x !
Archived Curricula Guide 2011–2012
Curricula Guide is archieved. Please refer to current Curricula Guides
RSTA3 Culture and Literature 3–5 ECTS
Organised by
Russian Studies
Preceding studies
Basic knowledge of Russian culture and literature.

Learning outcomes

After the course the students have gained good knowledge of Russian culture and literature through thematically emphasized courses.

Contents

Special courses on Russian culture and literature (literature, popular culture, philosophy, religion etc.) or essay or book examination.

Teaching language

English

Modes of study

Evaluation and evaluation criteria

Numeric 1-5.
Numerical grading scale 1-5 or Pass/Fail -grading based on overall performance.

Study materials

Book examination:

Students can choose to take the book examination for 3 or 5 ECTS. All the books in the module have to be examined at once, i.e. it is not possible to complete the module book by book.

3 ECTS:

Brown, D.: Last Years of Soviet Russian Literature. Prose Fiction 1975-1991. 1993.
AND
Stites, Richard
: Revolutionary Dreams. Utopian Vision and Experimental Life in the Russian Revolution. 1998.
AND
Barker, A.: Consuming Russia. Popular Culture, Sex and Society since Gorbachev. 1999.

5 ECTS:

Stites, Richard: Revolutionary Dreams. Utopian Vision and Experimental Life in the Russian Revolution. 1998.
AND
Barker, A.
: Consuming Russia. Popular Culture, Sex and Society since Gorbachev. 1999.
AND
Epstein, M.N.: Russian Postmodernism: New Perspectives on Post-Soviet Culture. 1999.

Essay:

The student can choose to complete the module by writing an essay on a topic chosen together with the teacher in charge of the module. At least seven academic sources need to be used in the essay. Possible sources include for example the following books:

Hellberg-Hirn, Elena: Soil and Soul. The Symbolic World of Russianness. Ashgate 1998.
Hellberg-Hirn, Elena:
Imperial imprints post-Soviet St. Petersburg. 2003.
Figes, Orlando
: Natasha's Dance. 2002.
Kelly, Catriona and Shepherd, David (eds.): Constructing Culture in the Age of Revolution, 1881-1940. Oxford University Press 1998.
Kelly, Catriona and Shepherd, David (eds.): Russian Cultural Studies. An Introduction. Oxford University Press 1998.
Epstein, M.N.
: After the Future: The Paradoxes of Postmodernism and Contemporary Russian Culture. University of Massachusetts Press 1997.
Epstein, M.N.: Russian Postmodernism: New Perspectives on Post-Soviet Culture. 1999.
Stites, Richard: Revolutionary Dreams. Utopian Vision and Experimental Life in the Russian Revolution. 1998.
Condee, Nancy: Soviet Hieroglyphics. Visual Culture in Late Twentieth-Century Russia. 1995.
Nakhimovsky, A.D., Nakhimovsky, A.S. (Eds.): The Semiotics of Russian Cultural History: Essays by Jurii M. Lotman, Lidiia Ia. Ginzburg, Boris Uspenskii.
Clark, K.: The Soviet Novel: History as Ritual. 1981.
Fitzpatrick, S. : The Cultural Front: Power and Culture in Revolutionary Russia. 1992.
Brown, D. : Last Years of Soviet Russian Literature. Prose Fiction 1975-1991. 1993.
Barker, A.: Consuming Russia. popular Culture, sex and Society since Gorbachev. 1999.

 

Belongs to following study modules

School of Language, Translation and Literary Studies
Subject Studies (Russian Studies)
School of Language, Translation and Literary Studies
School of Communication, Media and Theatre
School of Management
2011–2012
Teaching
Archived Teaching Schedule. Please refer to current Teaching Shedule.
School of Language, Translation and Literary Studies