Works Cited

Blok, Aleksandr. “The Twelve.”Translated by John Stallworthy, 1918.
Buckler, Julie. Mapping St. Petersburg: Imperial Text and Cityshape. Princeton: Princeton  University Press, 2004.
Dostoevsky, F M. “Celebration of Pushkin’s Birth.”June 1880, Moscow
“Entrance into Volkovskoe Cemetery’s Literatorskie Mostki.”1919. JPEG file.
Gorbacheva, Olga. July 2018.
“Grave of Aleksandr Blok.”1960. JPEG file.
Greenman, Sydney. “Grave of Aleksandr Blok.”2018. JPEG file.
Greenman, Sydney. “Literatorskie Mostki.”2018. JPEG file.
Knausgaard, Karl. “A Literary Road Trip into the Heart of Russia.” The New York Times Magazine, 14 Feb. 2018, nyti.ms/2Btgrz6.
“Literatorskie Mostki.”Literatorskie Mostki, litmostki.ru/.
Merridale, Catherine. Night of Stone: Death and Memory in Twentieth Century Russia. Penguin, 2002.
Noordenbos, Boris. Post-Soviet Literature and the Search for a Russian Identity. Palgrave Macmillan, 2018.
Rylkova, Galina. “Literature and Revolution: The Case of Aleksandr Blok.” Kritika:  Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History, vol. 3 no. 4, (2002): 611-630. Project MUSE, doi:10.1353/kri.2002.0061
Song, Ji Eun. Petersburg Museology: Visions of Modern Collectors in 20th Century Russian Culture. Order No. 3432769 The University of Chicago, 2010 Ann Arbor. 15  Apr. 2018 .
 Tumarkin, Nina. The Living & the Dead: the Rise and Fall of the Cult of World War II in Russia. Basic Books, 1994.
Veronkova, Liudmilla. July 2018.