![]() | TelegraphI see Russia’s future in the brightest of hues. Admittedly, this sort of statement does not befit a dystopian writer like me, who is supposed to make dire predictions, though for some what I am going to tell you will sound as bad as an anti-utopia (while I see it as an almost ideal outcome). Like India, Russia absorbs and changes cultural invadersI see Russia’s future in the brightest of hues. Admittedly, this sort of statement does not befit a dystopian writer like me, who is supposed to make dire predictions, though for some what I am going to tell you will sound as bad as an anti-utopia (while I see it as an almost ideal outcome). French and African Lettersby Ismail Gasprali Translated by Azade-Ayse Rorlich Istanbul: Isis Press; 2008; pp. 206 Through Ismail Gasprali's French and African Letters Professor Rorlich offers evidence regarding the scope of Muslim modernism in late imperial Russia contributing at the same time to a better understanding of the debates on gender issues that shaped the modernist discourse. Tovarisch, I Am Not Dead11-24 July 2008 BFI Southbank, London Garri Urban survived the holocaust and the Gulag, while maintaining self-respect and refusing to become a victim of his harrowing life as a polish Jew in the 20th Century. Garri and his son, two-time BAFTA winning director Stuart Urban, returned to the former Soviet Union in 1992 to claim his KGB file and prove his incredible history. Dominic LievenProfessor of Russian Government at the London School of Economics, Lieven has written extensively on Russian history and post-Soviet politics, and on empire and European history. His most recent publications include Russia and the Origins of the First World War (Macmillan, 1983), Russia's Rulers under the Old Regime (Yale U.P., 1989), Nicholas II (John Murray/St Martin's Press, 1993), and Empire: The Russian Empire and its Rivals (John Murray/Yale U.P., 2000). Rossica 10/11St Petersburg – 300 This special issue, with a foreword by Her Majesty The Queen, celebrates the Tercentenary of Russia’s imperial capital, known as the Venice of the North and one of the world’s most enigmatic cities – St Petersburg. Rossica 4Moscow – The Third Rome, Stalin’s Capital, Global City This issue focuses on Russia’s capital city as myth, as physical history, and as the future. Rossica 4Moscow – The Third Rome, Stalin’s Capital, Global City This issue focuses on Russia’s capital city as myth, as physical history, and as the future. Rossica 10/11St Petersburg – 300 This special issue, with a foreword by Her Majesty The Queen, celebrates the Tercentenary of Russia’s imperial capital, known as the Venice of the North and one of the world’s most enigmatic cities – St Petersburg. |