The Truth of Authority: Ideology and Communication in the Soviet Union. By Thomas F. Remington. Series in Russian and East European Studies, no. 9. Pittsburgh, Penn.: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1988. xv, 255 pp. Tables. $29.95, cloth. $12.95, paper.

Slavic Review ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 470-471
Author(s):  
Louise Shelley

William Chase et al., editors. A Research Guide. Volume 1, Guide to Collections/Putevoditel'. Tom 1, Kratkii spravochnik fondov. (The Russian Archive Series.) Moscow: Blagovest, for the Center for the Study of Russia and the Soviet Union and the Russian State Archive of the Economy; distributed by the Russian Publications Project, Center for Russian and East European Studies, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa. 1994. Pp. xx, 679. $33.00, Genrich M. Deych. A Research Guide to Materials on the History of Russian Jewry (Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries) in Selected Archives of the Former Soviet Union/Putevoditel'; Arkhivnye dokumenty po istorii evreev v Rossii v XEX-nachale XX vv. Edited and foreword by Benjamin Nathans. (Russian Archive Series.) Moscow: Blagovest, for the Center for the Study of Russia and the Soviet Union; distributed by the Russian Publications Project, Center for Russian and East European Studies, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa. n.d. Pp. xi, 149. $33.00, Gregory L. Freeze and S. V. Mironenko, editors. A Research Guide. Volume 1, Collections of the State Archive of the Russian Federation on the History of Russia in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries/Putevoditel': Tom 1, Fondy Gosudarstvennogo arkhiva Rossiiskoi Federatsii po istorii Rossii XEX-nachala XX vv. (Russian Archive Series.) Moscow: Blagovest, for the State Archive of the Russian Federation and the Center for the Study of Russia and the Soviet Union; distributed by the Russian Publications Project, Center for Russian and East European Studies, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa. 1994. Pp. xviii, 394. $33.00, J. Arch Getty and V. P. Kozlov, editors. A Research Guide/Kratkii putevoditel': Fondy i kollektsii, sobrannye Tsentral'nym partiinym arkhivom. Assisted by O. V. Naumov, V. O. Urazov, and N. P. Iakovlev. (The Russian Archive Series.) Moscow: Blagov


Slavic Review ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 554-559
Author(s):  
Alfred Erich Senn

For almost forty years the private library of Nikolai Aleksandrovich Rubakin, located first in Baugy-sur-Clarens and subsequently in Lausanne, Switzerland, served as a major fund of Russian books in Western Europe, and it attracted many of the great figures of the Russian Revolution. Rubakin in turn welcomed every new reader; his motto, imprinted on his bookplates, declared: “Long live the book, a powerful weapon in the struggle for truth and justice.” Upon his death in 1946 the Soviet Union inherited the collection, variously estimated at 80,000 to 100,000 volumes, and its departure represented a great blow to East European studies in the West.


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