Nina L. Khrushcheva
Nina Lvovna Khrushcheva | |
---|---|
at the 2014 National Book Festival | |
Born | 1964 |
Occupation | Professor of International Affairs |
Alma mater |
Moscow State University; Princeton University |
Genres | Non-fiction; History |
Website | |
ninakhrushcheva |
Nina Lvovna Khrushcheva (Нина Львовна Хрущёва, /xrʊ.ˈɕo.və/) (born 1964)[1] is a Russian American professor at The New School, a senior fellow of the World Policy Institute, and from 2002 to 2004 was adjunct assistant professor at the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University.
Khrushcheva received a degree from Moscow State University with a major in Russian in 1987 and a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from Princeton University in 1998.
Family
Khrushcheva is the granddaughter of Leonid Khrushchev, eldest son of former Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. When Leonid died in World War II, Nikita adopted Leonid's two-year-old daughter Julia, Nina's mother. Nikita Khrushchev is thus Nina Khrushcheva's biological great-grandfather, but adoptive grandfather. Khrushcheva's father, Lev Petrov, died in 1970, aged 47.[2]
Author
Khrushcheva is the author of numerous articles, director of the Russia Project at the World Policy Institute, contributor to Project Syndicate: Association of Newspapers Around the World, and editor of Project Syndicate's Russia column. She is the author of Imagining Nabokov: Russia Between Art and Politics and The Lost Khrushchev: A Journey into the Gulag of the Russian Mind, and member of Council on Foreign Relations.
Work
- Imagining Nabokov: Russia Between Art and Politics. Yale University Press. 2008. ISBN 978-0-300-14824-4.
- The Lost Khrushchev: A Journey Into the Gulag of the Russian Mind. Tate Publishing. 2014. ISBN 9781629945446
References
- ↑ http://greatimmigrants.carnegie.org/profile/nina-khrushcheva/
- ↑ Nina L. Khrushcheva. "Lost Khrushchev". Retrieved 13 January 2014.
External links
Nina L. Khrushcheva, Associate Professor, The New School, France24, 2014-02-28 |
- Official website
- "The Mysteries of Political Strategy"
- Brezhnev, Bush and Baghdad
- What will Castro's death bring to Cuba?
- New School profile