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The Development of Modern Russian Literature
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2017
Abstract
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- Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies. 1962
References
1 “Ty sprashivaesh', kakaia tsel’ u Tsyganov? Vot na! Tsel’ poezii—poeziia—kak govorit Del'vig (esli ne ukral etogo). Dumy Ryleeva i tseliat, a vse nevpopad.” (Moscow and Leningrad, 1949), X, 141.
2 E.g., (Moscow and Petrograd, 1924);
(Moscow, 1934).
3
(Paris, 1934).
4
(Moscow, 1953), p. 46.
5
, XV (Moscow, 1949), 446.
6 Ably analyzed by Ralph, Matlaw, “The Manifesto of Russian Symbolism” Slavic and East European Journal, XV (1957), 177–91.Google Scholar
7 ”… Novoe ideal'noe iskusstvo, griadushchee v Rossii na smenu utilitarnomu poshlomu realizmu.” #. , XV (St. Petersburg and Moscow, 1914), 252.
8
(Moscow and Leningrad, 1946), p. Leningrad
9
, No. 3 (1922), pp. 25-31. Cited from
William, Edgerton, “The Serapion Brothers: An Early Soviet Controversy” American Slavic and East European Review, VIII (1949), 51–52.Google Scholar
10
(Berlin, 1931).
11 Leon, Trotsky, Literature and Revolution, trans. Strunsky, Rose (New York, 1925), p. 1925 Google Scholar.
12 Brown, Edward J., The Proletarian Episode in Russian Literature (New York, 1953).Google Scholar
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