Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 320
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-7425-2062-2 • Hardback • November 2002 • $145.00 • (£112.00)
978-0-7425-2063-9 • Paperback • November 2002 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
Catherine Evtuhov is associate professor of history at Georgetown University. Stephen Kotkin is associate professor of history at Princeton University.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Part 2 History of Ideas
Chapter 3 Translatio Imperii and Translatio Religionis: The Geography of Salvation in Russian and American Messianic Thinking
Chapter 4 The Religious Westernism of Ivan Gagarin
Chapter 5 Guizot in Russia
Chapter 6 Alexander Herzen's "Russian Socialism"
Chapter 7 The Problem of "Russia and the West" in Russian Historiography (with special reference to M.I. Rostovstev and P.N Miliukov)
Chapter 8 William James through a Russian Prism: The Case of the Moscow God-Seekers
Part 9 Regimes and Political Practice
Chapter 10 Crosscurrents of French, Austiran, and Russian Security Policing, 1750-1990
Chapter 11 Poland between East and West: Law, Order, and Political Policing in the Kingdom of Poland, 1815-1914
Chapter 12 Terror in Pravda1917-1939: All the News that was Fit to Print
Chapter 13 Modern Times: the Soviet Union and the Interwar Conjuncture
Chapter 14 Persistence of the Ethic of Soviet Socialism in Late Twentieth Century Russia
Part 15 The Contemporary Scene: Politics and Intellectuals
Chapter 16 Russia, Europe, and "Western Civilization"
Chapter 17 A Critique of the Concept of Globalization
Chapter 18 Scenes from the Polish Hell
Chapter 19 Poland, Europe, and Russia
Chapter 20 Foxes into Hedgehogs: Berlin and Tolstoy
Chapter 21 Martin Malia and the Understanding of Russia
A welcome addition to the study of intellectual history. It engages many of the subtle complexities involved in not only understanding Europe's past, but also—and pertinently so—in reflecting upon her future.
— Frances Nethercott, University of St. Andrews; Studies In East European Thought