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The European Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies (EBSEES) - 1991-2007

The European Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies (EBSEES) collects books, journal articles, reviews and dissertations from Eastern Europe (former countries of Eastern Bloc) which were published in Belgium, Germany, Finland, France, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Austria and Switzerland from 1991 to 2007. The segment "Literature" and "Culture" of the European Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies contains 18.000 bibliographic entries (from the total asset of 85.000). More information can be found here.

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Your search for Russia, USSR, Russia (Federation) / Literature / Dostoevskij, Fedor M. provides 357 hits
31

Le statut épistémologique du personnage dostoïevskien

Marinov, Vladimir, in: Psychanalyse à l'Université, 16(63), juillet, 1991, p. 83-93
32

Pointing to the Man-God: Efimov as artist-hero in Dostoevskij's «Netočka Nezvanova»

Marullo, Th.G., in: Russian Literature, 30(2), 1991, p. 231-51
33

De verbeelding van de intellectuelen: literatuur en maatschappij van Dostojevski tot Ter Braak

Oudvorst, A.F. van, Amsterdam, Wereldbibliotheek, 1991, 483 p
34

Psychology and theology in The Brothers Karamazov: «Everything is permitted» and the two fictions of contradiction and paradox

Polka, Brayton, in: Literature and Theology, 5, Sept., 1991, p. 253-76
35

Dostojewskijs «Brüder Karamasow»: Einführung und Kommentar

Reber, Natalie, München, Kyrill und Method Verl., 1991, 234 p., ill
36

The idiot: an interpretation

Terras, Victor, Boston, MA, Twayne, 1990, xii+106 p.
37

The Brothers Karamazov and the poetics of memory

Thompson, Diane Oenning, Cambridge, University Press, 1991, [320] p.
38

The genesis of «The Brothers Karamazov». The aesthetics, ideology and psychology of making a text

Belknap, Robert L., Evanston, IL, Northwestern University Press, 1990, x+199 p.
39

Crime and punishment: a mind to murder

Cox, Gerry, Boston, MA, G.K. Hall, 1990, xiii+153 p
40

The idiot

[Dostoevskij] Dostoevsky, Fedor, Oxford, New York, University Press, 1992, xxix+658 p.