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- Gleb Tsipursky, Europe-Asia Studies
"This volume includes twelve essays and is a model example of how new approaches and methodologies can revitalize a subject as well covered as American fascination with Russia. Most of the contributors are historians, but the two editors-historian Choi Chatterjee and literary scholar Beth Holmgren-have chosen experts in both Russian and American history, and there is a clear focus on cutting-edge methodologies within cultural history and gender studies, such as an emphasis on personal experiences and emotions, which makes this volume a fascinating read."
- Rósa Magnúsdóttir, The Russian Review
"Seeking to explore the way Americans understood and experienced Russia from the late nineteenth century to the present day...The editors have done a fine job adding some answers and raising further questions about the often enigmatic and paradoxical relationship between the United States and Russia."
- Konstantin Avramov, Canadian Slavonic Papers
"This collection of articles and papers provides new insights into American experiences in Soviet Russia and beyond...it enlarges our perception of the variety of contacts and involvements that Americans have pursued in Russia since the 1917 Revolution."
-Norman E. Saul, Slavic Review
"[This] collection is an important contribution to the study of the cultural dimension of U.S.-Russian relations..."
-Ivan Kurilla, Journal of Cold War Studies