This volume highlights the diversity and complexity of cultural dialogue
between Russia and Western Europe since the end of the eighteenth
century. Part one contains contributions which focus on how these
cultures have viewed each other. There are chapters on the myth of Dumas
pere in Russia, the Russian travelogues of Henry Lansdell, Konstantin
Leont'ev's views on Great Britain and France, and the Russian
Symbolists' construction of a mythical European past. Authors in the
second part compare the account of the year 1793 in novels by Hugo,
Dickens and Dostoevsky, and the representation of female beauty by Bunin
and Proust. Part three looks at ways in which these different cultures
have influenced each other. Subjects include echoes of French
Impressionism in Soviet painting, John McGahern's rewriting of a Tolstoy
play, and actress Renata Litvinova's reworking of the story of
Marguerite Gauthier from La Dame aux Camelias. The subject of part four
is the actual physical encounters between Russia and Western Europe.
There are contributions on Karamzin's experiences in revolutionary
Alsace, the impression on Russian national consciousness made by
invading French soldiers in 1812, and the experiences of leading French
emigres in inter-war Paris.