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<title>Natasha's Dance:</title>
<subTitle>A Cultural History Of Russia</subTitle>
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<namePart>Orlando Figes</namePart>
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<publisher>Penguin</publisher>
<dateIssued>2003</dateIssued>
<issuance>monographic</issuance>
<edition>1st ed.</edition>
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<note>As epic and ambitious as his first book &#60;I&#62;A People's Tragedy&#60;/I&#62;, Orlando Figes's &#60;I&#62;Natasha's Dance&#60;/I&#62; is a sweeping panorama of Russian culture over the centuries. It takes its title from a scene in &#60;I&#62;War and Peace&#60;/I&#62; in which the upper-crust Natasha Rostov, visiting her countrified 'Uncle', falls instinctively into the rhythms of a peasant dance. Figes finds in this scene an ideal metaphor for his book's central theme--the perpetual see-sawing between the European cultural ideals of the aristocracy in St Petersburg and an 'authentic' Russianess, usually seen as embodied in the peasantry and the country. The great debate in Russian culture has been between those who have seen it as a naturally 'Western' society and those who have seen its destiny as lying in the East and its vast hinterland.&#60;p&#62;Around this supporting central theme, Figes has constructed an imposing edifice. The range of his knowledge and the sureness with which he deploys it are very impressive. Whether writing about the music of Stravinsky and Shostakovich or the novels of Tolstoy and Dostoevsky, the buildings of St Petersburg or the poetry of Akhmatova, he has something new and original to say. The great cultural achievements of Russia often seem, for those who have only a little knowledge of Russian history, like giant mountains suddenly rising out of featureless terrain. Figes's excellent book gives them a context and fills out many of the details of the surrounding landscape.--&#60;I&#62;Nick Rennison&#60;/I&#62;</note>
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