Abstract: |
As the most representative Russian cultural phenomenon of the 1920s, Eurasianism occurred almost simultaneously with Soviet literature and was reflected in Soviet literature, and it can even be said that
there was a certain "stream of Eurasianism" in Soviet literature. Even though Eurasianism receded from
the scene in the 1930s, it remained as a kind of subconscious, subnarrative, and subtext in Soviet literature until it was revived at the end of Soviet literature, and began a new round of interaction and dialogue with post-Soviet literature afterwards. |