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Russian Word : ウィキペディア英語版
Russkoye Slovo

''Russkoye Slovo'' (Русское слово, Russian Word) was a Russian weekly magazine published in Saint Petersburg in 1859-1866 by its owner, Count Grigory Kushelyov-Bezborodko.
==History==
The magazine’s first editors were Yakov Polonsky, Apollon Grigoryev, and A.Khmelnitsky. In mid-1860 Grigory Blagosvetov came in who invited Dmitry Pisarev to become the head of the literary criticism section, and the journal started to gain ground, albeit a politically risky one. In 1862, after Pisarev’s essay "Poor Russian Thought" (Бедная русская мысль), ''Russkoye Slovo'' was banned for half a year.〔
Under Blagosvetov ''Russkoye Slovo'' became a mouthpiece for the most radical part of young Russian intelligentsia. While ''Sovremennik'' (with Nikolai Dobrolyubov and Nikolai Chernyshevsky, its ideological leaders) represented the deeper, analytical part of the same specter, here the superficial, nihilistic protest was the order of the day. Some attacks on liberal literature and arts published in ''Russkoye Slovo'' made even the ''Sovremennik'' authors wince.
Polemic essays by Pisarev, Varfolomey Zaytsev, Nikolai Shelgunov, Afanasy Shchapov represented the facade of ''Russkoye Slovo'', but the literature section behind it was unimpressive: two stalwarts here were Nikolai Bazhin and Nikolai Blagoveshchensky, with occasional contributions by Marko Vovchok, Alexander Levitov, Alexander Sheller, Nikolai Pomyalovsky, Fyodor Reshetnikov, Konstantin Staniukovich and Gleb Uspensky.
After the 1866 Karakozov's assassination attempt ''Russkoye Slovo'' (as well as ''Sovremennik'') was closed by a monarch's decree.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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