Abstract
The approach to Russian sexuality exemplified by Eliot Borenstein’s recent keynote conference address, ‘Perverting Slavic Studies: A Love Story’ is examined and placed into the overall context of some common myths and clichés that seem to circulate in Russian sex studies outside Russia Each of the three parts of the study addresses a familiar set piece about sexuality in Russian culture and literature: Rozanov as an anti-Semitic sadist, as discussed by Laura Engelstein; Viktor Erofeev as an arch-enemy of academic feminists, as framed in the collection Eros and Pornography in Russian Culture; and finally Borenstein’s broad approach and his ‘Russian pornography as an idea’. In a brief summary, some of the most conspicuous problems of the burgeoning Russian sex studies ‘industry’ in the USA are formulated as it struggles to come to grips with its topic.
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Alexei Lalo
Alexei Lalo earned his Kandidat nauk degree (2002) in Philology (US Literature) from the Gorki Institute of World Literature at the Russian Academy of Sciences (Moscow) and his PhD (2010) in Comparative Literature from the University of Texas, Austin. He has worked as assistant professor at the European Humanities University (EHU) in Minsk and as a Rockefeller Fellow at the University of California, Santa Cruz. He is currently research administrator at the Melikian Center at Arizona State University. He has published on the history of Russian and US literature and culture, including the recent monograph Libertinage in Russian Culture and Literature: A Bio-History of Sexualities at the Threshold of Modernity (Brill, 2011).
Correspondence to Alexei Lalo. E-mail: [email protected].