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  1.  28
    Preface: Hegel in Russia.Ilya Kliger & David Bakhurst - 2013 - Studies in East European Thought 65 (3-4):155-157.
  2.  21
    Hegel’s political philosophy and the social imaginary of early Russian realism.Ilya Kliger - 2013 - Studies in East European Thought 65 (3-4):189-199.
    This article considers aspects of the social imaginary underlying early Russian realist thought and narrative by exploring two canonical novels from the 1840s, Ivan Gončarov’s Obyknovennaja istorija and Aleksandr Gercen’s Kto vinovat?, in light of Vissarion Belinskij’s activist reception of Hegel’s political philosophy. The Russian texts are read symptomatically against their western counterparts as illustrating the intriguing transformations that dominant European models of narrative and sociality undergo as they migrate to Russia.
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  3. Tragic nationalism in Nietzsche and Dostoevsky.Ilya Kliger - 2016 - In Jeff Love & Jeffrey Metzger (eds.), Nietzsche and Dostoevsky: philosophy, morality, tragedy. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press.
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  4.  16
    The Narrative Shape of Truth: Veridiction in Modern European Literature.Ilya Kliger - 2011 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    "Draws on philosophical and novelistic texts from the Western European and Russian canons to explore a crucial moment in the epistemological history of narrative and present a nonreductive way of conjugating the histories of philosophy and ...
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