“Angliya Rossiya Literaturnie svyazi”, Voprosy Literatury 2 (1989): 167-177 http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/10038824 (institutional access only)
Aronov, Vladimir, ‘Charles Rennie Mackintosh in Moscow at the 1902/3 Exhibition of Art Nouveau Architecture, Arts and Crafts’, Pinakotheke 18-19 (2004): 53-56
Beasley, Rebecca and Philip Ross Bullock, eds. Russia in Britain, 1880-1940: From Melodrama to Modernism (Oxford UP, 2013)
Calder, Robert R., ‘ Slavist as Poet: J.F. Hendry and the Epic of Russia (Some Footnotes from a Personal Memoir)’ in Jack, R.D.S and Tom Hubbard, eds. Scotland in Europe (Brill, 2006): 281-298
Carruthers, Gerard et. al. eds., Beyond Scotland: New Contexts for Twentieth-century Scottish Literature (Rodopi, 2004)
“Charles Snow i Aleksandr Tvardovskiy”, Voprosy Literatury 11 (1990): 249-270 http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/12277367 (institutional access only)
Cooke, Catherine, ‘Fyodor Shekhtel as a creator of the Russian ‘Brand’: ‘The Russian Village’ at the International Exhibition in Glasgow of 1901’, Pinakotheke 18-19 (2004): 44-52
Cross, Anthony, ed., A People Passing Rude: British Responses to Russian Culture (Open Book Publishers, 2012)
Dukes, Paul, ed., The Caledonian Phalanx: Scots in Russia (National Library of Scotland, 1987)
Elistratova, A. “Walter Scott Nash Sovremennik”. Voprosy Literatury 2 (1967): 220-225 http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/12204062 (institutional access only)
Fedosov, Dmitry, The Caledonian Connection: Scotland-Russia Ties: Middle Ages to Early Twentieth Century (University of Aberdeen Centre for Scottish Studies, 1996)
Findlay, Bill, ‘“By Policy a Native Theatre”: Glasgow Unity Theatre and the Significance of Robert Mitchell’s Scottish Adaptation of The Lower Depths’, International Journal of Scottish Theatre 2.1 (June 2001)
Findlay, Bill, ed. Frae Ither Tongues: Essays on Modern Translations Into Scots (Multilingual Matters, 2004)
Findlay, Bill, ed. Scottish People’s Theatre: Plays by Glasgow Unity writers (Association for Scottish Literary Studies, 2008)
Frame, Murray and Mark Cornwall, eds., Scotland and the Slavs: Cultures in Contact, 1500-2000 (Oriental Research Partners, 2001)
Frame, Murray, ‘Dundee and the Russian Revolution’, Slavonica 6.1 (2000): 76-83.
Gallagher, Jock. Scotland’s Global Empire: A Chronicle of Great Scots (Whittles Publishing, 2013)
Henry, Peter, et. al., eds. Scotland and the Slavs: Selected Papers (Astra Press, 1993)
Jack, R.D.S and Tom Hubbard, eds. Scotland in Europe (Brill, 2006)
Jack, R.D.S. ‘Translating Burns: The Bibliography of Scottish Literature in Translation’ in M. Pittock, ed. Robert Burns in Global Culture (Bucknell University Press, 2011): 156-171.
Kagarlitskiy, Yu. ‘Kniga O Stivensone’. Voprosy Literatury 6 (1985): 252-258 http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/10301842 (institutional access only)
Kenefick, William. Red Scotland: The Rise and Fall of the Radical Left, c. 1872-1932. (Edinburgh University Press, 2007)
Kerrigan, Catherine. ‘Underground Men: Dostoevsky in the Work of Hugh MacDiarmid’, The Journal of Narrative Technique 17.1 (Winter 1987): 45-50
Morgan, Edwin, ‘Flying with Tatlin, Clouds in Trousers: A Look at Russian Avant-Gardes’ in Carruthers, Gerard et. al. eds., Beyond Scotland: New Contexts for Twentieth-century Scottish Literature (Rodopi, 2004): 95-110
Peacock, Hardold, Mr. Fairley: The Oldest Banker in Glasgow (Harold Peacock, 2014)
Pitches Jonathan, ed. The Russians in Britain: British Theatre and the Russian Tradition of Actor Training (Routledge, 2012)
Pittock, M., ed. Robert Burns in Global Culture (Bucknell University Press, 2011)
Pittock, M., ed. The Reception of Robert Burns in Europe. Series: The Reception of British and Irish Authors in Europe. (Bloomsbury, 2014)
Pittock, M., ed. The Reception of Sir Walter Scott in Europe. Series: The reception of British and Irish authors in Europe. (Bloomsbury, 2014)
Rafeek, Neil C., Communist Women in Scotland: Red Clydeside from the Russian Revolution to the End of the Soviet Union (i. B. Tauris, 2008)
Reizov, B. “Walter Scott i Nekotoriye voprosy istorii”. Voprosyliteratury 6 (1963): 125-144 http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/11975556 (institutional access only)
Romm, A. “Romantism, Realism i Walter Scott”, Voprosyliteratury 8 (1961): 236-242 http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/12050391 (institutional access only)
“Sredi Zhurnalov i gazet”, Voprosy literatury 1 (1972): 253-256. http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/10440635 (institutional access only)
‘Writing About Shostakovich: Edinburgh International Festival 1962’, DSCH Journal 37 (July 2012): 31-47.
Zaitsev, Slava, Russia-Scotland (Blurb, 2013)
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Bibliography
“Angliya Rossiya Literaturnie svyazi”, Voprosy Literatury 2 (1989): 167-177
http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/10038824 (institutional access only)
Aronov, Vladimir, ‘Charles Rennie Mackintosh in Moscow at the 1902/3 Exhibition of Art Nouveau Architecture, Arts and Crafts’, Pinakotheke 18-19 (2004): 53-56
Beasley, Rebecca and Philip Ross Bullock, eds. Russia in Britain, 1880-1940: From Melodrama to Modernism (Oxford UP, 2013)
Liliya Burganova, “Distribution and Perception of Stevenson’s Works in Pre-Revolutionary Russia,” Philology and Culture, 44.2 (2016): 216-222
Calder, Robert R., ‘ Slavist as Poet: J.F. Hendry and the Epic of Russia (Some Footnotes from a Personal Memoir)’ in Jack, R.D.S and Tom Hubbard, eds. Scotland in Europe (Brill, 2006): 281-298
Carruthers, Gerard et. al. eds., Beyond Scotland: New Contexts for Twentieth-century Scottish Literature (Rodopi, 2004)
“Charles Snow i Aleksandr Tvardovskiy”, Voprosy Literatury 11 (1990): 249-270
http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/12277367 (institutional access only)
Cooke, Catherine, ‘Fyodor Shekhtel as a creator of the Russian ‘Brand’: ‘The Russian Village’ at the International Exhibition in Glasgow of 1901’, Pinakotheke 18-19 (2004): 44-52
Cross, Anthony, ed., A People Passing Rude: British Responses to Russian Culture (Open Book Publishers, 2012)
Cross, Anthony, ‘Scotland at the Russian Front in the First World War: Robert Scotland Liddell, War Correspondent and Photographer, Red Cross Worker and Russian Officer’, Slavonica 21.1-2 (2016): 16-36.
Dukes, Paul, ed., The Caledonian Phalanx: Scots in Russia (National Library of Scotland, 1987)
Elistratova, A. “Walter Scott Nash Sovremennik”. Voprosy Literatury 2 (1967): 220-225
http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/12204062 (institutional access only)
Fedosov, Dmitry, The Caledonian Connection: Scotland-Russia Ties: Middle Ages to Early Twentieth Century (University of Aberdeen Centre for Scottish Studies, 1996)
Findlay, Bill, ‘“By Policy a Native Theatre”: Glasgow Unity Theatre and the Significance of Robert Mitchell’s Scottish Adaptation of The Lower Depths’, International Journal of Scottish Theatre 2.1 (June 2001)
Findlay, Bill, ed. Frae Ither Tongues: Essays on Modern Translations Into Scots (Multilingual Matters, 2004)
Findlay, Bill, ed. Scottish People’s Theatre: Plays by Glasgow Unity writers (Association for Scottish Literary Studies, 2008)
Frame, Murray and Mark Cornwall, eds., Scotland and the Slavs: Cultures in Contact, 1500-2000 (Oriental Research Partners, 2001)
Frame, Murray, ‘Dundee and the Russian Revolution’, Slavonica 6.1 (2000): 76-83.
Gallagher, Jock. Scotland’s Global Empire: A Chronicle of Great Scots (Whittles Publishing, 2013)
Henry, Peter, et. al., eds. Scotland and the Slavs: Selected Papers (Astra Press, 1993)
Jack, R.D.S and Tom Hubbard, eds. Scotland in Europe (Brill, 2006)
Jack, R.D.S. ‘Translating Burns: The Bibliography of Scottish Literature in Translation’ in M. Pittock, ed. Robert Burns in Global Culture (Bucknell University Press, 2011): 156-171.
Kagarlitskiy, Yu. ‘Kniga O Stivensone’. Voprosy Literatury 6 (1985): 252-258
http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/10301842 (institutional access only)
Kenefick, William. Red Scotland: The Rise and Fall of the Radical Left, c. 1872-1932. (Edinburgh University Press, 2007)
Kerrigan, Catherine. ‘Underground Men: Dostoevsky in the Work of Hugh MacDiarmid’, The Journal of Narrative Technique 17.1 (Winter 1987): 45-50
Knox, W.W. ‘Migration: Scotland’s Shifting population 1840-1940’ in A History of the Scottish People
Lavrov, Aleksandr. ‘O “Shotlandskom” Motive v Poezii Georgiya Ivanova’, Simvolisti i Drugie (Novoye Literaturnoe Obozrenie, 2015)
Levin, IU. D., ‘The Russian Burns: The Reception of Robert Burns in Pre-revolutionary and Soviet Times’, Scottish Slavonic Review 5 (1985): 36-71.
MacLean, Caroline, The Vogue for Russia: Mysticism and Modernism in Britain, 1900-1930 (Edinburgh UP, 2014)
Makarova, E. “O Satire v Tvorchestve Bernsa”, Voprosy literatury 2 (1959): 111-130.
http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/12196146 (institutional access only)
McCarey, Peter, Hugh MacDiarmid and the Russians (Scottish Academic Press, 1987)
McKnight, Fiona, ‘Erik Chisholm and Serge Prokofiev’, MusicWeb International (February 2009)
Morgan, Edwin, ‘Flying with Tatlin, Clouds in Trousers: A Look at Russian Avant-Gardes’ in Carruthers, Gerard et. al. eds., Beyond Scotland: New Contexts for Twentieth-century Scottish Literature (Rodopi, 2004): 95-110
Peacock, Hardold, Mr. Fairley: The Oldest Banker in Glasgow (Harold Peacock, 2014)
Pitches Jonathan, ed. The Russians in Britain: British Theatre and the Russian Tradition of Actor Training (Routledge, 2012)
Pittock, M., ed. Robert Burns in Global Culture (Bucknell University Press, 2011)
Pittock, M., ed. The Reception of Robert Burns in Europe. Series: The Reception of British and Irish Authors in Europe. (Bloomsbury, 2014)
Pittock, M., ed. The Reception of Sir Walter Scott in Europe. Series: The reception of British and Irish authors in Europe. (Bloomsbury, 2014)
Rafeek, Neil C., Communist Women in Scotland: Red Clydeside from the Russian Revolution to the End of the Soviet Union (i. B. Tauris, 2008)
Reizov, B. “Walter Scott i Nekotoriye voprosy istorii”. Voprosy literatury 6 (1963): 125-144
http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/11975556 (institutional access only)
Romm, A. “Romantism, Realism i Walter Scott”, Voprosy literatury 8 (1961): 236-242
http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/12050391 (institutional access only)
Russian Journal of Communication. Special Issue: British Cultural Engagement and Exchange with the USSR, 8.3 (2016)
Smith, G. S., ‘D S Mirskii and Hugh MacDiarmid: A Relationship and an Exchange of Letters (1934)’, Slavonica 3.2 (1996/7): 49-60.
Soboleva, Olga and Angus Wrenn, From Orientalism to Cultural Capital: The Myth of Russia in British Literature of the 1920s (Peter Lang, 2017)
“Sredi Zhurnalov i gazet”, Voprosy literatury 1 (1972): 253-256.
http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/10440635 (institutional access only)
‘Writing About Shostakovich: Edinburgh International Festival 1962’, DSCH Journal 37 (July 2012): 31-47.
Zaitsev, Slava, Russia-Scotland (Blurb, 2013)