大象传媒

Ilya Vinkovetsky

Associate Professor
Office: AQ 6244
Email: ivink@sfu.ca


Areas of Study: EUROPE, GLOBAL/COMPARATIVE

Courses

Future courses may be subject to change.

Biography

I was born in Leningrad (presently St. Petersburg), but left the Soviet Union at the age of ten. I attended high school in Texas and university in New England. After wandering the earth in the guises of interpreter/translator and camp counselor/outdoor educator, I went to the University of California, Berkeley, where I received training in both Russian and North American history. Before arriving at 大象传媒 in 2004, I spent two years teaching at the American University in Bulgaria.

Research Interests

The bulk of my research is directed to examining the culture, commerce, politics, and colonial practices of nineteenth-century Russian Empire. I wrote a book that explores the paradox of Russian America (aka Alaska, 1741-1867) as a sole overseas colony of an empire that otherwise conformed to a continental, as opposed to maritime, modus operandi. I am also keenly interested in how Russian imperial officials responded to, learned from, and incorporated the colonial practices of their neighbours and competitors, particularly the British in North America and the Ottomans in the Balkans.

Books

Articles

  • 鈥淭he China-Russia Trade Through Nerchinsk and Kiakhta鈥 In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Asian History. 2024.
  • 鈥淭he Russian-American Company as a Corporation.鈥 The Russian Review 81 (July 2022): 421-39.
  • 鈥淐hinese roads in the Russian imagination and in reality: The 1870s as a decade of discovery.鈥 In Russia in Asia: Imaginations, Interactions, and Realities (New York: Routledge, 2020). Pp. 65-76.
  • ',' The Journal of Modern History 90, no. 4 (December 2018): 751-791.
  • '.' In Oxford Bibliographies in Atlantic History. Ed. Trevor Burnard. New York: Oxford University Press, 2018.
  • 'Building a Diocese Overseas: The Orthodox Church in Partnership with the Russian-American Company in Alaska.' Ab Imperio, 3 (2010): 152-194.'
  • 'Why Did Russia Sell Alaska?', Acta Slavica Iaponica, 23 (2006): 202-210
  • 'The Russian-American Company as a Colonial Contractor for the Russian Empire' in Alexei Miller and Alfred J. Rieber eds., Imperial Rule (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2004), pp. 161-176.
  • 'Circumnavigation, Empire, Modernity, Race: the Impact of Round-the-World Voyages on Russia's Imperial Consciousness', Ab Imperio, 1-2, (2001): 191-210.
  • 'Classical Eurasianism and its Legacy', Canadian-American Slavic Studies, 34 (2000): 125-139.

Graduate Supervision

Russia/Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, Central Asia, northern Pacific Rim (aka Russian Far East & Russian-era Alaska, including First Nations of that part of North America & Siberia)

Accepting new MA students, but not PhD

 

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