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01 ôåâðàëÿ 2017

SLAVERY’S AFTERMATH: INTELLECTUAL LEGACY AND CULTURAL MEMORY

Special issue. Vol. I

Irina Prokhorova. Introduction

 

SLAVERY STUDIES MANIFESTO: INTERVIEW WITH RON EYERMAN

Ron Eyerman. The Cultural Aftermath of Slavery (trans. Nikolay Poselyagin)

 

LACUNAE: A CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK

Peter Kolchin. Comparative Perspectives on Emancipation in the U.S. South: Reconstruction, Radicalism, and Russia (trans. Andrey Logutov)

Orlando Patterson. The Two Conceptions of Social Death (trans. Alexander Slobodkin)

Ron Eyerman. Cultural Trauma and Collective Memory (trans. Nikolay Poselyagin)

 

SLAVERY, HISTORIOGRAPHY AND SOCIETY

Alessandro Stanziani. The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia: A Global Perspective (trans. Tatiana Pirusskaya)

Piotr Korys´ Serfdom, Feudal Land Tenure and Their Legacy in Poland (trans. Alexander Suslov)

Polina Kuzmicheva. The Abolition of Slavery as Part of the French National Idea: Debates in Contemporary Historiography

William Palmer. Historical Writing on British Abolition (trans. Liubov Bugaeva)

Boris Tarasov (Kerzhentsev). Serfdom in Scholarly and Artistic Discourse — From Historical Myth to Objective Reality

19 Short Interviews with Slavists on Slavery Studies and Serfdom Mark Altshuller, Timur Atnashev, Mikhail Velizhev, Jean-Philippe Jaccard, Yuri Zaretsky, Alexander Kamenskii, Ljubov Kisseljova, Yanni Kotsonis, Dominic Lieven, Mikhail Makeev, Laurie Manchester, Alexander Martin, Olga Matich, Alexey Miller, Vadim Mikhailin, Jona than Brooks Platt, Marshall Poe, Valery Podoroga, Andrei Ranchin, Richard Wortman (trans. Nikolay Poselyagin)

 

SLAVERY AS  SEEN THROUGH HEGEL

Mikhail Yampolski. Slave: Insider and Other

Oxana Timofeeva. Freedom is Slavery

Aage Hansen-Lo¨ve. From Master and Man to Man Without a Master

 

THE RHETORICAL REPRESENTATION OF SLAVERY

Elena Marasinova. ‘I can be a subject, even a slave — but I will never be a serf, even for the heavenly tsar’: Authority and Personality in Eighteenth-century Russia

Konstantin Bugrov. An Abyss of Inequality: The ‘Language of Civic Consciousness’ in Russia from the Eighteenth Century to the Eight­eenth Party Congress

Abram Reitblat. Rhetorical Strategies for Justifying Serfdom in Russia, 1800—1850.

Konstantin A. Bogdanov. Atavisms of Freedom, Reflexes of Slavery and the ‘Russian National Character’: The History of an Ethno-psy-chological Hypothesis

 

LITERARY REPRESENTATIONS OF SLAVERY

Aleksey Vdovin. ‘Unknown World’: Russian and European Aesthetics and the Problem of Representing Peasants in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Literature

 John Richardson. Alexander Pope’s Windsor Forest: Its Context and Attitudes toward Slavery (trans. Maria Kozlova)

Calvin Schermerhorn. Chained Sentiment: United States Slavery and the Emerging African American Novel, 1850—1862 (trans. Igor Gorkov)

Jennifer Wilson. Writing the ‘Soviet South’: Inflections of Post-Slavery America in Langston Hughes’ Ethnography of Central Asia (trans. Maria Kozlova)

Catriona Kelly. ‘Man-Footed Beast’ versus ‘Beast-Footed Man’: Animals as Slaves, Servants, and Companions in Post-Enlighten­ment European Culture (trans. Vladimir Kucheryavkin)

Vlad. Tretyakov. The Representation of Slavery in Western Literature

 

THE VISUAL REPRESENTATION OF SLAVERY — I

Yan Levchenko. Until the Bosses Get Back: The Problem of Domination and Subjugation in late 1980s-early 1990s ‘Lenfilm’ Production

Lyubov Bugaeva. Emancipation and the Burden of the Past: Serfs and Slaves Onscreen in Russian Film

Rizvana Bradley. Close-Up: Fugitivity and the Filmic Imagination: Reinventing Capacity: Black Femininity’s Lyrical Surplus, and the Cinematic Limits of 12 Years a Slave (trans. Igor Gorkov)

 

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