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Teaching Russia and Eastern Europe Through Literature and Film

Teaching Russia and Eastern Europe Through Literature and Film. Two Topics Today. Two Topics Today. Content—Some suggestions for what to teach Movies, internet sources, shorter works that aren’t as scary as War and Peace. Two Topics Today. Content—Some suggestions for what to teach

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Teaching Russia and Eastern Europe Through Literature and Film

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  1. Teaching Russia and Eastern Europe Through Literature and Film

  2. Two Topics Today

  3. Two Topics Today • Content—Some suggestions for what to teach • Movies, internet sources, shorter works that aren’t as scary as War and Peace

  4. Two Topics Today • Content—Some suggestions for what to teach • Movies, internet sources, shorter works that aren’t as scary as War and Peace • Concept—Discussions of how to teach • Approaching the “other” Europe • Dealing with sensitive issues

  5. Russia—Not so Different as We’d Like to Think

  6. Russia—Not so Different as We’d Like to Think • Multi-ethnic empire with colonized native population

  7. Russia—Not so Different as We’d Like to Think • Multi-ethnic empire with colonized native population • Former slave/serf state

  8. Russia—Not so Different as We’d Like to Think • Multi-ethnic empire with colonized native population • Former slave/serf state • The “Woman” question

  9. Russia—Not so Different as We’d Like to Think • Multi-ethnic empire with colonized native population • Former slave/serf state • The “Woman” question • Constructed according to experimental political ideology

  10. But just different enough

  11. How can we make American students understand this? • Compare with familiar Western books/films • Compare with students’ own lives • Point out issues students may not understand as wrong—e.g., hate speech, sexual exploitation—and explain problems in non-accusatory language • Other???

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