This interdisciplinary conference will look at the scope and nature of Soviet culture disseminated in Britain and significance of cultural relations with the USSR in Britain. It will ask what mechanisms of cultural exchange existed, how Soviet culture was presented to the British public and specialists, and what influence these relations exerted on British writers, creative artists and professionals in fields as diverse as law, music and architecture. It will examine the intersection of this subject with related fields and the methodological challenges associated with approaching literature and culture in a highly politicized context.
The event will be held at the Society for Co-operation in Russian and Soviet Studies, 320 Brixton Road, London SW9 6AB.
The Programme is available to download.
The cost, including refreshments, is £20. Please book via the online store here.
This event is sponsored by BASEES
Sunday, April 27, 2014
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
Reading Group: Simon Dixon on the Russian Orthodox Church and Anglicanism in the Nineteenth Century, 2 May
Professor Simon Dixon, Sir Bernard Pares Chair of Russian History at UCL SSEES, will be leading our next reading group, which will focus on the relationship between the Russian Orthodox Church and Anglicanism. The session will take place on 2 May from 5.30pm-7.30pm at Pushkin House, Bloomsbury (www.pushkinhouse.org). We will be circulating the texts by email soon.
Outline
It is generally supposed that, before the era of W.J. Birkbeck, relations between Anglicans and the Russian Orthodox Church were the preserve of eccentrics on both sides: maximalists such as William Palmer of Magdalen predictably ran into a brick wall; no leading figures were involved. I hope to suggest a rather different picture by highlighting the role of two leading Russian laymen: Count Aleksandr Tolstoi, chief procurator of the Holy Synod after the Crimean War, and his anglophile friend, Count Evfimii Putiatin, who combined an expertise in the latest naval technology with ultra-Orthodox piety. Though eccentrics are certainly to be found (the convert Stephen Hatherly was one), by concentrating on the period 1840 to 1870 we might throw light on a wider set of concerns, focused partly on hostility to Roman Catholicism and partly on the tensions between pan-Slavism and pan-Orthodoxy.
Biography
Born in Lancashire, where he learned Russian at Bolton School, Simon Dixon graduated in History from Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, where he held a Junior Research Fellowship after studying for a PhD at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies. Having spent nine years lecturing at the University of Glasgow, he was Professor of Modern History at the University of Leeds from 1999 to 2008 before moving to the Sir Bernard Pares Chair of Russian History at UCL SSEES.
The Anglo-Russian Research Network organises termly reading groups for those interested in the interactions between British and Russian culture and politics in the period c.1880-1950. These are informal events with plenty of discussion and wine. Anyone who would like to is very welcome to come along with us for dinner at a local restaurant--it would be helpful to know in advance if you're planning to come to dinner so that we have some idea of numbers. Please contact Matt Taunton or Rebecca Beasley if you would like to attend.
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