Emigranci i jankesi: o amerykańskich historykach Rosji
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | Polish |
Veröffentlicht: |
Lublin
Wydawnictwo Katolickiego Uniwersytetu Lubelskiego
2007
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Zsfassung in engl. Sprache u.d.T.: The émigrés and their students: American historians of Russia |
Beschreibung: | 404, [1] s. 24 cm |
ISBN: | 9788373635470 |
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adam_text | Spis treści
Wstęp
...................................................... 9
Część pierwsza: Rozwój historycznych
Russian Studies
w Stanach Zjednoczonych
Rozdział I: Praojcowie i ojcowie. Amerykańskie
Russian Studies
na przełomie
XIX
і
XX
wieku i w okresie międzywojennym
............... 21
1.
Preludium.
Titanic
a Russian Studies..............................
21
2.
Praojcowie
................................................. 26
3.
Ojcowie
................................................... 43
3.1.
Emigranci i
Russian
Vogue..................................
43
3.2.
Świat akademicki
......................................... 48
Rozdział
II:
Wojenny przełom i powojenna hossa: czasopisma, ośrodki,
ludzie
............................................. 65
1.
Czasopisma
................................................ 67
2.
Ośrodki badawcze. Miejsca i ludzie
.............................. 92
3.
Refleksja nad dziejami Cerkwi i rosyjską myślą religijną
.............. 164
4.
Polacy i Ukraińcy
a Russian Studies..............................
174
4.1.
Troublemakers.
Kilka słów o polskim wkładzie w
Russian Studies.....
174
4.2.
„Czy Ukraina ma historię?
.................................195
5.
Trup w każdej szafie?
-
czyli o tym, czy
Harvard
czeka
lustraqa
.......203
Część druga: Kilka sylwetek
Rozdział
I: Michael Karpovich
i
George Vernadsky
....................215
Rozdział
II:
Dwaj uczeni z Charbinu:
Nicholas Riasanovsky
i
Michael Cherniavsky
.................................273
1.
Żywoty równoległe
..........................................273
7
Spis
tresei
2.
Prace historyczne
Cherniavsky ego
i
Riasanovsky ego
................ 284
3.
Kilka kluczowych problemów dziejów Rusi i Rosji w ujęciu
Cherniavsky ego
i
Riasanovsky ego
.............................. 294
3.1.
Problem początków Rusi i teoria normańska. Kultura
Rusi Kijowskiej
.......................................... 294
3.2.
Rola Mongołów. Europa czy Eurazja?
......................... 297
3.3.
Kim był Iwan Groźny
..................................... 300
3.4.
Piotr Wielki. Dwie perspektywy
............................. 305
Rozdział III: O dwóch uczniach
Karpovicha
-
Martinié Malii
i
Richardzie Pipesie
.................................. 311
1.
Ludzie
.................................................... 311
2.
Książki
.................................................... 320
Zakończenie
.................................................. 345
Bibliografia
................................................... 351
Indeks osób
.................................................. 387
Summary
.................................................. 403
The Emigrés
arta
their Students:
American Historians of Russia
Summary
The present work is concerned with the intriguing phenomenon of Russian
history as viewed from an American perspective. This problem has both a univer¬
sal aspect (when treated as an example of a different distant culture knowing
another), and a particular aspect: the large role played by Russian emigrants in
the formation of Russian Studies in America. It is true that the first appearances of
interest in Russia were stirring by the end of the 19th century, under me influence
of Russian culture s great achievements, especially its literature, but its music as
well. Yet the beginnings of Russian Studies at the academic level occurred in the
internar
period of the
1920s.
Two universities proved to be pioneers in this respect-
Boston s Harvard Univ. and California s
U.C.
Berkeley. Some dozen other centres
of learning began research in the field of interest to us at this time, with varying
degrees of success. By this time an important role was being played by Russian
emigres, some of whom worked at universities (Michael Karpovich at Harvard,
George Vernadsky at Yale), while others became involved in developing the cul¬
tural life of the Russian diaspora, modest at that time, in the U.S. A key role was
played here by Boris Bakhmeteff, who came to America as the ambassador of the
Provisional Government, and remained there permanently once the Bolsheviks
seized power.
A huge change in direction took place in Russian Studies in the U.S. following
the German invasion of the Soviet Union in
1941.
Russia was now becoming
America s wartime ally, with many public groups and governmental departments
concentrating much more attention on it. Also, a large group of new Russian
émigrés
was fleeing German-occupied countries in Europe for the United States.
Earlier centers of great importance to Russian emigration, such as Harbin in China
and Prague in Czechoslovakia, were losing their status by the end of the
1930s.
And
after the capitulation of France to the Germans, yet a third city, Paris, lost its
significance for
émigrés.
It was precisely during the period of the Second World
403
Summary
War that America became the leading centre in the world for Russian Studies. A few
important periodicals ( Russian Review and Slavic Review ) would already
come into existence in the early
1940s,
and after the war two major centers devoted
exclusively to Russian problems would be created (The Russian Institute at Colum¬
bia in New York City, and The Russian Research Center at Harvard). While Russia
may have turned from ally to foe at that time, interest in Russian affairs not only
did not lessen, it increased substantially. Centers of Russian research sprang up
throughout the United States. Although they concentrated primarily on the econ¬
omy, foreign and internal policies, as well as social transformations taking place, in
the contemporary Soviet Union, studies of more historical interest were also under¬
taken. And although those last-mentioned were not a priority, more than once their
results would be of permanent value and deserving of recognition. The same
cannot be said, unfortunately, of the works produced by thousands of American
sovietologists, though even here notable exceptions could be found among them.
At the beginning native-born Americans, not always well acquainted with pro¬
blems peculiar to Russian studies, were in charge of Russian research centers.
However, the intellectual contribution of the Russian, Ukrainian and Polish emi¬
gres soon proved decisive, to take, for example, Richard Pipes and Adam
Ulam
as
leading scholars. Soon afterwards new voices of those native-born American spe¬
cialists educated by Karpovich, Vernadsky and other older
émigrés
were heard in
the public arena. And from among this group there appeared in the
1960s
the so-
called „revisionist current , which was to dominate Russian studies in America for
the next several decades. The historians of this loosely defined orientation pointed
to the need for research into the social and economic histories of both Russia and
the Soviet Union. Unfortunately, they often treated Soviet reality uncritically, and
were even apologists for the Soviet Union in some cases. Yet the most permanent
achievements of American historiography are not the works of the revisionists, but
rather of such figures as George Vernadsky, Michael Karpovich, Martin
Malia,
Nicholas Riasanovsky, Marc Raeff, Richard Pipes, the last four scholars being
students of Karpovich.
This study is divided into two parts. In the first I outline the development of
Russian Studies in America from the end of the 19th century to the present, con¬
centrating on the decades immediately following the Second World War. Some
academic centers and periodicals are discussed at length, as are the achievements
of several American scholars. I have treated separately the contributions of Polish
and Ukrainian scholars to Russian Studies, researches into the history of Orthodox
Christian thought and the Orthodox Church, as well as the problem of FBI infiltra¬
tion into American universities, especially the centers of Russian studies. In the
second part I concentrate on adding details to the silhouettes of six prominent
American historians of Russia. I group them in pairs according to ancient tradi¬
tion. Michael Karpovich and George Vernadsky constitute the first pair. Although
Karpovich wrote comparatively little, he educated an entire generation of Amer-
404
Summary
ican scholars. While less valued as a pedagogue, Vernadsky created the first corpus
of essential works dedicated to the history of mediaeval and early modern Russia.
The second pair is formed by Nicholas Riasanovsky and Michael Cherniavsky,
both born in Harbin and both arrivals to the U.S. in the late
1930.
Cherniavsky,
a true
enfante
terrible among American historians, died early but managed to pub¬
lish a few brilliant works. Riasanovsky was a professor at Berkeley for many years
and the author of the best-known English-language synthesis of Russian past:
A History of Russia. Martin
Malia
and Richard Pipes make up the third pair.
Mal¬
ia,
another professor at Berkeley, concentrated his studies on the history of ideas in
the 19th century, publishing two important books near the end of his life. The first
was not only devoted to the history of the Soviet Empire, but, importantly for us, is
decidedly polemical with the works of many of Western sovietologists. The second
work, the brilliantly written Russia under Western Eyes, traces the ways in which the
West has constructed its view of Russia through the centuries. While Pipes,
a longtime professor at Harvard, has written substantially more than
Malia,
his
greatest fame rests on his books devoted to the history of tsarist Russia (Russia
under the Old Regime), the revolution (The Russian Revolution), and the first years the
Bolsheviks held power (Russia under the Bolshevik Regime).
A comprehensive bibliography constitutes a separate section of the present
book.
Translated by Mark
Klus
Bayerische
Staatsbibliothek
München
|
adam_txt |
Spis treści
Wstęp
. 9
Część pierwsza: Rozwój historycznych
Russian Studies
w Stanach Zjednoczonych
Rozdział I: Praojcowie i ojcowie. Amerykańskie
Russian Studies
na przełomie
XIX
і
XX
wieku i w okresie międzywojennym
. 21
1.
Preludium.
Titanic
a Russian Studies.
21
2.
Praojcowie
. 26
3.
Ojcowie
. 43
3.1.
Emigranci i
Russian
Vogue.
43
3.2.
Świat akademicki
. 48
Rozdział
II:
Wojenny przełom i powojenna hossa: czasopisma, ośrodki,
ludzie
. 65
1.
Czasopisma
. 67
2.
Ośrodki badawcze. Miejsca i ludzie
. 92
3.
Refleksja nad dziejami Cerkwi i rosyjską myślą religijną
. 164
4.
Polacy i Ukraińcy
a Russian Studies.
174
4.1.
Troublemakers.
Kilka słów o polskim wkładzie w
Russian Studies.
174
4.2.
„Czy Ukraina ma historię?"
.195
5.
Trup w każdej szafie?
-
czyli o tym, czy
Harvard
czeka
lustraqa
.203
Część druga: Kilka sylwetek
Rozdział
I: Michael Karpovich
i
George Vernadsky
.215
Rozdział
II:
Dwaj uczeni z Charbinu:
Nicholas Riasanovsky
i
Michael Cherniavsky
.273
1.
Żywoty równoległe
.273
7
Spis
tresei
2.
Prace historyczne
Cherniavsky'ego
i
Riasanovsky'ego
. 284
3.
Kilka kluczowych problemów dziejów Rusi i Rosji w ujęciu
Cherniavsky'ego
i
Riasanovsky'ego
. 294
3.1.
Problem początków Rusi i teoria normańska. Kultura
Rusi Kijowskiej
. 294
3.2.
Rola Mongołów. Europa czy Eurazja?
. 297
3.3.
Kim był Iwan Groźny
. 300
3.4.
Piotr Wielki. Dwie perspektywy
. 305
Rozdział III: O dwóch uczniach
Karpovicha
-
Martinié Malii
i
Richardzie Pipesie
. 311
1.
Ludzie
. 311
2.
Książki
. 320
Zakończenie
. 345
Bibliografia
. 351
Indeks osób
. 387
Summary
. 403
The Emigrés
arta
their Students:
American Historians of Russia
Summary
The present work is concerned with the intriguing phenomenon of Russian
history as viewed from an American perspective. This problem has both a univer¬
sal aspect (when treated as an example of a different distant culture knowing
another), and a particular aspect: the large role played by Russian emigrants in
the formation of Russian Studies in America. It is true that the first appearances of
interest in Russia were stirring by the end of the 19th century, under me influence
of Russian culture's great achievements, especially its literature, but its music as
well. Yet the beginnings of Russian Studies at the academic level occurred in the
internar
period of the
1920s.
Two universities proved to be pioneers in this respect-
Boston's Harvard Univ. and California's
U.C.
Berkeley. Some dozen other centres
of learning began research in the field of interest to us at this time, with varying
degrees of success. By this time an important role was being played by Russian
emigres, some of whom worked at universities (Michael Karpovich at Harvard,
George Vernadsky at Yale), while others became involved in developing the cul¬
tural life of the Russian diaspora, modest at that time, in the U.S. A key role was
played here by Boris Bakhmeteff, who came to America as the ambassador of the
Provisional Government, and remained there permanently once the Bolsheviks
seized power.
A huge change in direction took place in Russian Studies in the U.S. following
the German invasion of the Soviet Union in
1941.
Russia was now becoming
America's wartime ally, with many public groups and governmental departments
concentrating much more attention on it. Also, a large group of new Russian
émigrés
was fleeing German-occupied countries in Europe for the United States.
Earlier centers of great importance to Russian emigration, such as Harbin in China
and Prague in Czechoslovakia, were losing their status by the end of the
1930s.
And
after the capitulation of France to the Germans, yet a third city, Paris, lost its
significance for
émigrés.
It was precisely during the period of the Second World
403
Summary
War that America became the leading centre in the world for Russian Studies. A few
important periodicals ("Russian Review" and "Slavic Review") would already
come into existence in the early
1940s,
and after the war two major centers devoted
exclusively to Russian problems would be created (The Russian Institute at Colum¬
bia in New York City, and The Russian Research Center at Harvard). While Russia
may have turned from ally to foe at that time, interest in Russian affairs not only
did not lessen, it increased substantially. Centers of Russian research sprang up
throughout the United States. Although they concentrated primarily on the econ¬
omy, foreign and internal policies, as well as social transformations taking place, in
the contemporary Soviet Union, studies of more historical interest were also under¬
taken. And although those last-mentioned were not a priority, more than once their
results would be of permanent value and deserving of recognition. The same
cannot be said, unfortunately, of the works produced by thousands of American
sovietologists, though even here notable exceptions could be found among them.
At the beginning native-born Americans, not always well acquainted with pro¬
blems peculiar to Russian studies, were in charge of Russian research centers.
However, the intellectual contribution of the Russian, Ukrainian and Polish emi¬
gres soon proved decisive, to take, for example, Richard Pipes and Adam
Ulam
as
leading scholars. Soon afterwards new voices of those native-born American spe¬
cialists educated by Karpovich, Vernadsky and other older
émigrés
were heard in
the public arena. And from among this group there appeared in the
1960s
the so-
called „revisionist current", which was to dominate Russian studies in America for
the next several decades. The historians of this loosely defined orientation pointed
to the need for research into the social and economic histories of both Russia and
the Soviet Union. Unfortunately, they often treated Soviet reality uncritically, and
were even apologists for the Soviet Union in some cases. Yet the most permanent
achievements of American historiography are not the works of the revisionists, but
rather of such figures as George Vernadsky, Michael Karpovich, Martin
Malia,
Nicholas Riasanovsky, Marc Raeff, Richard Pipes, the last four scholars being
students of Karpovich.
This study is divided into two parts. In the first I outline the development of
Russian Studies in America from the end of the 19th century to the present, con¬
centrating on the decades immediately following the Second World War. Some
academic centers and periodicals are discussed at length, as are the achievements
of several American scholars. I have treated separately the contributions of Polish
and Ukrainian scholars to Russian Studies, researches into the history of Orthodox
Christian thought and the Orthodox Church, as well as the problem of FBI infiltra¬
tion into American universities, especially the centers of Russian studies. In the
second part I concentrate on adding details to the silhouettes of six prominent
American historians of Russia. I group them in pairs according to ancient tradi¬
tion. Michael Karpovich and George Vernadsky constitute the first pair. Although
Karpovich wrote comparatively little, he educated an entire generation of Amer-
404
Summary
ican scholars. While less valued as a pedagogue, Vernadsky created the first corpus
of essential works dedicated to the history of mediaeval and early modern Russia.
The second pair is formed by Nicholas Riasanovsky and Michael Cherniavsky,
both born in Harbin and both arrivals to the U.S. in the late
1930.
Cherniavsky,
a true
enfante
terrible among American historians, died early but managed to pub¬
lish a few brilliant works. Riasanovsky was a professor at Berkeley for many years
and the author of the best-known English-language synthesis of Russian past:
A History of Russia. Martin
Malia
and Richard Pipes make up the third pair.
Mal¬
ia,
another professor at Berkeley, concentrated his studies on the history of ideas in
the 19th century, publishing two important books near the end of his life. The first
was not only devoted to the history of the Soviet Empire, but, importantly for us, is
decidedly polemical with the works of many of Western sovietologists. The second
work, the brilliantly written Russia under Western Eyes, traces the ways in which the
West has constructed its view of Russia through the centuries. While Pipes,
a longtime professor at Harvard, has written substantially more than
Malia,
his
greatest fame rests on his books devoted to the history of tsarist Russia (Russia
under the Old Regime), the revolution (The Russian Revolution), and the first years the
Bolsheviks held power (Russia under the Bolshevik Regime).
A comprehensive bibliography constitutes a separate section of the present
book.
Translated by Mark
Klus
Bayerische
Staatsbibliothek
München |
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geographic | Rosja / historiografia jhpk Rosja / historia / bibliografia jhpk Rosja - historia - bibliografia jhpk Rosja - historiografia jhpk USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd |
geographic_facet | Rosja / historiografia Rosja / historia / bibliografia Rosja - historia - bibliografia Rosja - historiografia USA |
id | DE-604.BV023124208 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T19:52:45Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:11:36Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9788373635470 |
language | Polish |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016326640 |
oclc_num | 169976479 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-12 |
physical | 404, [1] s. 24 cm |
publishDate | 2007 |
publishDateSearch | 2007 |
publishDateSort | 2007 |
publisher | Wydawnictwo Katolickiego Uniwersytetu Lubelskiego |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Filipowicz, Mirosław 1963- Verfasser (DE-588)173650201 aut Emigranci i jankesi o amerykańskich historykach Rosji Mirosław Filipowicz Lublin Wydawnictwo Katolickiego Uniwersytetu Lubelskiego 2007 404, [1] s. 24 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Zsfassung in engl. Sprache u.d.T.: The émigrés and their students: American historians of Russia Bibliogr. s. 351-386. Indeks Geschichte gnd rswk-swf Historycy / Stany Zjednoczone jhpk Historycy - Stany Zjednoczone jhpk Auswanderer (DE-588)4131725-7 gnd rswk-swf Geschichtswissenschaft (DE-588)4020535-6 gnd rswk-swf Russland Motiv (DE-588)4130559-0 gnd rswk-swf Russen (DE-588)4051034-7 gnd rswk-swf Rosja / historiografia jhpk Rosja / historia / bibliografia jhpk Rosja - historia - bibliografia jhpk Rosja - historiografia jhpk USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd rswk-swf USA (DE-588)4078704-7 g Geschichtswissenschaft (DE-588)4020535-6 s Russland Motiv (DE-588)4130559-0 s Russen (DE-588)4051034-7 s Auswanderer (DE-588)4131725-7 s Geschichte z DE-604 Digitalisierung BSBMuenchen application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016326640&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Filipowicz, Mirosław 1963- Emigranci i jankesi o amerykańskich historykach Rosji Bibliogr. s. 351-386. Indeks Historycy / Stany Zjednoczone jhpk Historycy - Stany Zjednoczone jhpk Auswanderer (DE-588)4131725-7 gnd Geschichtswissenschaft (DE-588)4020535-6 gnd Russland Motiv (DE-588)4130559-0 gnd Russen (DE-588)4051034-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4131725-7 (DE-588)4020535-6 (DE-588)4130559-0 (DE-588)4051034-7 (DE-588)4078704-7 |
title | Emigranci i jankesi o amerykańskich historykach Rosji |
title_auth | Emigranci i jankesi o amerykańskich historykach Rosji |
title_exact_search | Emigranci i jankesi o amerykańskich historykach Rosji |
title_exact_search_txtP | Emigranci i jankesi o amerykańskich historykach Rosji |
title_full | Emigranci i jankesi o amerykańskich historykach Rosji Mirosław Filipowicz |
title_fullStr | Emigranci i jankesi o amerykańskich historykach Rosji Mirosław Filipowicz |
title_full_unstemmed | Emigranci i jankesi o amerykańskich historykach Rosji Mirosław Filipowicz |
title_short | Emigranci i jankesi |
title_sort | emigranci i jankesi o amerykanskich historykach rosji |
title_sub | o amerykańskich historykach Rosji |
topic | Historycy / Stany Zjednoczone jhpk Historycy - Stany Zjednoczone jhpk Auswanderer (DE-588)4131725-7 gnd Geschichtswissenschaft (DE-588)4020535-6 gnd Russland Motiv (DE-588)4130559-0 gnd Russen (DE-588)4051034-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Historycy / Stany Zjednoczone Historycy - Stany Zjednoczone Auswanderer Geschichtswissenschaft Russland Motiv Russen Rosja / historiografia Rosja / historia / bibliografia Rosja - historia - bibliografia Rosja - historiografia USA |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016326640&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT filipowiczmirosław emigranciijankesioamerykanskichhistorykachrosji |