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213:. In the same year its circulation was about 150,000 copies a month. The magazine continued publishing controversial articles and stories about various aspects of Soviet and Russian history despite the fact that its editor-in-chief,
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has been published in Moscow since
January 1925. It was supposed to be modelled on the popular pre-
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is considered a leading
Russian literary magazine and has a liberal orientation.
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239:. It also published fiction and poetry by previously banned writers, such as
176:("God's World"), which was published from 1892 to 1906, and its follow-up,
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position. In
November 1962 the magazine became famous for publishing
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Ludmilla B. Turkevich (Autumn 1958). "Soviet
Literary Periodicals".
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Novy Mir: A Case Study in the
Politics of Literature, 1952-1958.
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mainly published prose that approved of the general line of the
180:("Contemporary World"), which was published from 1906 to 1917.
231:, the magazine practised increasingly bold criticism of the
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In the 2000s, the following authors have been published:
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Cambridge, England: Cambridge
University Press, 2009.
221:, resigned in February 1970. With the appointment of
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346:, Arkadi Babchenko, Dmitry Bak, Vladimir Berezin,
637:Literary magazines published in the Soviet Union
514:. New York: Praeger. p. 138. Archived from
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423:. Taylor & Francis. 2004. p. 3566.
420:The Europa World Year: Kazakhstan - Zimbabwe
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195:changed its political stance, leaning to a
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540:Журнальный зал (Zhurnal'nyj zal) Magazines
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508:Klaus Mehnert; Maurice Rosenbaum (1962).
30:For a Russian American publication, see
607:1925 establishments in the Soviet Union
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350:, Dmitry Danilov, Vladimir Gandelsman,
627:Literary magazines published in Russia
206:One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
632:Monthly magazines published in Russia
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382:, Valery Pustovaya, Sergey Soloukh,
209:, a novella about a prisoner of the
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529:"Summary": In Novy Mir, 2010 (4).
566:Novy Mir. A Selection 1925-1967.
302:Alexander Tvardovsky (1958–1970)
153:) is a Russian-language monthly
284:Vladimir Shcherbina (1941–1946)
299:Konstantin Simonov (1954–1957)
219:significant political pressure
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617:Magazines published in Moscow
612:Magazines established in 1925
225:in 1986, at the beginning of
386:, Oleg Yermakov and others.
305:Valery Kosolapov (1970–1974)
235:, including figures such as
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622:Russian-language magazines
396:List of literary magazines
326:Andrei Vasilevsky (1998- )
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32:Novy Mir (1911 newspaper)
511:Soviet Man and His World
354:, Alexander Ilichevsky,
27:Russian literary journal
554:Edith Rogovin Frankel,
261:Ivan Skvortsov-Stepanov
201:Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
150:[ˈnovɨjˈmʲir]
144:'New World',
358:, Leonid Kostyukov,
331:Contemporary authors
294:Alexander Tvardovsky
215:Alexander Tvardovsky
191:In the early 1960s,
267:Vyacheslav Polonsky
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374:, Anatoly Nayman,
356:Alexander Karasyov
309:Sergei Narovchatov
288:Konstantin Simonov
203:'s groundbreaking
172:literary magazine
642:Hijacked journals
430:978-1-85743-255-8
364:Alexander Kushner
237:Mikhail Gorbachev
233:Soviet government
155:literary magazine
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83:January 1925
66:Literary magazine
57:Andrei Vasilevsky
16:(Redirected from
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562:Michael Glenny
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518:on 2016-04-08.
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434:. Retrieved
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384:Andrei Volos
348:Dmitry Bykov
344:Maxim Amelin
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273:Ivan Gronsky
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323:(1986–1998)
317:(1981–1986)
311:(1974–1981)
296:(1950–1954)
290:(1946–1950)
281:(1937–1941)
275:(1931–1937)
269:(1926–1931)
263:(1925–1926)
228:perestroika
80:First issue
601:Categories
62:Categories
497:Book site
486:Мир божий
402:Footnotes
217:, facing
197:dissident
174:Mir Bozhy
135:Новый мир
72:Frequency
18:Novyi Mir
568:London:
473:40097964
390:See also
337:Novy Mir
193:Novy Mir
182:Novy Mir
166:Novy Mir
126:Novy Mir
115:Language
105:Based in
39:Novy Mir
572:, 1972.
436:27 July
161:History
142:
131:Russian
118:Russian
95:Country
87:1925-01
85: (
75:Monthly
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427:
335:Today
170:Soviet
109:Moscow
99:Russia
54:Editor
469:JSTOR
211:Gulag
438:2016
425:ISBN
247:and
146:IPA:
140:lit.
461:doi
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410:^
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