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Plotting history: the Russian historical novel in the Imperial Age
Dan Ungurianu
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Frontmatter
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List of Illustrations (page ix)
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Preface and Acknowledgments (page xi)
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Introduction: Fact, Fiction, and the Anxiety of Genre (page 3)
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1 An Overview of the Romantic Era (page 13)
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2 Fact and Fiction in the Romantic Novel (page 40)
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3 The Changing and the Unchanged (page 55)
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4 Masterpieces in Context: Taras Bulba and The Captain's Daughter (page 76)
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5 Tolstoy's "Book" and a New Kind of Historical Novel (page 97)
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6 The Age of Positivism: "Historiographie Romancée" (page 125)
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7 The End of Progress: Facets of the Modernist Paradigm (page 149)
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In Lieu of a Conclusion: A Tale of Three Cities, or the Reincarnations of Saint Petersburg in the Russian Historical Novel (page 189)
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Appendix A: Chronological and Thematic Distribution of Works (page 209)
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Appendix B: Annotated List of Authors (page 263)
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Notes (page 289)
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Works Cited (page 309)
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Index (page 325)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
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SR | 68.1 (Spring 2009): 191-192 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/20453312 |
Citable Link
Published: 2007
Publisher: The University of Wisconsin Press
- 9780299225032 (ebook)
- 9780299225001 (hardcover)