![]() ![]() Voprosy istorii estestvoznanii i tekniki. “Russkaia statistika pervoi poloviny XIX v. ![]() “Defining the Russian People: Konstantin Arsen'ev and Russian Statistics before 1861.” History of Science 45, no. “Educating Peasant Girls for Motherhood: Religion and Primary Education in Mid-Nineteenth Century Russia.” The Russian Review 66, no. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2008. The Carl Beck Papers in Russian and East European Studies, no. The Russian Provincial Newspaper and Its Public, 1788-1864. “Creating a Creole Estate in early Nineteenth-Century Russian America.” Cahiers du Monde Russe 51, no. “Bringing the Provinces into Focus: Subnational Spaces in the Recent Historiography of Russia.” Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 12, no. “Russian America in Russian and American Historiography.” Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 14, no. “'A Class of People Admitted to the Better Ranks': The First Generation of Creoles in Russian America, 1810s-1820s.” Ethnohistory 60, 3 (Summer 2013): 363-384. “Making Empty Provinces: Eighteenth-Century Enlightenment Regionalism in Russian Provincial Journals.” REGION: Regional Studies of Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia 4, 1 (Winter 2015): 7-29. “Sweet Development: The Sugar Beet Industry, Agricultural Societies and Agrarian Transformations in the Russian Empire, 1818-1913.” Cahiers du Monde Russe 57, vol. “Russian Society at a Provincial Scale: Ideas of Society in Provincial Newspapers,” Canadian-American Slavic Studies 50 (2016): 439-464. 3: 28-42.Ĭo-authored with Vyacheslav Shevtsov. Translated into Russian as: “Sibirskie pis’ma Dzhordzha Kennan-starshego, 1866-1867 gg.,” Sibirskie istoricheskie issledovaniia 2016, no. Washington, DC: The Kennan Institute, 2016. The Siberian Letters of George Kennan the Elder, 1866-1867. Edith Clowes, Gisela Erbsloh and Ani Kokobobo (London: Routledge, 2018), 15-43. “The Six Waves of Russian Regionalism in European Context, 1830-2000,” in Russia’s Regional Identities: The Power of the Provinces, ed. ![]() Listen to the interview with the New Books Network about the book: Watch my book talk at NYU and read the story about it: Imagining Russian Regions: Civil Society and Subnational Identity in Nineteenth-Century Russia, Leiden: Brill, 2018. She is former chair of the Columbia University Seminar on Slavic History and Culture and has received a Fulbright for study in Russia, as well as grants and awards from the American Historical Association, IREX, Fulbright-Hays, the University of Illinois and CUNY. She has served as the history department representative to Faculty Senate and on various campus-wide committees. Professor Smith-Peter joined the CSI faculty in 2001 and teaches classes on Russian history, European intellectual and political history, and world civilization, among others. She has published articles on topics related to civil society and regional identity in such journals as The Russian Review, Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History and Russian History/ Histoire Russe. Beginning with a study of identity in the provinces of European (or central) Russia, she has branched out to investigate the regional identity of the Russian North and Siberia as well. Susan Smith-Peter works on Russian history beyond the two capitals of Moscow and St. ![]()
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