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    Picturing Russian Empire

    Picturing Russian Empire by Kivelson, Valerie; Kozlov, Sergei; Neuberger, Joan;

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    A termék adatai:

    • Kiadó OUP USA
    • Megjelenés dátuma 2023. június 21.

    • ISBN 9780197600528
    • Kötéstípus Puhakötés
    • Terjedelem592 oldal
    • Méret 226x198x53 mm
    • Súly 1202 g
    • Nyelv angol
    • Illusztrációk 180
    • 584

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    Hosszú leírás:

    Picturing Russian Empire offers a new way to approach the history of Russia as an empire and as a state located in a world characterized by a churning, dynamic exchange of people, ideas, and practices. It presents readers with a visual tour of the lands and peoples that constituted the Russian Empire and those that confronted it, defied it, accommodated to it, and shaped it at various times in more than a millennium of history.

    Bringing together scholars and experts from across the world and from various disciplines, Picturing Russian Empire consistently raises big historical questions to stimulate readers to think about images as embedded in the diverse, lived worlds of the Russian empire. The authors challenge the reader to not only to see images as the creations of individuals, but as objects circulating among viewers in a variety of contexts, creating new impressions, meanings, and experiences.

    Picturing Russian Empire is a wonderfully original volume that is a welcome addition to the pedagogical tools we use to introduce students to Russia's empires. The book's paramount advantage lies in its much-needed presentation of tangible artifacts that bring ostensibly distant, perhaps abstract, topics closer to the students. This visual representation of Russian history enables students to appreciate, understand, and critique the narratives they have grown accustomed to analyzing from printed sources"- Stephen Riegg, Texas A&M University

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    Tartalomjegyzék:

    List of Images
    List of Maps
    About the Contributors
    Acknowledgments
    Note on Transliterations
    Valerie Kivelson, Sergei Kozlov, and Joan Neuberger, Introduction
    I. Medieval Rus among the Empires
    1. Monica White, Early Rus: The Nexus of Empires
    2. Irina Konovalova, Placing Rus among World Empires in Tenth-Century Arab Geography
    3. Sergei Kozlov, The "Imperial Mirage" of Sviatoslav (twelfth century)
    II. Muscovy and the Expansion of Empire
    4. Nancy S. Kollmann, Empire and Culture: The Sixteenth-Century English Encounter the Samoyedy
    5. Valerie A. Kivelson, Racial Imaginary and Images of Mongols and Tatars in Early Modern Russia (1560s-1690s)
    6. Ekaterina Boltunova, Visual Polemics: The Time of Troubles in Polish and Russian Historical Memory (1611-1949)
    7. Maria Grazia Bartolini, The Image of the Good Orthodox Ruler between Kyiv and Moscow (1660s)
    8. Erika Monahan, Tents or Towns: The Limits of Sovereignty in the Russian North in the Late Seventeenth Century
    9. Evgeny Grishin, Divine Creation and Russian Exploitation of the Environment in Siberia (circa 1700)
    III. Imperial Russia
    10. Ernest A. Zitser, Re-visioning Empire under Peter the Great: How Muscovite Russia became Imperial
    11. Gregory Afinogenov, Depictions of China from a Caravan Journal (1736)
    12. Catherine Evtuhov, A "Complete" Atlas of the Russian Empire (1745)
    13. Nathaniel Knight, What's in a Hat? Representations of Ethnicity and Gender in Eighteenth-Century Russia 14. Alison K. Smith, Annushka, the Kalmyk (circa 1767)
    15. Erin McBurney, "If fate had not given her an Empire...": Catherine the Great and the Optics of Power (1783)
    16. Anna Graber, Depicting Expertise and Managing Diversity in the Urals Mining Industry (1773-1818)
    17. Willard Sunderland, Father Hyacinth's Chinese Portrait (Early Nineteenth Century)
    18. Richard Wortman, Vignettes of Empire: "Asiatic Peoples" at Nineteenth-Century Imperial Russian Coronations
    19. Nadja Berkovich, The Women of Empire Strike Back (1856)
    20. Bart Pushaw, The Peasant and the Photograph: Gender, Race, and the Sunlight Picture in the Baltic Provinces (1866)
    21. Olga Maiorova, Severed Heads on Display: Visualizing Central Asia (1868-1872)
    22. Sarah Badcock, The Cautious One: Identity and Belonging in Late Imperial Russia (1877)
    23. Fedor Korandei, Siberian Travelogues: Images of Asiatic Russia during the Transport Revolution (1860s-1890s)
    24. Maria Taroutina, "To the Caucasus": Representations of Empire in the Visual Arts at Abramtsevo (1870s-1890s)
    25. Louise McReynolds, Archeological Imagery Colonizes the Caucasus
    26. Alison Rowley, Chained to a Wheelbarrow: Hard Labor on an 1890s Picture Postcard from Siberia
    27. Rosalind P. Blakesley, Siberian Roots in an Imperial Space: Ermak's Conquest of Siberia by Vasily Surikov (1895)
    28. Anna Kotomina, Alexander Borisov and Tyko Vilka: Two Artists Who Made Worlds of Their Own from the Arctic Wilderness
    29. Galina V. Lyubimova, Yermak from Yenisei Province: A Peasant Painting from the Early Twentieth Century
    30. Katherine M. H. Reischl, Imperial Color in the Present Tense: The Photography of Sergei Prokudin-Gorsky
    IV. The Revolutionary Era
    31. Naomi Caffee and Robert Denis, "Go Be Russian:" Political Caricature and the Tbilisi Press After the 1905 Revolution
    32. Ronald Grigor Suny, In the Claws of the Imperial Eagle: Finland, Georgia, and Joseph Stalin (1906)
    33. Laura Engelstein, Agit-Empire: Bolshevik Civil War Art
    34. Angelina Lucento, Breakfast in Suuk Su: The Rise of Visual "Tatarism" (1917-1923)
    V. The Soviet Union
    35. Mollie Arbuthnot, Propaganda in Translation: Imagined Muslim Viewers in Early Soviet Posters (circa 1926)
    36. Craig Campbell, Two Laws: The Image of the Tungus in Soviet Dreamworlds (1920s)
    37. Oksana Sarkisova, Views from the Roof of the World: 1920s Film Expeditions to the Pamir Mountains
    38. Emma Widdis, A Shared Soviet Space: Filming the Caucasus in the 1920s-1930s
    39. Helena Holzberger, Socialist Orientalism: Picturing Central Asia in the Early Soviet Union (1920s-1930s)
    40. Nick Baron, "Fascist Colors": Stalinist Spatial Ideology, Cartographic Design, and Visual Learning
    41. Robert Weinberg, Representing Jewishness in the Red Zion: The Jewish Autonomous Region in the 1930s
    42. Charles Shaw, Love Letters to O'g'ulxon: Photography and Imperial Intimacy in the Second World War
    43. Nikolai Vakhtin, From Ethnographic Reality to Socialist Realism: Illustrations in Soviet Primers for the Indigenous Minorities of the North
    44. Erika Wolf, The Stalinist Imperial Body Politic: Photomontage in a Soviet Poster
    45. Stephen M. Norris, Caricatured Empire: Cold War Political Cartoons
    46. Yana Skorobogatov, "Where the Sun Begins its Path Over our Soil": El'dar Riazanov's Documentary Sakhalin Island (1954)
    47. Olessia Vovina, Crafting the Art of Tradition: Chuvash Embroidery Reframed
    48. Erik Scott, The Imperial Iconography of the Georgian Table (1900-1980s)
    49. Jessica Werneke, Representations of Women in the Soviet Periphery: Tartu Photography Exhibitions in the 1980s
    VI. The Post-Soviet Era
    50. Yulia Mikhailova, Competing Nationalisms in Russia's Empire and Its Aftermath: Sviatoslav of Kiev and the Diorama of His Last Battle
    51. Evgeny Manzhurin, Return of the Sables: Interpretations of the Symbol of Imperial Siberia (Seventeenth Century to Today)
    52. Karen Petrone, Soviet War Memorials in Post-Soviet Spaces
    53. Elizabeth A. Wood, Crimea in my Heart: Visualizing Putin's Resurgent Empire in 2014
    54. Joshua First, The Maidan: Anti-Imperial Modes of Mythmaking in Documentary Film (2014-2015)
    55. Olga Shevchenko, The Post-Soviet Body Politic: Media, Diaspora, and Photographs in the Immortal Regiment
    56. Joan Neuberger, Photo Essay: Picturing Wartime 2022
    Credits
    Index

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