Mikhail Epstein

Mikhail Naumovich Epstein (Epshtein)
Epstein in 2014
Epstein in 2014
Native name
Михаи́л Нау́мович Эпште́йн
Born (1950-04-21) 21 April 1950 (age 74)
Moscow, Soviet Union
NationalityRussian, American
Subject
  • Continental philosophy
  • Mikhail Bakhtin and dialogical poetics
  • Postmodern theory and conceptualism
  • Methodology of the humanities
  • Cultural theory
  • Postmodernism
  • Literature, Philosophy, and Religion in Russia
  • Experimental Genres
  • Internet and Creativity
  • Language and Neologisms
  • Transformative humanities
  • Post-atheism and minimal religion
  • Transculture and culturology
  • Possibilism
  • Metarealism
  • Collective improvisations
  • Projective linguistics
Website
inteLnet

Mikhail Naumovich Epstein (also transliterated Epshtein; Russian: Михаи́л Нау́мович Эпште́йн; born 21 April 1950) is a Russian-American literary scholar, essayist, and cultural theorist best known for his contributions to the study of Russian postmodernism. He is the Emeritus S. C. Dobbs Professor of Cultural Theory and Russian Literature at Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia.[1] His writings encompass Russian literature and intellectual history, the philosophy of religion, the creation of new ideas in the age of electronic media, semiotics, and interdisciplinary approaches in the humanities. His works have been translated into over 26 languages.

The Modern Language Association of America awarded Epstein[2] the Aldo and Jeanne Scaglione Prize for Studies in Slavic Languages and Literatures for his book Ideas Against Ideocracy: Non-Marxist Thought of the Late Soviet Period (1953–1991) on 6 December 2023.

  1. ^ "Mikhail Epstein". www.comparativelit.emory.edu. Archived from the original on 21 July 2019. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
  2. ^ https://www.mla.org/content/download/191347/file/SCS-2023-Scaglione-Prize-Slavic-Studies-Press-Release.pdf [bare URL PDF]