George Jerkovich. Appollon Grigor'ev as a Literary Critic. Defended 1970 (Chair: Heinrich Stammler). Curator of the Slavic Collection KU Watson Library. Deceased. (04/09)
Walter Kolonosky Andrej Sinjavskij as a Literary Critic. Defended 1972. (Chair: Joseph L. Conrad). Formerly Professor of Russian, Department of Modern Languages, Kansas State University; Director of KSU Study Abroad. Died 18 August 2009. (10/09)
Valentina Golondzowska Brougher. Vsevolod Ivanov's
Mystery of Mysteries. Defended 1973 (Chair: Joseph L.
Conrad). Professor and past Chairperson of Slavic Languages
and Literatures, Georgetown University. Retired. (04/09)
More
Peter A. Kersten. Nominal Accidence in Two Letters attributed to Ivan IV; Exposition and Analysis. Defended 1973 (Chair: Heinrich Stammler). private business; formerly at the University of Missouri - Columbia.
Thomas R. Beyer, Jr. Andrej Belyj's Real'nyj Criticism: Precursor of Russian Formalism. Defended 1974 (Chair: Stephen J. Parker) C.V. Starr Professor of Russian, Chair of Russian, Dean of the Russian School at Middlebury College. More
Daniel Gallagher. The Surrealist Mode in Twentieth-Century Russian Literature. Defended 1974 (Chair: Stephen J. Parker). Senior Soviet/CIS Affairs Analyst, National Security Agency. (1/01)
Joel Wilkinson. The Development of the Ballad in Russian Literature by Mixail Ju. Lermontov (1814-1841). Defended 1977 (Chair: Joseph L. Conrad). Assistant Professor of Russian, Wooster College. Deceased. (04/09)
David Bethea. The Wingless Genius: Irony in the Poetry of Vladislav Xodasevic. Defended 1977 (Chairs: Stephen J. Parker and Gerald E. Mikkelson). Vilas Distinguished Professor of Slavic Languages, and past Chair, Slavic Languages and Literatures, University of Wisconsin-Madison. (1/01)
Halina Filipowicz. The Theatre of Tadeusz Rozewicz. Defended 1979 (Chair: Jadwiga Maurer). Professor of Polish, Slavic Languages and Literatures, University of Wisconsin-Madison. More
Slava Yastremski. Myth in Russian Drama of the Twentieth Century: Anenskij, Ivanov, Blok, Khlebnikov, Majakovskij, Leonov, Visnevskij, and Arbuzov. Defended 1981 (Chair: ) Associate Professor of Russian and Chair of Modern Languages and Literatures at Bucknell University; formerly Assistant Professor at Yale University. (11/03)
Alexander Boguslawski. The Vitae of St. Nicholas and his Hagiographical Icons in Russia. Defended 1980 (Chair: Heinrich Stammler). Professor of Russian Studies at Rollins College, Winter Park, Florida, and Chair of the Department of Foreign Language Teaching. More
Leonard Stanton. Optina Pustyn' in Russian Secular Literature: Backgrounds, Sources, and Legacy. Defended 1984 (Chair: Stephen J. Parker). Associate Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge. (1/01)
Robert Mann. Oral Composition in the Slovo o Polku Igoreve. Defended 1984 (Chair: Joseph L. Conrad). Associate Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures, University of Florida, Gainsville; independent scholar. (04/09)
Timothy Pogacar The Journal IuNOST in Soviet Russian Literature, 1955-1965. Defended 1985 (Chair: Stephen J. Parker). Associate Professor of Russian and Chair, Department of German, Russian and East Asian Langs, Bowling Green University, Bowling Green, Ohio. (12/02)
Anatoly Vishevsky Irony in Comtemporary Russian Literary Culture: 1960s-1970s. Defended 1985 (Chair: Gerald E. Mikkelson). Associate Professor and Chair of Russian Department at Grinnell College; formerly Assistant Professor of Russian, Washington University, St. Louis. E-mail (11/03)
Michael Biggins. A South Russian Dialect in Oregon: The "Turkish" Old Believers. Defended 1985 (Chair: Herbert Galton). Head Slavic Librarian, University of Washington, Seattle; formerly Slavic Librarian, University of Kansas Assistant Professor of Russian, Knox College, Illinois. (1/01)
Maia Kipp. The Dramaturgy of Edvard Radzinskii. Defended 1985 (Chair: Gerald E. Mikkelson). Lecturer, Department of Theatre and Drama, University of Kansas; Assistant Professor of Russian and German, Miami University, Ohio and University of Kansas. Retired. E-mail (5/03)
Mila Saskova-Pierce. A Reanalysis of the Concept of Colloquial Czech and its use in the Prague Linguistic Circle Language Model. Defended 1986 (Chair: Herbert Galton). Associate Professor of Russian and Czech, Modern Languages Department, University of Nebraska, Lincoln. E-mail (11/03)
Chol-Kun Kwon. Siberian Mythology, Folklore, and Tradition in Valentin Rasputin's Novellas. Defended 1986 (Chair: Gerald E. Mikkelson). Associate Professor and Chair, Slavic Languages and Literatures Department at Seoul National University in Korea. (1/01)
David Gordon Wilson. Fantasy in the Fiction of Sergei Zalygin. Defended 1988 (Chair: Gerald E. Mikkelson). Formerly Assistant Professor of Russian, Memphis State University. (1/01)
Kurt C. Shaw. Chasing the Red Balloon: Psychological Separation in the Early Fiction of Andrej Bitov, 1958-1962. Defended 1988 (Chair: Gerald E. Mikkelson). Associate Professor of Russian at Wake Forest University. (1/01)
Hyun-Taek Kim. Three Soviet Writers and the New Testament: Iurii Bombrovskii, Vladimir Tendriakov and Chingiz Aitmatov. Defended 1990 (Chair: Gerald E. Mikkelson). Assistant Professor in the Russian Language Department, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies. E-mail (1/01)
Gisela Zimmerman. The Revolutionary and the Superfluous Man: Soviet Russian Images of Faust. Defended 1992 (Chair: Jadwiga Maurer). Formerly Assistant Professor of Russian, University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Since 2009 teaching at the American University, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, where she offers courses in European Literature, Intercultural Communications, and Research Methods. (11/09)
Anesa Miller-Pogacar. Transculture and Culturology: Post-Structuralist Theory in Late and Post-Soviet Russia. Defended 1993 (Co-Chairs: Maria Carlson and Stephen J. Parker). Formerly Assistant Professor of Russian, Bowling Green University, Ohio; freelance translator and writer. (04/09)
Laura Wilhelm. The Fate of the Fable in Modern Russian Literature. Defended 1994 (Chair: Joseph L. Conrad). Instructor, advanced ESL for Russian and other emigrants at LA ORT; private language tutor, inter-cultural consultant. More
Mark Richard Lauersdorf. The Question of "Cultural Language" and Interdialectal Norm in 16th Century Slovak Administrative-Legal Texts. Defended 1995 (Chair: Marc L. Greenberg). Director of Language Learning Technology and Associate Professor, Department of Modern and Classical Languages, University of Kentucky. E-mail (9/05) More
He is actively involved in numerous professional organizations for linguistics, Slavic studies and academic technology, and is webmaster and listowner for the Slovak Studies Association.
Gary D. Roy. The Characterization of Women in the Works of Jurij Trifonov. Defended 1996 (Chair: Gerald E. Mikkelson). Teaches languages at Thornton Academy in Saco, ME. (11/09)
William Griffiths. The indeterminate-personal clause in Russian: A systemic functional analysis. Defended 1996 (Chair: Jane F. Hacking) resident of Lawrence, Kansas. (9/00)
Yelaina Khripkov The Borrowed Lyre: Vasilii Zhukovskii as one of the Founders of Russian Art of Poetic Translation. Defended 1996 (Chair: Maria M. Carlson). Senior Instructor, Department of Russian, University of Oregon. (4/09)
Howard Solomon. Religion and Philosophy in Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita: Roots in the Silver Age and Pavel Florenskii's Writings. Defended 1997 (Chair: Maria M. Carlson). 2007-09 served as Senior Political Officer and then Acting Deputy Director of the Office of Russian Affairs at the U.S. Department of State. Since April 2009, Director for Russia, National Security Council. E-mail (10/09)
Tatiana Spektor. The Christian Subtext in Iurii Trifonov's Moscow Stories. Defended 1997 (Chair: Gerald E. Mikkelson). Formerly Assistant Professor, Iowa State University (Ames); independent scholar. (6/03)
Jason Merrill. Russian Symbolist mythopoesis: The Neomythological Dramas of Fedor Sologub. Defended 1998 (Co-chairs: Maria M. Carlson and Stephen J. Parker). Associate Professor of Russian, Michigan State University. (10/07)
Viktor Leier. From the "City of K." to the Funeral Red Square: Evgenij Popov's Prose of the 1960's-1980s . Defended 1998 (Chair: Gerald E. Mikkelson). Freelance translator, residing in Germany.
Grant H. Lundberg. Problems in the Description and Historical Phonology of the Slovene Dialect of Haloze. Defended 1999 (Chair: Marc L. Greenberg). Associate Professor, Department of German and Slavic Languages, Brigham Young University. E-mail (11/03) More
Joachim Faust. The Metaphysics of Grammar in Aleksandr Blok’s Poetry. Defended 1999 (Co-chairs: Marc L. Greenberg and Maria M. Carlson). Lecturer and Freshman Advisor, Washington University, St. Louis. (11/03)
Karen Bapst. Archetypal Patterns in Pushkin's Narrative and Dramatic Works. Defended, 2000 (Chair: Gerald E. Mikkelson). Adjutant of American-Ukrainian Veterans Post 40, Florida. (4/09)
Meghan Murphy-Lee. A Description and Analysis of the Interlanguage of Second-Year Students of Russian: Evidence from Electronic Dialogue Journals. Defended 2003 (Chair: William J. Comer). Assistant Professor of Russian, United States Military Academy, West Point. (11/03)
Matthew E. Feeney. Problems in the Reconstruction of Pre-Migration Slavic Dialects: The Case of Alleged Neo-Acute Retraction. Defended 2003 (Chair: Marc L. Greenberg). E-mail (11/03)
Leann Keefe. The Place and Pedagogy of Reading in the Russian Language Curriculum. Defended 2004 (Chair: William J. Comer). Language specialist, federal government, Washington, D.C. (1/06)
Jonathan Perkins. Redefining the Russian Fantastic Tale (1825-1842): An Analysis of Mikhail Zagoskin’s Evening on the Khopyor. Defended 2006 (Co-chairs: Maria Carlson and Stephen J. Parker). Director, Ermal Garinger Academic Resource Center, KU. (03/09)
Eugenia K. Amditis. Women, Conformity, Society, and Power in Dostoevsky's The Idiot and Flaubert's Madame Bovary. Defended 2006 (Co-chairs: Maria Carlson and Stephen J. Parker).
Adrienne M. Harris. The Myth of the Woman Warrior and World War II in Soviet Culture. Defended 2008 (Chair: Edith Clowes). Assistant Professor of Russian, Baylor University.
Michael D. Johnson. On the Paths of the Soul: Stanislaw Przybyszewski and the Russian Stage. The Cases of Vera Komissarzhevskaia and Vsevolod Meierkhol'd (1900-1910). Defended 2008 (Chair: Edith Clowes).
