSTOR

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TopHighlights

Such a Beautiful Dream: How Russia Did Not Become a Market Economy, Stefan Hedlund

Gleaning Meaning: Harvest Time, Rimgaila Salys

Vladimir Solov'ev on Symbolism and Decadence, Michael Wachtel

'The Discreet Charm of the Russian Bourgeoisie': OKsana Robski and Glamour in Russian Popular Culture, Olga Mesropova

'Our brigade will not be sent to the front': Soviet Women under Arms in the Great Fatherland War, 1941-1945, Euridice Charon Cardona and Roger D. Markwick

Ivan Turgenev's Crime and Punishment: 'The jews' and the Furtive Pleasures of Liberalism, Leonid Livak

TopEndorsements

'Among the major Slavic journals worldwide, The Russian Review has a particular elegance and profile. It is interdisciplinary in a responsible way, seeking essays that not only criss-cross formerly separate fields....but also that educate new types of readers. for this to happen... there can be no narrow insidership: terms must be explained, background information must not be despised, and the level of writing must be uniformly accomplished and clear. This is the case with the Review: editing is always superb and standards for peer review fastidiously high... It is a place where important ideas are given the best possible chance to survive. '
Abraham Ascher, City University of New York