Acknowledgements
Introduction
Galin Tihanov, Rossen Djagalov, Anne Lounsbery
1. World Literature in the Soviet Union: Infrastructure and Ideological Horizons
Galin Tihanov
2. On the Worldliness of Russian Literature
Anne Lounsbery
3. Armenian Literature as World Literature: Phases of Shaping it in the Pre-Soviet and Stalinist Contexts
Susanne Frank
4. The Roles of "Form" and "Content" in World Literature as Discussed by Viktor Shklovsky in His Writings of the Immediately Post-Revolutionary Years
Katerina Clark
5. “The Treasure Trove of World Literature”: Shaping the Concept of World Literature in Post-Revolutionary Russia
Maria Khotimsky
6. The Birth of New out of Old: Translation in Early Soviet History
Sergey Tyulenev
7. International Literature: A Multi-Language Soviet Journal as a Model of “World Literature” of the Mid-1930s USSR
Elena Ostrovskaya, Elena Zemskova, Evgeniia Belskaia, Georgii Korotkov
8. Translating China into International Literature: Stalin-Era World Literature Beyond the West
Edward Tyerman
9. World Literature and Ideology: The Case of Socialist Realism
Schamma Schahadat
10. Premature Postcolonialists: The Afro-Asian Writers’ Association (1958–1991) and Its Literary Field
Rossen Djagalov
11. Can “Worldliness” Be Inscribed into the Literary Text?: Russian Diasporic Writing in the Context of World Literature
Maria Rubins
Contributors
Index