1st Edition

Women & Gender in Central and Eastern Europe, Russia, and Eurasia: A Comprehensive Bibliography A Comprehensive Bibliography

2091 Pages
by Routledge

This is the first comprehensive, multidisciplinary, and multilingual bibliography on "Women and Gender in East Central Europe and the Balkans (Vol. 1)" and "The Lands of the Former Soviet Union (Vol. 2)" over the past millennium. The coverage encompasses the relevant territories of the Russian, Hapsburg, and Ottoman empires, Germany and Greece, and the Jewish and Roma diasporas. Topics range from... Read more

Preface; Introduction to Volume I Irina Livezean; Introduction to Volume I Irina Livezean; Introduction to Volume II Mary Zirin and Christine D. Worobe; Abbreviations (Vol. I); Abbreviations (Vol. II); GENERAL BACKGROUN; Bibliography and Reference; Web Site; Periodical; Collected Essays and Anthologie; Individual Books, Articles, and These; STATELESS DIASPORA NATIONALITIES; Gypsy/Roma Diaspor; Bibliography and Referenc; Web Site; Periodical; History and Socieyt; Literature and the Art; Autobiograpyh; Jewish Diaspor; Bibliography and Reference Web Site; Periodical; History and Societ; Literature and the Art; Autobiograph; SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE; Albani; Bibliography and Reference; Web Site; Periodical; History and Society; Literature and the Art; Autobiography; Bulgari; Bibliography and Reference; Web Site; Periodical; History and Society; Literature and the Art; Autobiography; Greec; Bibliography and Reference; Web Site; Periodical; History and Society; Literature and the Art; Autobiography; Ottoman Turkey;Bibliography and Reference; Web Site; Periodical; History and Society; Literature and the Art; Autobiography and Travel; Romani; Bibliography and Reference; Web Site; Periodical; History and Society; Literature and the Art; Autobiography; Yugoslavia, Its Antecedents and Successors; Bosnia-Herzegovin; Bibliography and Referenc; Web Site; Periodical; History and Societ; Literature and the Art; Autobiograph; Documentaries, TV Programs, and Videorecording; Croati; Bibliography and Reference; Web Site; Periodical; History and Society; Literature and the Art; Autobiography; Macedoni; Bibliography and Reference; Web Site; Periodical; History and Society; Literature and the Art; Autobiography; Serbia and Montenegr; Bibliography and Reference; Web Site; Periodical; History and Society; Literature and the Art; Autobiography; Sloveni; Bibliography and Reference; Web Site; Periodical; History and Society; Literature and the Art; Autobiography; Yugoslavia; Bibliography and Reference; Web Site; Periodical; History and Society; Literature and the Art; Autobiography.

Biography

Christine D. Worobec is Presidential Research Professor in the Department of History at Northern IllinoisUniversity. She is the author of Peasant Russia: Family and Community in the Post-Emancipation Period(Princeton University Press, 1991; Northern Illinois University Press, 1995) and Possessed: Women, Witchesand Demons in Imperial Russia (Northern Illinois University Press, 2001) as well as co-editor with BarbaraEvans Clements and Barbara Alpem Engel of Women in Russia: Accommodation, Resistance, Transformation(University of California Press, 1991). She is currently working on a short biography of St. Serafim of Sarovand a history of Orthodox pilgrimages in Russia and Ukraine from the eighteenth century to the present.,Mary Zirin is an independent researcher-translator based in Altadena, CA. For the past thirty years shehas devoted major effort to research on and recovery of the lives and works of nineteenth-century Russianwomen writers. Together with Marina Ledkovsky and Charlotte Rosenthal, she served as a contributor toand editor of the Dictionary o f Russian Women Writers (Greenwood Press, 1994); the dictionary containsarticles on 448 authors from all periods of Russian history.,Christine D. Worobec is Presidential Research Professor in the Department of History at Northern IllinoisUniversity. She is the author of Peasant Russia: Family and Community in the Post-Emancipation Period(Princeton University Press, 1991; Northern Illinois University Press, 1995) and Possessed: Women, Witchesand Demons in Imperial Russia (Northern Illinois University Press, 2001) as well as co-editor with BarbaraEvans Clements and Barbara Alpem Engel of Women in Russia: Accommodation, Resistance, Transformation(University of California Press, 1991). She is currently working on a short biography of St. Serafim of Sarovand a history of Orthodox pilgrimages in Russia and Ukraine from the eighteenth century to the present.,Mary Zirin is an independent researcher-translator based in Altadena, CA. For the past thirty years shehas devoted major effort to research on and recovery of the lives and works of nineteenth-century Russianwomen writers. Together with Marina Ledkovsky and Charlotte Rosenthal, she served as a contributor toand editor of the Dictionary o f Russian Women Writers (Greenwood Press, 1994); the dictionary containsarticles on 448 authors from all periods of Russian history.