Milestones and Russian intellectual history
Studies in East European Thought 62 (1) (2010)
| Abstract | Milestones was a manifesto of rightwing, anti-revolutionary liberalism, according to which the political events of 1905 should have officially concluded the intelligentsia’s battle against autocracy and inaugurated the intelligentsia’s cooperation with Russia’s “historical rulers” to turn the country into an economically and culturally strong “state of law.” All the Milestones ’ authors agreed that Russia’s intellectual history was not identical with the traditions of the radical intelligentsia, and that there was need for a new intellectual canon focused on religious thought and efforts to define the Russian national identity. | |||||||||
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Balázs Trencsényi (2010). Writing the Nation and Reframing Early Modern Intellectual History in Hungary. Studies in East European Thought 62 (2).
N. G. O. Pereira (1979). The Nineteenth-Century Russian Intelligentsia and the Future of Russia. Studies in East European Thought 19 (4).
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Serguei AlexOushakine (2007). Vitality Rediscovered: Theorizing Post-Soviet Ethnicity in Russian Social Sciences. Studies in East European Thought 59 (3).
Dmitry Shlapentokh (2007). Dugin Eurasianism: A Window on the Minds of the Russian Elite or an Intellectual Ploy? Studies in East European Thought 59 (3):215 - 236.
Marina Peunova (2008). From Dissidents to Collaborators: The Resurgence and Demise of the Russian Critical Intelligentsia Since 1985. Studies in East European Thought 60 (3):231 - 250.
Andrzej Walicki (1987). Legal Philosophies of Russian Liberalism. Oxford University Press.
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