Revolution in the Third Rome is a story of conflict between the
liberated mind and the oppressive state in one of the darkest times and
places in modern history. It examines the experience of Russian
intellectuals before and after the creation of the Soviet Union with a
specific focus - their engagement with the classics. Delving into the
work of the poet Osip Mandelstam and the historian Michael Ivanovitch
Rostovtzeff among others, the book demonstrates how the history and
literature of antiquity inspired Russian authors as they sought to
challenge political tyranny in a nation gripped by revolution. With its
study of the impact of the classics upon the political philosophies of
the tsars as well as both Lenin and Stalin, the book demonstrates how
the classics were a battleground between the state and intellectuals in
the search for a Russian national identity. This book is one of the
first to study the classics in the Russian context, offering a unique
perspective on Russian political and intellectual history in a time of
national transformation.