Results 171 to 180 of about 23,559 (226)
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The Antioch Review, 1945
THE RUSSIAN INTELLIGENTSIA is a specific formation of nineteenthcentury Russia, not to be identified with the "educated and professional classes" of the Western lands, or with the officials, technicians, and managers of present-day Russia. It was extruded out of a fixed society of medieval estates into which it no longer fitted, as an ideological sign ...
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THE RUSSIAN INTELLIGENTSIA is a specific formation of nineteenthcentury Russia, not to be identified with the "educated and professional classes" of the Western lands, or with the officials, technicians, and managers of present-day Russia. It was extruded out of a fixed society of medieval estates into which it no longer fitted, as an ideological sign ...
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Russian Studies in Literature, 1994
The present-day situation forces me to address a letter to the editors in which—and not for the first time by any means—I respond to the question of what exactly is our status, what is the role and significance of the intelligentsia in our society.
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The present-day situation forces me to address a letter to the editors in which—and not for the first time by any means—I respond to the question of what exactly is our status, what is the role and significance of the intelligentsia in our society.
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Intelligentsia exhumed: nationalist trends among contemporary Russian intelligentsia
Russian Journal of Communication, 2018Since the late 1980s, we witnessed vigorous attempts to bury the Soviet intelligentsia along with Soviet literature.
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The Russian Intelligentsiais the first single-volume history of a small but tremendously influential group of Russian intellectuals who achieved world renown in a variety of spheres. While previous accounts have addressed the history of individuals within this collective, Christopher Read offers the first explanation of the intelligentsia as a group ...
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Ayn Rand and the Russian Intelligentsia
2022This book examines the writings of the American novelist Ayn Rand, especially The Fountainhead (1943) and Atlas Shrugged (1957), which Rand considered her definitive statement about the need for an unregulated free market in which superior humans could fully realize themselves by living for no-one but themselves.
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The Problem of the Russian Intelligentsia
Slavic Review, 1967Historians have little reason to believe that the so-called intelligentsia corresponded to any real group of men in Russian society. It is true that the term has been used very frequently in the past one hundred years, but it has been denned in so many ways and been the subject of such bitter partisan debate that it has lost any objective meaning ...
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Impacts of permafrost degradation on infrastructure
Nature Reviews Earth & Environment, 2022Jan Hjort +2 more
exaly

