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NYU JORDAN CENTER
Yolanda Zhang | Friday, April 16th, 2021. Mirsaid Sultan-Galiev (1892-1940) was a communist, an anti-colonial revolutionary, and a devout Muslim. Born in the Bashkir village of Elembet’evo in Ufa, he was raised in a family of mixed socioeconomic backgrounds: his mother a member of the nobility, and his father a peasant following Ismail TIME OUT OF JOINT (UNSTUCK IN TIME) This post is part of the Introduction to Unstuck in Time: On the Post-Soviet Uncanny, an ongoing Tuesday/Thursday summer feature on All the Russias. It can also be found on Eliot Borenstein’s website.To get email announcements about new posts, please write to eb7@nyu.edu TEACHING RUSSIA ONLINE RESOURCE DATABASE MediaZona Podcasts: MediaZona is a Russian-language online news publication that focuses its reporting on the judicial, law enforcement, and penal system in Russia. Their podcasts (all in Russian) focus on topics such as the 2019 Moscow summer election protests and imagining a future without corruption in Russia. CRIME AND PUNISHMENT IN TODAY'S RUSSIA In the aftermath of the crime, police arrested several Chechens, a primarily Muslim ethnic group that fought, and lost, a war for independence from Russia in the 1990s and early 2000s. Following confessions, the suspects were charged with the murder. According to pro-Kremlin commentators, the slaying was a hate crime, a reaction toNemtsov’s
LIFE WITH THE RUSSIAN ÉMIGRÉ COMMUNITY OF AUSTRALIA The relation between the American and Australian communities is a deep one, rooted at the core of the White Émigré community and Church. Since the 1950s, most émigré spiritual leaders in the worldwide community have received their theological education in a seminary in Upstate New York. In our world, the boundaries between the continents THE SHAMAKHMUDOVS, PART I: FAMILY AND KINSHIP METAPHORS IN “The family of an Uzbek blacksmith identified as Shamakmudov may be the most multi-national in the world, the TASS news agency reported today. Akhmed and his wife adopted 14 children of soldiers killed in World War II including Uzbeks, Russians, Jews, Tartars, Moldavians, and Gypsies,” various American local daily news outlets reported in December 1964. Indeed, the main Soviet REMEMBERING THE CHILDREN OF CHERNOBYL: HOW HBO’S This post features a runner-up entry in All the Russias’ inaugural Graduate Student Essay Competition. Isabelle DeSisto is completing a joint bachelor’s degree in Government and master’s degree in Regional Studies: Russia, Eastern Europe and Central Asia at HarvardUniversity.
GUNS FOR LENIN: A NEW JERSEY LOVE STORY After the Ludlow Massacre of striking miners in Colorado in 1914, anarchists sought to blow up John D. Rockefeller, Jr., who held a controlling interest in the mining company. Goldman family lore blames Gusta for the faulty fuse that led to the bomb destined for Rockefeller blowing up in a New York City apartment beforehand, onJuly 4, 1914.
WRITING A GLOBAL HISTORY OF SOVIET SOCIALISM: GEOPOLITICS The collapse of socialist regimes during 1989-1991 profoundly affected the conditions of knowledge production about the former socialist countries. The “transition to liberal democracy and capitalism” substituted the “know-your-enemy” paradigm, but hardly rescued the scholarship on the Soviet Union and other socialist countries from the area-studies model of knowledge production and “THOSE CRAZY AMERICANS, OF COURSE PUSHKIN’S NOT BLACK Last Friday, a group of scholars gathered in the wonderful space of NYU’s newly established Africa house to discuss connections of various forms between Russian and Africa. We were a notably eclectic collective, including a Nigerian professor who studied in the USSR, the daughter of a Russian woman and an Angolan man who was born in Soviet Uzbekistan, an American historian of Russia marriedNYU JORDAN CENTER
Yolanda Zhang | Friday, April 16th, 2021. Mirsaid Sultan-Galiev (1892-1940) was a communist, an anti-colonial revolutionary, and a devout Muslim. Born in the Bashkir village of Elembet’evo in Ufa, he was raised in a family of mixed socioeconomic backgrounds: his mother a member of the nobility, and his father a peasant following Ismail TIME OUT OF JOINT (UNSTUCK IN TIME) This post is part of the Introduction to Unstuck in Time: On the Post-Soviet Uncanny, an ongoing Tuesday/Thursday summer feature on All the Russias. It can also be found on Eliot Borenstein’s website.To get email announcements about new posts, please write to eb7@nyu.edu TEACHING RUSSIA ONLINE RESOURCE DATABASE MediaZona Podcasts: MediaZona is a Russian-language online news publication that focuses its reporting on the judicial, law enforcement, and penal system in Russia. Their podcasts (all in Russian) focus on topics such as the 2019 Moscow summer election protests and imagining a future without corruption in Russia. CRIME AND PUNISHMENT IN TODAY'S RUSSIA In the aftermath of the crime, police arrested several Chechens, a primarily Muslim ethnic group that fought, and lost, a war for independence from Russia in the 1990s and early 2000s. Following confessions, the suspects were charged with the murder. According to pro-Kremlin commentators, the slaying was a hate crime, a reaction toNemtsov’s
LIFE WITH THE RUSSIAN ÉMIGRÉ COMMUNITY OF AUSTRALIA The relation between the American and Australian communities is a deep one, rooted at the core of the White Émigré community and Church. Since the 1950s, most émigré spiritual leaders in the worldwide community have received their theological education in a seminary in Upstate New York. In our world, the boundaries between the continents THE SHAMAKHMUDOVS, PART I: FAMILY AND KINSHIP METAPHORS IN “The family of an Uzbek blacksmith identified as Shamakmudov may be the most multi-national in the world, the TASS news agency reported today. Akhmed and his wife adopted 14 children of soldiers killed in World War II including Uzbeks, Russians, Jews, Tartars, Moldavians, and Gypsies,” various American local daily news outlets reported in December 1964. Indeed, the main Soviet REMEMBERING THE CHILDREN OF CHERNOBYL: HOW HBO’S This post features a runner-up entry in All the Russias’ inaugural Graduate Student Essay Competition. Isabelle DeSisto is completing a joint bachelor’s degree in Government and master’s degree in Regional Studies: Russia, Eastern Europe and Central Asia at HarvardUniversity.
GUNS FOR LENIN: A NEW JERSEY LOVE STORY After the Ludlow Massacre of striking miners in Colorado in 1914, anarchists sought to blow up John D. Rockefeller, Jr., who held a controlling interest in the mining company. Goldman family lore blames Gusta for the faulty fuse that led to the bomb destined for Rockefeller blowing up in a New York City apartment beforehand, onJuly 4, 1914.
WRITING A GLOBAL HISTORY OF SOVIET SOCIALISM: GEOPOLITICS The collapse of socialist regimes during 1989-1991 profoundly affected the conditions of knowledge production about the former socialist countries. The “transition to liberal democracy and capitalism” substituted the “know-your-enemy” paradigm, but hardly rescued the scholarship on the Soviet Union and other socialist countries from the area-studies model of knowledge production and “THOSE CRAZY AMERICANS, OF COURSE PUSHKIN’S NOT BLACK Last Friday, a group of scholars gathered in the wonderful space of NYU’s newly established Africa house to discuss connections of various forms between Russian and Africa. We were a notably eclectic collective, including a Nigerian professor who studied in the USSR, the daughter of a Russian woman and an Angolan man who was born in Soviet Uzbekistan, an American historian of Russia married TIME OUT OF JOINT (UNSTUCK IN TIME) This post is part of the Introduction to Unstuck in Time: On the Post-Soviet Uncanny, an ongoing Tuesday/Thursday summer feature on All the Russias. It can also be found on Eliot Borenstein’s website.To get email announcements about new posts, please write to eb7@nyu.edu TIME OF TROUBLES; OR, THE TROUBLE WITH TIME (UNSTUCK IN This post is part of the Introduction to Unstuck in Time: On the Post-Soviet Uncanny, an ongoing Tuesday/Thursday summer feature on All the Russias. It can also be found on Eliot Borenstein’s website.To get email announcements about new posts, please write to eb7@nyu.edu TEACHING RUSSIA ONLINE RESOURCE DATABASE MediaZona Podcasts: MediaZona is a Russian-language online news publication that focuses its reporting on the judicial, law enforcement, and penal system in Russia. Their podcasts (all in Russian) focus on topics such as the 2019 Moscow summer election protests and imagining a future without corruption in Russia. IDENTITY POLITICS AND THE REALITY OF PANDEMIC-ERA RUSSIA From the beginning of the pandemic, the Russian government instituted very tight control over all information related to the spread of the coronavirus in Russia. It highlighted Russia’s lower mortality rate and focused on advances in developing and registering the first COVID-19 vaccine. The label of "Sputnik-V" hearkened back to the Cold War-era space race and Soviet achievements in this NOTES FROM THE MANOSPHERE, PART II The "age of rage," a term dating to the 2010s, when the online culture wars began, is in full flower today. Reading Dostoevsky's "Notes from Underground" from our contemporary vantage point offers a warning about social fragmentation as a precursor for angry, megalomaniacal fantasies and rising chauvinism. Analyzing the Underground Man's reactions shows that this often directionless rage is a RYANAIR - NYU JORDAN CENTER Jordan Center for the Advanced Study of Russia Ryanair sashashpitalnik. Published: 07-Jun-2021 MAKING AN ANTI-IMPERIALIST EMPIRE: REVOLUTIONARY RUSSIA This event will be held virtually as a Zoom meeting. Professor Norihiro Naganawa will present on his ongoing book project, which explores early Soviet Russia’s engagement with Central Asia, Iran and the Red Sea through a biography of one Tatar revolutionary and Soviet diplomat, Karim Abdraufovich Khakimov (1890-1938). With Putin’s Russia returning to the Middle IN RUSSIAN CULTURAL POLICY, THE CUSTOMER IS ALWAYS WRONG Olga Lyubimova’s appointment as Russia’s new minister of culture in early 2020 was an immediate scandal. In old LiveJournal posts that surfaced on social media, she boldly declared an aversion to ballet, museums, arthouse cinema, and a dozen other types of culture. “I unexpectedly came to realize,” she wrote at the time, “That I am in no freaking way a cultured person.”#QUITSEELANGS
SEELANGS is a listserv used by our academic discipline to circulate all kinds of useful information and ask questions ranging from inquiries about Russian grammar to the accessibility of the Moscow Metro for wheelchair users. But SEELANGS is also the medium that brings nitpicky quarrels, negativity, racism, sexism and nationalismright into the
RECONSTRUCTING STALINGRAD: THE STRUGGLE TO REBUILD AND The surrender of the last of nearly 90,000 Axis soldiers in Stalingrad on February 2, 1943 marked a major turning point in the Second World War and, indeed, in twentieth-century history. But for thousands around the Soviet Union and in Stalingrad itself, the event had personal significance: after nearly 200 days under siege, their home city had been liberated. The challenge facing the city’sNYU JORDAN CENTER
Yolanda Zhang | Friday, April 16th, 2021. Mirsaid Sultan-Galiev (1892-1940) was a communist, an anti-colonial revolutionary, and a devout Muslim. Born in the Bashkir village of Elembet’evo in Ufa, he was raised in a family of mixed socioeconomic backgrounds: his mother a member of the nobility, and his father a peasant following Ismail TIME OUT OF JOINT (UNSTUCK IN TIME) This post is part of the Introduction to Unstuck in Time: On the Post-Soviet Uncanny, an ongoing Tuesday/Thursday summer feature on All the Russias. It can also be found on Eliot Borenstein’s website.To get email announcements about new posts, please write to eb7@nyu.edu TEACHING RUSSIA ONLINE RESOURCE DATABASE MediaZona Podcasts: MediaZona is a Russian-language online news publication that focuses its reporting on the judicial, law enforcement, and penal system in Russia. Their podcasts (all in Russian) focus on topics such as the 2019 Moscow summer election protests and imagining a future without corruption in Russia. CRIME AND PUNISHMENT IN TODAY'S RUSSIA In the aftermath of the crime, police arrested several Chechens, a primarily Muslim ethnic group that fought, and lost, a war for independence from Russia in the 1990s and early 2000s. Following confessions, the suspects were charged with the murder. According to pro-Kremlin commentators, the slaying was a hate crime, a reaction toNemtsov’s
LIFE WITH THE RUSSIAN ÉMIGRÉ COMMUNITY OF AUSTRALIA The relation between the American and Australian communities is a deep one, rooted at the core of the White Émigré community and Church. Since the 1950s, most émigré spiritual leaders in the worldwide community have received their theological education in a seminary in Upstate New York. In our world, the boundaries between the continents THE SHAMAKHMUDOVS, PART I: FAMILY AND KINSHIP METAPHORS IN “The family of an Uzbek blacksmith identified as Shamakmudov may be the most multi-national in the world, the TASS news agency reported today. Akhmed and his wife adopted 14 children of soldiers killed in World War II including Uzbeks, Russians, Jews, Tartars, Moldavians, and Gypsies,” various American local daily news outlets reported in December 1964. Indeed, the main Soviet GUNS FOR LENIN: A NEW JERSEY LOVE STORY After the Ludlow Massacre of striking miners in Colorado in 1914, anarchists sought to blow up John D. Rockefeller, Jr., who held a controlling interest in the mining company. Goldman family lore blames Gusta for the faulty fuse that led to the bomb destined for Rockefeller blowing up in a New York City apartment beforehand, onJuly 4, 1914.
SOVIET CINEMA LIVES! MONTAGE, THE KULESHOV EFFECT, AND Christopher Tremoglie attends the University of Pennsylvania, where he is majoring in Russian and Eastern European Studies and minoring in Political Science. Early Soviet cinema pioneered the use of film as propaganda rather than entertainment. From the regime’s inception, the Bolsheviks saw cinema as a fruitful avenue for persuading Russians to adopt Soviet ideals. WRITING A GLOBAL HISTORY OF SOVIET SOCIALISM: GEOPOLITICS The collapse of socialist regimes during 1989-1991 profoundly affected the conditions of knowledge production about the former socialist countries. The “transition to liberal democracy and capitalism” substituted the “know-your-enemy” paradigm, but hardly rescued the scholarship on the Soviet Union and other socialist countries from the area-studies model of knowledge production and “THOSE CRAZY AMERICANS, OF COURSE PUSHKIN’S NOT BLACK Last Friday, a group of scholars gathered in the wonderful space of NYU’s newly established Africa house to discuss connections of various forms between Russian and Africa. We were a notably eclectic collective, including a Nigerian professor who studied in the USSR, the daughter of a Russian woman and an Angolan man who was born in Soviet Uzbekistan, an American historian of Russia marriedNYU JORDAN CENTER
Yolanda Zhang | Friday, April 16th, 2021. Mirsaid Sultan-Galiev (1892-1940) was a communist, an anti-colonial revolutionary, and a devout Muslim. Born in the Bashkir village of Elembet’evo in Ufa, he was raised in a family of mixed socioeconomic backgrounds: his mother a member of the nobility, and his father a peasant following Ismail TIME OUT OF JOINT (UNSTUCK IN TIME) This post is part of the Introduction to Unstuck in Time: On the Post-Soviet Uncanny, an ongoing Tuesday/Thursday summer feature on All the Russias. It can also be found on Eliot Borenstein’s website.To get email announcements about new posts, please write to eb7@nyu.edu TEACHING RUSSIA ONLINE RESOURCE DATABASE MediaZona Podcasts: MediaZona is a Russian-language online news publication that focuses its reporting on the judicial, law enforcement, and penal system in Russia. Their podcasts (all in Russian) focus on topics such as the 2019 Moscow summer election protests and imagining a future without corruption in Russia. CRIME AND PUNISHMENT IN TODAY'S RUSSIA In the aftermath of the crime, police arrested several Chechens, a primarily Muslim ethnic group that fought, and lost, a war for independence from Russia in the 1990s and early 2000s. Following confessions, the suspects were charged with the murder. According to pro-Kremlin commentators, the slaying was a hate crime, a reaction toNemtsov’s
LIFE WITH THE RUSSIAN ÉMIGRÉ COMMUNITY OF AUSTRALIA The relation between the American and Australian communities is a deep one, rooted at the core of the White Émigré community and Church. Since the 1950s, most émigré spiritual leaders in the worldwide community have received their theological education in a seminary in Upstate New York. In our world, the boundaries between the continents THE SHAMAKHMUDOVS, PART I: FAMILY AND KINSHIP METAPHORS IN “The family of an Uzbek blacksmith identified as Shamakmudov may be the most multi-national in the world, the TASS news agency reported today. Akhmed and his wife adopted 14 children of soldiers killed in World War II including Uzbeks, Russians, Jews, Tartars, Moldavians, and Gypsies,” various American local daily news outlets reported in December 1964. Indeed, the main Soviet GUNS FOR LENIN: A NEW JERSEY LOVE STORY After the Ludlow Massacre of striking miners in Colorado in 1914, anarchists sought to blow up John D. Rockefeller, Jr., who held a controlling interest in the mining company. Goldman family lore blames Gusta for the faulty fuse that led to the bomb destined for Rockefeller blowing up in a New York City apartment beforehand, onJuly 4, 1914.
SOVIET CINEMA LIVES! MONTAGE, THE KULESHOV EFFECT, AND Christopher Tremoglie attends the University of Pennsylvania, where he is majoring in Russian and Eastern European Studies and minoring in Political Science. Early Soviet cinema pioneered the use of film as propaganda rather than entertainment. From the regime’s inception, the Bolsheviks saw cinema as a fruitful avenue for persuading Russians to adopt Soviet ideals. WRITING A GLOBAL HISTORY OF SOVIET SOCIALISM: GEOPOLITICS The collapse of socialist regimes during 1989-1991 profoundly affected the conditions of knowledge production about the former socialist countries. The “transition to liberal democracy and capitalism” substituted the “know-your-enemy” paradigm, but hardly rescued the scholarship on the Soviet Union and other socialist countries from the area-studies model of knowledge production and “THOSE CRAZY AMERICANS, OF COURSE PUSHKIN’S NOT BLACK Last Friday, a group of scholars gathered in the wonderful space of NYU’s newly established Africa house to discuss connections of various forms between Russian and Africa. We were a notably eclectic collective, including a Nigerian professor who studied in the USSR, the daughter of a Russian woman and an Angolan man who was born in Soviet Uzbekistan, an American historian of Russia married TIME OUT OF JOINT (UNSTUCK IN TIME) This post is part of the Introduction to Unstuck in Time: On the Post-Soviet Uncanny, an ongoing Tuesday/Thursday summer feature on All the Russias. It can also be found on Eliot Borenstein’s website.To get email announcements about new posts, please write to eb7@nyu.edu TIME OF TROUBLES; OR, THE TROUBLE WITH TIME (UNSTUCK IN This post is part of the Introduction to Unstuck in Time: On the Post-Soviet Uncanny, an ongoing Tuesday/Thursday summer feature on All the Russias. It can also be found on Eliot Borenstein’s website.To get email announcements about new posts, please write to eb7@nyu.edu TEACHING RUSSIA ONLINE RESOURCE DATABASE MediaZona Podcasts: MediaZona is a Russian-language online news publication that focuses its reporting on the judicial, law enforcement, and penal system in Russia. Their podcasts (all in Russian) focus on topics such as the 2019 Moscow summer election protests and imagining a future without corruption in Russia. IDENTITY POLITICS AND THE REALITY OF PANDEMIC-ERA RUSSIA From the beginning of the pandemic, the Russian government instituted very tight control over all information related to the spread of the coronavirus in Russia. It highlighted Russia’s lower mortality rate and focused on advances in developing and registering the first COVID-19 vaccine. The label of "Sputnik-V" hearkened back to the Cold War-era space race and Soviet achievements in this NOTES FROM THE MANOSPHERE, PART II The "age of rage," a term dating to the 2010s, when the online culture wars began, is in full flower today. Reading Dostoevsky's "Notes from Underground" from our contemporary vantage point offers a warning about social fragmentation as a precursor for angry, megalomaniacal fantasies and rising chauvinism. Analyzing the Underground Man's reactions shows that this often directionless rage is a INSURGENTS BUILT IN: HOW WARS RADICALIZED THE MOST The following is an abridged and reconceptualized version of the article “Tatars and Imperialist Wars: From the Tsar’s Servitors to the Red Warriors,” Ab Imperio 1 (2020): 164-96. Norihiro Naganawa is Professor of Central Eurasian Studies at the Slavic and Eurasian Research Center, Hokkaido University, Japan, and currently a William D. Loughlin member of the Princeton Institute for MAKING AN ANTI-IMPERIALIST EMPIRE: REVOLUTIONARY RUSSIA This event will be held virtually as a Zoom meeting. Professor Norihiro Naganawa will present on his ongoing book project, which explores early Soviet Russia’s engagement with Central Asia, Iran and the Red Sea through a biography of one Tatar revolutionary and Soviet diplomat, Karim Abdraufovich Khakimov (1890-1938). With Putin’s Russia returning to the Middle RYANAIR - NYU JORDAN CENTER Jordan Center for the Advanced Study of Russia Ryanair sashashpitalnik. Published: 07-Jun-2021 RECONSTRUCTING STALINGRAD: THE STRUGGLE TO REBUILD AND The surrender of the last of nearly 90,000 Axis soldiers in Stalingrad on February 2, 1943 marked a major turning point in the Second World War and, indeed, in twentieth-century history. But for thousands around the Soviet Union and in Stalingrad itself, the event had personal significance: after nearly 200 days under siege, their home city had been liberated. The challenge facing the city’s#QUITSEELANGS
SEELANGS is a listserv used by our academic discipline to circulate all kinds of useful information and ask questions ranging from inquiries about Russian grammar to the accessibility of the Moscow Metro for wheelchair users. But SEELANGS is also the medium that brings nitpicky quarrels, negativity, racism, sexism and nationalismright into the
NYU JORDAN CENTER
Yolanda Zhang | Friday, April 16th, 2021. Mirsaid Sultan-Galiev (1892-1940) was a communist, an anti-colonial revolutionary, and a devout Muslim. Born in the Bashkir village of Elembet’evo in Ufa, he was raised in a family of mixed socioeconomic backgrounds: his mother a member of the nobility, and his father a peasant following Ismail IDENTITY POLITICS AND THE REALITY OF PANDEMIC-ERA RUSSIA From the beginning of the pandemic, the Russian government instituted very tight control over all information related to the spread of the coronavirus in Russia. It highlighted Russia’s lower mortality rate and focused on advances in developing and registering the first COVID-19 vaccine. The label of "Sputnik-V" hearkened back to the Cold War-era space race and Soviet achievements in this CRIME AND PUNISHMENT IN TODAY'S RUSSIA In the aftermath of the crime, police arrested several Chechens, a primarily Muslim ethnic group that fought, and lost, a war for independence from Russia in the 1990s and early 2000s. Following confessions, the suspects were charged with the murder. According to pro-Kremlin commentators, the slaying was a hate crime, a reaction toNemtsov’s
MAKING AN ANTI-IMPERIALIST EMPIRE: REVOLUTIONARY RUSSIA This event will be held virtually as a Zoom meeting. Professor Norihiro Naganawa will present on his ongoing book project, which explores early Soviet Russia’s engagement with Central Asia, Iran and the Red Sea through a biography of one Tatar revolutionary and Soviet diplomat, Karim Abdraufovich Khakimov (1890-1938). With Putin’s Russia returning to the Middle THE SHAMAKHMUDOVS, PART I: FAMILY AND KINSHIP METAPHORS IN “The family of an Uzbek blacksmith identified as Shamakmudov may be the most multi-national in the world, the TASS news agency reported today. Akhmed and his wife adopted 14 children of soldiers killed in World War II including Uzbeks, Russians, Jews, Tartars, Moldavians, and Gypsies,” various American local daily news outlets reported in December 1964. Indeed, the main Soviet#QUITSEELANGS
SEELANGS is a listserv used by our academic discipline to circulate all kinds of useful information and ask questions ranging from inquiries about Russian grammar to the accessibility of the Moscow Metro for wheelchair users. But SEELANGS is also the medium that brings nitpicky quarrels, negativity, racism, sexism and nationalismright into the
THE RAMP TO NOWHERE? DISABILITY IN CONTEMPORARY RUSSIA High-level international censure came in response to Russia’s actions in Ukraine; the anti-gay law (in effect since June 2013) also prompted wide criticism. Unsurprisingly, disability activists and Paralympics sponsors and attendees were noticeably quieter, although politics entered the arena there as well. Thus only one member of the SOVIET CINEMA LIVES! MONTAGE, THE KULESHOV EFFECT, AND Christopher Tremoglie attends the University of Pennsylvania, where he is majoring in Russian and Eastern European Studies and minoring in Political Science. Early Soviet cinema pioneered the use of film as propaganda rather than entertainment. From the regime’s inception, the Bolsheviks saw cinema as a fruitful avenue for persuading Russians to adopt Soviet ideals. A CONVERSATION WITH JULIA PHILLIPS, AUTHOR OFJULIA PHILLIPS AUTHOR BIOGRAPHYJULIA PHILLIPS PRODUCERJULIA PHILLIPS WIKIPEDIA Julia Phillips is the debut author of the nationally bestselling novel Disappearing Earth. Author Julia Phillips says three significant political moments framed her time in Russia. Her sojourn there led to Disappearing Earth, a novel set in the Far East that centers on a “THOSE CRAZY AMERICANS, OF COURSE PUSHKIN’S NOT BLACK Last Friday, a group of scholars gathered in the wonderful space of NYU’s newly established Africa house to discuss connections of various forms between Russian and Africa. We were a notably eclectic collective, including a Nigerian professor who studied in the USSR, the daughter of a Russian woman and an Angolan man who was born in Soviet Uzbekistan, an American historian of Russia marriedNYU JORDAN CENTER
Yolanda Zhang | Friday, April 16th, 2021. Mirsaid Sultan-Galiev (1892-1940) was a communist, an anti-colonial revolutionary, and a devout Muslim. Born in the Bashkir village of Elembet’evo in Ufa, he was raised in a family of mixed socioeconomic backgrounds: his mother a member of the nobility, and his father a peasant following Ismail IDENTITY POLITICS AND THE REALITY OF PANDEMIC-ERA RUSSIA From the beginning of the pandemic, the Russian government instituted very tight control over all information related to the spread of the coronavirus in Russia. It highlighted Russia’s lower mortality rate and focused on advances in developing and registering the first COVID-19 vaccine. The label of "Sputnik-V" hearkened back to the Cold War-era space race and Soviet achievements in this CRIME AND PUNISHMENT IN TODAY'S RUSSIA In the aftermath of the crime, police arrested several Chechens, a primarily Muslim ethnic group that fought, and lost, a war for independence from Russia in the 1990s and early 2000s. Following confessions, the suspects were charged with the murder. According to pro-Kremlin commentators, the slaying was a hate crime, a reaction toNemtsov’s
MAKING AN ANTI-IMPERIALIST EMPIRE: REVOLUTIONARY RUSSIA This event will be held virtually as a Zoom meeting. Professor Norihiro Naganawa will present on his ongoing book project, which explores early Soviet Russia’s engagement with Central Asia, Iran and the Red Sea through a biography of one Tatar revolutionary and Soviet diplomat, Karim Abdraufovich Khakimov (1890-1938). With Putin’s Russia returning to the Middle THE SHAMAKHMUDOVS, PART I: FAMILY AND KINSHIP METAPHORS IN “The family of an Uzbek blacksmith identified as Shamakmudov may be the most multi-national in the world, the TASS news agency reported today. Akhmed and his wife adopted 14 children of soldiers killed in World War II including Uzbeks, Russians, Jews, Tartars, Moldavians, and Gypsies,” various American local daily news outlets reported in December 1964. Indeed, the main Soviet#QUITSEELANGS
SEELANGS is a listserv used by our academic discipline to circulate all kinds of useful information and ask questions ranging from inquiries about Russian grammar to the accessibility of the Moscow Metro for wheelchair users. But SEELANGS is also the medium that brings nitpicky quarrels, negativity, racism, sexism and nationalismright into the
THE RAMP TO NOWHERE? DISABILITY IN CONTEMPORARY RUSSIA High-level international censure came in response to Russia’s actions in Ukraine; the anti-gay law (in effect since June 2013) also prompted wide criticism. Unsurprisingly, disability activists and Paralympics sponsors and attendees were noticeably quieter, although politics entered the arena there as well. Thus only one member of the SOVIET CINEMA LIVES! MONTAGE, THE KULESHOV EFFECT, AND Christopher Tremoglie attends the University of Pennsylvania, where he is majoring in Russian and Eastern European Studies and minoring in Political Science. Early Soviet cinema pioneered the use of film as propaganda rather than entertainment. From the regime’s inception, the Bolsheviks saw cinema as a fruitful avenue for persuading Russians to adopt Soviet ideals. A CONVERSATION WITH JULIA PHILLIPS, AUTHOR OFJULIA PHILLIPS AUTHOR BIOGRAPHYJULIA PHILLIPS PRODUCERJULIA PHILLIPS WIKIPEDIA Julia Phillips is the debut author of the nationally bestselling novel Disappearing Earth. Author Julia Phillips says three significant political moments framed her time in Russia. Her sojourn there led to Disappearing Earth, a novel set in the Far East that centers on a “THOSE CRAZY AMERICANS, OF COURSE PUSHKIN’S NOT BLACK Last Friday, a group of scholars gathered in the wonderful space of NYU’s newly established Africa house to discuss connections of various forms between Russian and Africa. We were a notably eclectic collective, including a Nigerian professor who studied in the USSR, the daughter of a Russian woman and an Angolan man who was born in Soviet Uzbekistan, an American historian of Russia married TIME OF TROUBLES; OR, THE TROUBLE WITH TIME (UNSTUCK IN This post is part of the Introduction to Unstuck in Time: On the Post-Soviet Uncanny, an ongoing Tuesday/Thursday summer feature on All the Russias. It can also be found on Eliot Borenstein’s website.To get email announcements about new posts, please write to eb7@nyu.edu IDENTITY POLITICS AND THE REALITY OF PANDEMIC-ERA RUSSIA Gulnaz Sharafutdinova is a Reader at Russia Institute, King’s College London. In my upcoming book, The Red Mirror: Putin’s Leadership and Russia’s Insecure Identity (Oxford University Press, October 2020), I explore the roots of the Kremlin’s success in shaping public opinion in Russia after Crimea. Following other scholars who have highlighted the social factors at play in Putin’s STATE-SPONSORED HIJACKING AND INTERNATIONAL RESPONSES: THE Join us for another NYC Russia Public Policy Series panel! Register here for the Zoom webinar, or tune in on YouTube Live. The New York-Russia Public Policy Series is co-hosted by the Harriman Institute at Columbia University and the New York University Jordan Center for the Advanced Study of Russia. The forced landing of a Ryanair flight by Belarusian authorities and coerced detention of NOTES FROM THE MANOSPHERE, PART II The "age of rage," a term dating to the 2010s, when the online culture wars began, is in full flower today. Reading Dostoevsky's "Notes from Underground" from our contemporary vantage point offers a warning about social fragmentation as a precursor for angry, megalomaniacal fantasies and rising chauvinism. Analyzing the Underground Man's reactions shows that this often directionless rage is a STEPHEN COHEN (1938-2020): PROFESSOR EMERITUS, NYU RUSSIAN Yanni Kotsonis is Professor of History and Professor of Russian and Slavic Studies at NYU. Steve was hired to NYU after his time at Princeton. He was a masterful lecturer who packed in 400 students each time he taught his survey of Soviet history, and he helped keep alive Soviet and Russian studies at a time when interest was falling. NOTES FROM THE MANOSPHERE, PART I This is Part I in a two-part series. Part II will follow on Wednesday, 5/12. Mimi Walker is a Master’s student of Russian and Slavic Studies and International Relations at New York University. “I am a sick manI am a wicked man,” says the Underground Man, the anti-hero of Dostoevsky’s 1864 novel. Narrated by a disillusioned man who A PUSH FOR DIGITAL HISTORY IN SOVIET AND POST-SOVIET My research examines German prisoners-of-war (POWs) in the USSR from 1941 to 1956. My dissertation, which I am currently transforming into a book manuscript, treats the reasons that Soviets held POWs for so long after war's end. On the basis of digital historical methods, I argue that Soviet authorities detained German POWs as a labor source for postwar reconstruction. RYANAIR - NYU JORDAN CENTER Jordan Center for the Advanced Study of Russia Ryanair sashashpitalnik. Published: 07-Jun-2021 GUNS FOR LENIN: A NEW JERSEY LOVE STORY After the Ludlow Massacre of striking miners in Colorado in 1914, anarchists sought to blow up John D. Rockefeller, Jr., who held a controlling interest in the mining company. Goldman family lore blames Gusta for the faulty fuse that led to the bomb destined for Rockefeller blowing up in a New York City apartment beforehand, onJuly 4, 1914.
TOTALITARIAN SPEECH: PUTIN’S "NATIONAL TRAITORS" The same can be said about the notorious “national traitors.”. This term appeared in Weimar Germany, and was applied to Matthias Erzberger, Philipp Scheidemann and other members of the German delegation who signed the armistice of 1918 and the Treaty of Versailles. The meaning of the expression is clear. It’s a name forcollaborators, for
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The Jordan Center for the Advanced Study of Russia was established in 2011 thanks to a generous gift from the family of NYU alumni Boris and Elizabeth Jordan. The mission of the Center is to make Russia intrinsic to all aspects of scholarly investigation: from history to visual culture, literature to economics, anthropology to politics. -------------------------EMAIL UPDATES
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TwitterTwitter RSSRSS ------------------------- ALL THE RUSSIAS' BLOG A SPACE FOR NEWS AND OPINION, SPONSORED BY THE JORDAN CENTER SCHEDULING CONFLICTS (UNSTUCK IN TIME)Eliot Borenstein |
Thursday, June 3rd, 2021 On or about December 1991, the normal course of time in Russiastopped.
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NEW BOOK, NEW BLOG: UNSTUCK IN TIMEEliot Borenstein |
Tuesday, June 1st, 2021 Unstuck in Time: On the Post-Soviet Uncanny, will begin serializationon Thursday
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NOTES FROM THE MANOSPHERE, PART IIMimi Walker |
Wednesday, May 12th, 2021 The “age of rage,” a term dating to the 2010s, when the online culture wars began, is in full flower today. Reading Dostoevsky’s “Notes from Underground” from our contemporary vantage point offers a warning about social fragmentation as a precursor for angry, megalomaniacal fantasies and rising chauvinism. Analyzing the Underground Man’s reactions shows that this often directionless rage is a coping mechanism that compensates for profound feelings of inadequacy, loneliness, despair, and loss of status.Continue reading...
NOTES FROM THE MANOSPHERE, PART IMimi Walker |
Tuesday, May 11th, 2021 “I am a sick man…I am a wicked man,” says the Underground Man, the anti-hero of Dostoevsky’s 1864 novel. Narrated by a disillusioned man who fails to fit into societal norms, Notes from Underground exposes the seamy underbelly of Russian society by showcasing the deep resentment certain individuals feel for both themselves and their social “betters.” If this narrative sounds familiar, it is because there is an entire radical movement online centered on this same resentment.Continue reading...
VICTORY DAY AT THE SOVIET KITCHEN TABLEDalia Wolfson |
Monday, May 10th, 2021 “Why are you crying, Musya? Because we’re so old?” asks my grandmother, annoyed. “No, no, because it all happened.”Continue reading...
WERE THE LIBERALS STUPID? LIBERAL PEDAGOGY IN THE DESIGN OF THE POLISH POST-COMMUNIST TRANSFORMATIONMarta Bucholc |
Wednesday, May 5th, 2021 Interest in the 1989 post-Communist transformation in Poland has had its ups and downs, but seems to be on the rise again since 2015, when the national-conservative Prawo i Sprawiedliwość (Law and Justice, PiS) replaced the liberals at the state’s helm and launched a program of institutional changes under the general heading of a“Good Change.”
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A PUSH FOR DIGITAL HISTORY IN SOVIET AND POST-SOVIET STUDIESSusan Grunewald |
Tuesday, May 4th, 2021 My research examines German prisoners-of-war (POWs) in the USSR from 1941 to 1956. My dissertation, which I am currently transforming into a book manuscript, treats the reasons that Soviets held POWs for so long after war’s end. On the basis of digital historical methods, I argue that Soviet authorities detained German POWs as a labor source for postwar reconstruction.Continue reading...
DAILY IDENTITY PRACTICES: POTATO EATERS IN BELARUSAnna Zadora |
Friday, April 30th, 2021 Food cultivation, preparation, and consumption are important reference points in the creation of national identity. Food has strong symbolic, even quasi-sacred, associations in many cultures. For Slavic peoples, bread is a very important symbol, while in Belarus, potatoes are known as “the second bread.”Continue reading...
IN RUSSIAN CULTURAL POLICY, THE CUSTOMER IS ALWAYS WRONG Rebecca Adeline Johnston| Thursday, April
29th, 2021
Olga Lyubimova’s appointment as Russia’s new minister of culture in early 2020 was an immediate scandal. In old LiveJournal posts that surfaced on social media, she boldly declared an aversion to ballet, museums, arthouse cinema, and a dozen other types of culture. “I unexpectedly came to realize,” she wrote at the time, “That I am in no freaking way a cultured person.”Continue reading...
INSURGENTS BUILT IN: HOW WARS RADICALIZED THE MOST INTEGRATED MUSLIMS IN THE RUSSIAN EMPIRENorihiro Naganawa
| Monday, April 26th, 2021 With observers consistently pointing to the social isolation and lack of opportunity Muslim youth often confront, why are European societies reluctant to listen to Muslim citizens who — speaking a shared language of liberalism — ask for equality combined with individual recognition of difference? These questions are very familiar to historians of Muslim regions in the Russian Empire, particularly the oldest and most integrated one within Russia’s body politic: theVolga-Urals region.
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