Foreword Christopher Ely
Introduction: Russian Radicals Revisited Andrew M. Drozd
Chapter 1: Nikolai Dobrolyubov’s Social and Political Theory Revisited Alexey Vdovin
Chapter 2: Rakhmetov and Reading in Chernyshevsky’s What Is to Be Done? Andrew M. Drozd
Chapter 3: New People as Others: Race and Empire in Nikolai Chernyshevsky’s What Is to Be Done? Valeria Sobol
Chapter 4: Who Can Claim the “Heritage of Serfdom?”: On the Racial Representation of Radical Heroes in Russian Literature of the 1860s–1870s Lindsay Ceballos
Chapter 5: Dmitry Pisarev: Nihilism, Darwinism, and Man’s Place in Nature Brendan G. Mooney
Chapter 6: The History of a Plot: Nikolai Uspensky and the Representation of the Narod in Russian Fiction Kirill Zubkov
Chapter 7: “The Expansion of Western Civilization”: Aleksandr Pypin on Pan-Slavism and Czech Nationalism Anastasia Williams
Chapter 8: The Napoleonic Myth in Saltykov-Shchedrin’s The History of a Town and The Pompadours Charles L. Byrd
Chapter 9: Peacocks and Crows: The Populist Discourse on Progress and Individual Happiness in the Works of Ivan Kushchevsky and Andrei Osipovich-Novodvorsky Victoria Thorstensson
Chapter 10: Reconstructing the Radical Mind: Bakunin’s Texts and Their Anarchist Legacy James Goodwin
About the Contributors