http://aatseel.org/AATSEEL/seej/TOC.html
SLAVIC AND EAST EUROPEAN JOURNAL
VOLUME 49, NUMBER 1 SPRING 2005
2004 AATSEEL DISTINGUISHED LECTURE
BENJAMIN RIFKIN: Introduction
DAVID BETHEA: Whose Mind Is This Anyway?: Influence, Intertextuality, and
the Boundaries of Legitimate Scholarship
ARTICLES
SCOTT W. PALMER: Icarus, East: The Symbolic Contexts of Russian Flight
ALEXEI BOGDANOV: Ostranenie, Kenosis, and Dialogue: The Metaphysics of
Formalism According to Shklovsky
IVETA JUSOV : Gabriela Preissov s Women-Centered Texts: Subverting the Myth
of Homogeneous Nation
VALERIA SOBOL: "Yes, We are Scythians": The Image of Russia in Josef
kvoreck 's The Cowards
GEORGE RUBINSTEIN: Linguistic Bioacoustics: Fragments of Russian and English
REVIEW ARTICLE
MARY F. ZIRIN: "Mnogosmyslennaia nedoskazannost' ": A Useful Series on
Russian Women Writers From Germany
____________________
SLAVIC AND EAST EUROPEAN JOURNAL
VOLUME 48, NUMBER 4 WINTER 2004
ARTICLES
TIM HARTE: Vasilii Kamensky's Tango with Cows: A Modernist Map of Moscow
MARGARITA MARINOVA: Malevich's Poetry: A "Wooden Bicycle Against a
Background of Masterpieces"?
NIKOLAI FIRTICH: WORLDBACKWARDS: Lewis Carroll, Aleksei Kurchenykh and
Russian Alogism
SARA PANKENIER: Reborn in a Reappropriation of Creation: Marina Tsvetaeva's
"Po nagoriiam"
MIRJAM FRIED: Czech Reflexivization and the Invariance Principle Revisited
_______________________________
SLAVIC AND EAST EUROPEAN JOURNAL
VOLUME 48, NUMBER 3 FALL 2004
FORUM
INNOVATION THROUGH ITERATION: RUSSIAN POPULAR CULTURE TODAY
ORGANIZERS: ELIOT BORENSTEIN, MARK LIPOVETSKY, ELENA BARABAN
MARK LIPOVETSKY: POST-SOTS: Transformations of Socialist Realism in the
Popular Culture of the Recent Period
BIRGIT BEUMERS: Pop Post-Sots, or the Popularization of History in the
Musical Nord-Ost
ELENA BARABAN: A Country Resembling Russia: The Use of History in Boris
Akunin's Detective Novels
ELENA PROKHOROVA: Challenging Nostalgic Imagination: The Case of Dmitry
Astrakhan
VLADIMIR STRUKOV: Masiania, or Reimagining the Self in the Cyberspace of
Rusnet
ELIOT BORENSTEIN: Survival of the Catchiest: Memes and Postmodern Russia
|