Acknowledgements
1. Introduction: The Intelligentsia in Russia: Shifting Terms, History, and Scholarly Approaches
Olga Partan and Sibelan Forrester
Part One: Pre-Nineteenth Century
2. An Essay on the Origins of the Intelligentsia: Catherine the Great and Her Relations with Novikov and Radishchev
Marcus Levitt
Part Two: The Nineteenth Century
3. The Intelligentsia in the Russian Press of the 1860s and 1870s
Konstantine Klioutchkine
4. Dostoevsky and the Intelligentsia
Alexander Burry
5. Accommodating the Intelligentsia: Tolstoyan Nonresistance as a Response to the Russian Intelligentsia
Michael Denner
6. The Russian Intelligentsia and Western Intellectuals: Through the Prism of Chekhov
Svetlana Evdokimova
Part Three: The Twentieth Century
7. Merchants vs. the Intelligentsia: The Case of the Moscow Art Theatre
Maria Ignatieva
8. A Bridgeable Schism? The Russian Silver Age Intelligentsia Holds Its Ground, Spruces up, and Proselytizes
Irene Masing-Delic
9. Landmarks (Vekhi)—the Russian Intelligentsia at a Crossroads
Olga Sobolev
10. The End of the Classical Intelligentsia?
Gary Hamburg
11. The Russian Knights Templar: A Secret Mystical Order and Its Legacy
Olga Partan
12. Remaking the Literary Intelligentsia (1930s-1940s)
Carol Any
13. The Soviet Intelligentsia and Thaw-Era Science Fiction
Sibelan Forrester
14. The Intelligentsia and the “Thick Journal”
Marina Adamovich
15. A Romantic Ironist or a New Intellectual? Tatyana Tolstaya and Her Critique of the Russian Intelligentsia
Alexandra Smith
Part Four: The Twenty-First Century
16. Ulitskaya and Pelevin on the Shestidesiatniki
Sofya Khagi
17. The Intelligentsia and the Intellectuals: A History of Two Terms in Russian Philosophical Discourse
Alyssa DeBlasio
18. Legacy and Denial: Russian Intelligentsia on Screen and Online in the First Two Decades of the Twenty-First Century
Tatiana Smorodinska