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                <text>Activist Artemy Troitsky gave a recent lecture at the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies. Bridging together the fields of history, visual arts, and journalism,  the attached lecture is an excellent example of the kind of contemporary interdisciplinary work that the center does.  Like most lectures at the Center, this one too begins with a discussion of Soviet origins and history. Not only was the lecture offered on-site, but also is entirely online and is accessible to anyone with a computer. The work that Harvard does in Russian studies is available to the American public at large.  </text>
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                <text>"Lecture: The New Russian Protest Movement and Cultural Policy." Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies. Given, February 21, 2013. Accessed May 5, 2014. &lt;http://daviscenter.fas.harvard.edu/digital-resources/lecture-new-russian-protest-movement-and-cultural-policy&gt;</text>
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                <text>Offered this year for the first time, Societies and the World 52: The Phoenix &amp; The Firebird is an interdisciplinary approach to understanding Russia and its place in the contemporary global climate. Taught by a member of the Slavic Languages and Literature Department and a member of the History Department, the course bridges the gap in understanding Russianness and Russian studies expressed by both Posin and Engerman. It is not enough to understand Russia as simply a site of rich literature and culture, or as a site of historical and political importance, but rather, both.  The inclusion of this  course in the General Education program indicates that on some level Harvard believes that it is not only content that matters when addressing studies of Russia, but also, methodology.</text>
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                <text>After Harvard Economics Professor Shleifer reached a settlement with the US. Government because of his illegal stock-buying activities in post-Soviet Russia, President Summers was accused of extreme favoritism towards his well-known friend. In January of 2006, an article in the "Institutional Investor" suggested that Summers forewarned and shielded Shleifer and his wife to protect them from disciplinary action from the University. Harvard picked up the tab for Shleifer, and the University agreed to pay $26.5 million to the US Government to settle the lawsuit. Shleifer was allowed to return to his faculty position, inciting outrage among faculty and students of Harvard. On February 21, 2006, Summers announced his intention to step down as President of the University in response to the outrage. This situation reflects the complexity of the interplay between Economics, University, and Russia in the world. </text>
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                <text>Graham, David A. "How a Small Team of Democrats Defeated Larry Summers—and Obama." The Atlantic. Atlantic Media Company, published  September 15, 2013. Accessed May 6, 2014. &lt;http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2013/09/how-a-small-team-of-democrats-defeated-larry-summers-and-obama/279688/&gt;</text>
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The Smithsonian welcomes you to make fair use of the Content as defined by copyright law.Information on United States copyright fair use law is available from the United States Copyright Office: http://www.copyright.gov/fls/fl102.html. Please note that you are responsible for determining whether your use is fair and for responding to any claims that may arise from your use.&#13;
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                <text>Nicholas II : the life and reign of Russia's last monarch; Dukhobors in Georgia : a study of the issue of land ownership and inter-ethnic relations in Ninotsminda rayon</text>
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                <text>Hill, Jayme Rae. From the Brothel to the Block: Politics and Prostitution in Baltimore During the Progressive Era. Ann Arbor: ProQuest, 2008. Web. 25 Apr. 2014. Koman, Rita G. Ellis Island: The Immigrants Experience. OAH Magazine of History 13.4 (1999): 31-37. Print. Murray-Seegert, Carola. The Mechanics of Emigration: One Familys Story. JewishGen.org. Geneaology. N. p., Aug. 2012. The New York Times. A Veritable Pest Ship. The New York Times 10 Sept. 1892. Web. 22 Apr. 2014.</text>
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                <text>The covers of American labor magazine paint a vivid picture of an evolving the leftist perspective on the Soviet Union.  The 1919 cover of a pamphlet by Abner Woodruff depicts a single worker, symbolizing the mass of the proletariat, looming over a city. He is in the peak of fitness: young, muscular and handsome. In 1919, spread of communism was in its early stages, full of hope and vitality. In the 1929 cover of Labor Defender, a headline (slightly cut off in this image) reads "The Soviet Union drives ahead!" Again, the figure of the worker looms above us. But she is driving, rather than climbing. The symbol of the "advancing worker" remained powerful but evolved over the course of  a decade. The contrast between the climb depicted in 1919 and the sedentary posture of 1929 is particularly striking. </text>
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                <text>http://bolshoi-theatr.ru/photo.php (an unofficial website about the Bolshoi Theatre)</text>
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                <text>Note: does not appear to have rights information on the website since it is unofficial. Since the website (from which the main image was set) is in all Russian, however, there is a possibility that the rights were embedded and I missed it even though I translated the page.</text>
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                <text>The Bolshoi Theater, one of the most storied and dramatic artistic sites in modern Russian history, encapsulates several different aspects of Russian history and culture.  Founded by Catherine the Great in 1776 to help promote the ballet and the arts in Russia, the Bolshoi Theater has become centrally important to not only specific events and instances in Russian history, but also in defining the changing concept of “Russianness” over time.  The sociopolitical history and material changes of the Bolshoi Theater offer a juxtaposing, unique, and ever-changing lens through which to understand the domestic and international takes on “Russianness.”</text>
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                <text>http://www.ellisisland.org/search/passRecord.asp?MID=06159238210873810528&amp;LNM=RAS&amp;PLNM=RAS&amp;last_kind=1&amp;town_kind=0&amp;ship_kind=0&amp;TOWN=null&amp;SHIP=null&amp;RF=3223&amp;ETHS=40&amp;pID=604767060091, http://ukrainetrek.com/odessa-city, http://faculty.history.umd.edu/BCooperman/NewCity/Pogrom1905.html, http://www.economist.com/node/3490716</text>
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