1st Edition
Siberian Exile and the Invention of Revolutionary Russia, 1825–1917 Exiles, Émigrés and the International Reception of Russian Radicalism
Introduction 1. Siberian exile and Russian radical culture, 1825-1873 2. ‘A Nihilist Kurort’: Siberia in the Victorian imagination, c. 1830-1890 3. The Siberian agitation, 1890-1895 4. ‘Apostles of the gospel of reform’: Prison, exile and the limits of revolutionary subjectivity, 1905-1917 Conclusion
Biography
Ben Phillips is a Lecturer in Russian in the Department of Modern Languages and Cultures at the University of Exeter
' … situates the literary and the transnational as constitutive elements of political activism … A richly detailed account interweaving stories of people, places, and narratives, while emphasizing the role of global interactions and imaginaries in moulding revolutionary culture … Specialists on the writers, activists, and organizations that populate this book may find previously unfamiliar connections and interactions across the extensive chronologies and geographies which Phillips surveys. - Lara Green in Modern Language Review






