Americans Experience Russia analyzes how American scholars,
journalists, and artists envisioned, experienced, and interpreted
Russia/the Soviet Union over the last century. While many histories
of diplomatic, economic, and intellectual connections between the
United States and the Soviet Union can be found, none has yet
examined how Americans' encounters with Russian/Soviet society
shaped their representations of a Russian/Soviet 'other' and its
relationship with an American 'west.'
The essays in this volume critically engage with postcolonial
theories which posit that a self-valorizing, unmediated west
dictated the colonial encounter, repressing native voices that must
be recovered. Unlike western imperialists and their colonial
subjects, Americans and Russians long co-existed in a tense parity,
regarding each other as other-than-European equals, sometime
cultural role models, temporary allies, and political antagonists.
In examining the fiction, film, journalism, treatises, and
histories Americans produced out of their 'Russian experience, '
the contributors to this volume closely analyze these texts, locate
them in their sociopolitical context, and gauge how their
producers' profession, politics, gender, class, and interaction
with native Russian interpreters conditioned their authored
responses to Russian/Soviet reality. The volume also explores the
blurred boundaries between national identities and representations
of self/other after the Soviet Union's fall.
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