This collection of essays on Turgenev, Goncharov, Conrad, Dostoevsky, Blok, Briusov, Gor'kii, Pasternak and Nabokov represents diverse voices but is also unified. One invariant is the recurring distinction between "e;culture"e; and "e;civilization"e; and the vision of Russia as the bearer of culture because it is "e;barbaric."e; Another stance advocates the synthesis of "e;sense and sensibility"e; and the vision of "e;Apollo"e; and "e;Dionysus"e; creating a "e;civilized culture"e; together. Those voices that delight in the artificiality of civilization are complemented by those apprehensive of the dangers inherent in barbarism. This collection thus adds new perspectives to the much-debated opposition of vital Russia and a declining West, offering novel interpretations of classics from Oblomov to Lolita and The Idiot to Doctor Zhivago.