Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-29T19:37:56.106Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Soviet Indologists and the Institute of Oriental Studies: Works on Contemporary India in the Soviet Union

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2011

Get access

Abstract

In this article the author studies the main trends in the evolution of modern Soviet Indology in the context of developments in Soviet Oriental studies and examines the extent to which both these were conditioned in turn by shifts in Soviet ideology. The development of Soviet Indology is further examined within the context of the organizational growth of the Institute of Oriental Studies (IVAN) and the evolving expertise of Soviet Indologists on contemporary India (along with a study of patterns in the academic training of these scholars). The author thus investigates both the intellectual and organizational bases contributing to the growth of Soviet Indology in an integrated and interconnected manner.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 1983

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

List of References

Alayev, L. B., and Vapha, A. K. 1968. “Indology (History, Economy and Culture).” In Fifty Years of Soviet Orient Studies (Brief Reviews), 1917–1967, ed. by Gafurov, B. G. and Gankovskii, Yu. V.. Moscow: Nauka.Google Scholar
D'iakov, A. M., and Reisner, I. M. 1956. “Rol' Gandi v natsional'noosvoboditel'noi bor'be narodov Indii” [Gandhi's role in the national liberation struggle of the peoples of India]. Sovetskoe Vostokovedenie, no. 5. Translated in Thought (New Delhi), March 23, March 30, April 6, 1957, under the title, “Gandhi in Russia's New Mirror.”Google Scholar
Donaldson, Robert H. 1974. Soviet Policy Towards India: Ideology and Strategy. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eran, Oded. 1979. Mezhdunarodniki: An Assessment of Professional Expertise in the Making of Soviet Foreign Policy. Tel Aviv: Turtledove Publishing.Google Scholar
Gafurov, B. G. 1970. “150 Let Sovetskogo Vostokovedeniia” [150 years of Soviet Oriental studies], AAS, November, p. 7.Google Scholar
Hough, Jerry. 1980. “The Evolution of the Soviet World View.” World Politics, July, pp. 509530.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Imam, Zafar. 1975. Ideology and Reality in Soviet Policy in Asia. New Delhi: Kalyani Publications.Google Scholar
Imam, Zafar. 1977. Soviet View of India 1957–1975. New Delhi: Kalyani Publishers. (A collection of review articles on India, 1957–1975, published in the annual yearbooks of IMEMO.)Google Scholar
Kemp, P. M. 1958. Bharat-Rus: An Introduction to Indo-Russian Contacts from Medieval Times to the October Revolution. New Delhi: Indo-Soviet Cultural Society.Google Scholar
Kotovskii, G. G. 1974. “Soviet Indology: Ways and Stages of Development.” In Soviet Studies of India, Soviet Land Booklets. New Delhi.Google Scholar
Kuznetsova, N. A., and Kulagina, L. M. 1970. Iz Istorii Sovetskogo Vostokovedeniia, 1917–1967 [The History of Soviet Oriental Studies, 1917–1967). Moscow.Google Scholar
Laqueur, Walter L. 1956. “The Shifting Line in Soviet Orientalogy [sic].” Problems of Communism, no. 2 (March-April): 21.Google Scholar
Malakhovskii, K. 1976. “Sovetskoe Vostokovedenie mezhdu XXIV i XXV S'ezdami KPSS” [Soviet Oriental studies in the period between the 24th and 25th Congress of the CPSU]. AAS, February, pp. 81–10.Google Scholar
Nikiforov, V., et al. 1974. “Problems of Soviet Oriental and African Studies.” Kommunist, no. 9 (June): 119–24. (See Joint Publication Research Service, no. 62594, July 29, 1974, pp. 160–68.)Google Scholar
Remnek, Richard. 1975. Soviet Policy Towards India: The Role of Soviet Scholars in the Formulation of Soviet Foreign Policy. New Delhi: Oxford and IBH.Google Scholar
Ruble, Blair. 1978. Soviet Research Institute Projects: Interim Report. Prepared with the assistance of Eleanor Sutter for the International Communication Agency, Office of Research, Washington, D.C., Research Report R-31–78, December 6.Google Scholar
Sahai, Nisha. 1980. “Soviet Specialists on South Asia.” International Studies (New Delhi) 19, no. 1 (January–March): 89108.Google Scholar
Solodovnikov, V. G. 1976. “Sovetskaia Afrikanistika mezhdu XXIV i XXV S'ezdami KPSS” [Soviet African studies in the period between the 24th and 25th Congress of the CPSU]. NAA, no. 2: 819.Google Scholar
Tolstov, S. P. 1950. “For Advanced Soviet Oriental Studies.” Kultura i Zhizri, August 11. In CDSP 1950, 2, no. 33: 4.Google Scholar
Valkenier, Elizabeth K. 1968. “Recent Trends in Soviet Research on Developing Countries.” World Politics, no. 20 (July): 644–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Valkenier, Elizabeth K. 1979. “The USSR, the Third World and the Global Economy.” Problems of Communism, July–August, pp. 2532.Google Scholar
Zhukov, E. M. 1956. “Gandhi's Role in History.” New Times, February.Google Scholar