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Understanding Russia

A Cultural History

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Understanding Russia

By: Lynne Ann Hartnett, The Great Courses
Narrated by: Lynne Ann Hartnett
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About this listen

From the earliest recorded history of the Russian state, its people have sought to define their place in the world. And while many of us look to make sense of Russia through its political history, in many ways a real grasp of this awe-inspiring country comes from looking closely at its cultural achievements.

The 24 lectures of Understanding Russia: A Cultural History survey hundreds of years of Russian culture, from the world of Ivan the Terrible to the dawn of the Soviet Union to the post-war tensions of Putin’s Russia. Blending history with cultural studies, they are designed to bring you closer than ever before to the Russian people - not just the authoritarian rulers like Peter the Great, the Romanovs, and Stalin but the everyday men and women who sought their own meaning in the poetry of Pushkin, the comfort of early folk tales, the faith of medieval iconography, the avant-garde films of Eisenstein, and more.

You’ll discover surprising insights into centuries of cultural history, including peasant superstitions, such as avoiding whistling indoors, and the culture of queuing for goods and services that defined everyday life for ordinary Soviets. You’ll also spend time in the company of novelists, painters, poets, filmmakers, impresarios, composers, revolutionaries, and intellectuals who shaped Russia in myriad ways, including The Five, a group of composers who created a distinctly national sound based in part on Russian folk music; and Sergei Eisenstein, the filmmaker whose Battleship Potemkin revolutionized the language of cinema.

In a time when the eyes of the Western world are constantly drawn to Russia, it’s amazing how little we really know about its culture. These lectures will help you finally understand that complex, thrilling, and undeniably fascinating spirit.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.

©2018 The Great Courses (P)2018 The Teaching Company, LLC
Europe Russia Soviet Union Scary War
All stars
Most relevant
The narrator approaches Russia's dense,
tragic history with an American
enthusiasm that might be perfect for a travelog, but feels strangely out of place amid revolutions, gulags, and existential despair. Relentless upbeat American enthusiasm feels curiously ill-suited to the material. Russia's cultural and historical landscape is heavy with tragedy and moral seriousness; hearing it delivered in the tone of an instructional video on how to assemble patio furniture produces what I sincerely hope is an unintended dissonance, but one I just couldn't live with. The narrator sounds
less like a guide through Russian history and
more like Prince Myshkin from Dostoevsky's "The Idiot" enthusiastically hosting a documentary about suffering. Although the History is all there, it just all sounds slightly absurd.

Intense Russian History delivered by an ebullient American narrator.

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it's adequate for a sweeping although somewhat superficial, gushing and over romantic picture of a vast subject.
Not improved by an annoying high pitched narrator who sounds like an infant's teacher.

Good for middle school Geo History
Lacking for those wanting a more detailed window into the Russian psyche and philosophy..

Orlando Figues is better

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The cultural history provided in this course provides a different framework for understanding Russia history that I found compelling. The music at first was off putting for me - but by about 3rd lecture I realised how wholly appropriate it was. Makes ‘Russia’ much less of an enigma than the previous, although very good, audio books and courses on Russia that I have listened to.

Less of an enigma

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Absolutely fascinating lectures explaining Russian history and culture.
Extremely pertinent in the current political situation.

Fascinating

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This is annoying - trying too hard to make things sound dramatic. Very disappointing. There are many good books on Russian history and the content (so far) doesn’t stand up to those either. It’s pretty superficial.

Over produced and annoying

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