Orientalism and Empire. North Caucasus Mountain Peoples and the Georgian Frontier, 1845-1917

(WallPaper) #1
239 Bibliography


  • ed., trans., and Valerii N. Ponaromarev, assistant ed. Imperial Russian
    Foreign Policy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993.
    Rakowska-Harmstone, Teresa. Russia and Nationalism in Central Asia: The Case
    of Tadzhikistan. Baltimore: John Hopkins Press, 1970
    Ram, Harsha. “Prisoners of the Caucasus: Literary Myths and Media
    Representations of the Chechen Conflict.” Working Paper, Berkeley
    Program in Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies, Summer 1999.
    Ramazanov, Kh.Kh., and A. Kh. Ramazonov. Shamil’: Istoricheskii portret.
    Makhachkala, 1990.
    Rayfield, Donald. The Literature of Georgia: A History. Oxford: Clarendon
    Press, 1994.
    Reinke, Nikolai. Gorskie i narodnye sudy Kavkazskago kraia. St Petersburg, 1912.
    Reisner, Oliver. “Die georgische Alphabetisierungsgesellschaft: Schule na-
    tionaler Eliten und Vergemeinschaftung.” Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuro-
    pas 48, no. 1 (2000):66–89.

  • “The Tergdaleulebi: Founders of the Georgian National Identity.” In Ladis-
    laus Löb, István Petrovics, and György E. Szonyi, eds., Forms of Identity:
    Definitions and Changes, 125–37. Szeged, Hungary: Attila József University,
    1994.
    Rhinelander, L. Hamilton. “The Creation of the Caucasian Vicegerency.”
    Slavonic and East European Review 59, no. 1 (January 1981):15–40.

  • Prince Michael Vorontsov: Viceroy to the Tsar. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s
    University Press, 1990.

  • “Russia’s Imperial Policy: The Administration of the Caucasus in the First
    Half of the Nineteenth Century.” Canadian Slavonic Papers 17, nos. 2–3
    (1975):218–35.

  • “Viceroy Vorontsov’s Administration of the Caucasus.” In Ronald Grigor
    Suny, ed., Transcaucasia: Nationalism and Social Change, 87–104. Ann Arbor:
    University of Michigan Press, 1983.
    Riasanovsky, Nicholas V. “Asia through Russian Eyes.” In Wayne S. Vucinich,
    ed., Russia and Asia, 3–29. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1972.

  • Nicholas i and Official Nationality in Russia, 1825–1855. Berkeley: University
    of California Press, 1969.

  • Russia and the West in the Teaching of the Slavophiles. Gloucester, Mass.: Peter
    Smith, 1952, 1965.
    Rieber, Alfred J. “Persistent Factors in Russian Foreign Policy: An Interpreta-
    tive Essay.” In Hugh Ragsdale, ed., trans., and Valerii N. Ponomarev, assis-
    tant ed., Imperial Russian Foreign Policy, 315–59. Cambridge: Cambridge
    University Press, 1993.

  • ed. The Politics of Autocracy: Letters of Alexander ii to Prince A.I. Bariatinskii,
    1857–1864. Paris: Mouton, 1966.

  • “Russian Imperialism: Popular, Emblematic, Ambiguous.” Russian Review
    53, no. 3 (July 1994):331–5.

Free download pdf