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Foreign Languages Publishing House (Soviet Union)
Soviet publisher From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Foreign Languages Publishing House (Russian: Издательство иностранной литературы) was a Soviet state-run foreign-language publisher of Russian literature, novels, propaganda, and books about the USSR.[1] Headquartered in Moscow at 21 Zubovsky Boulevard, the publishing house was founded in 1946, and in 1964 was split into two separate publishers, Progress and Mir.
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Book series
English-language titles
- Arts Library
- Books for Socialism
- Classics of Russian Literature[2]
- Documents of the First International
- Library of Marxist–Leninist Classics
- Library of Selected Soviet Literature
- Library of Soviet Literature
- Library of Soviet Short Stories
- Men of Russian Science
- Outline History of the USSR
- Political Education Series
- Soviet Arts Series
- Soviet Children's Library for Tiny Tots[3]
- Soviet Literature for Young People
French-language titles
- Arts
- Bibliothèque de la littérature soviétique
- Les classiques de la littérature
- Les classiques du marxisme-leninisme
- Les classiques russes
- Critique littéraire
- Littérature pour la jeunesse
- Littérature soviétique pour l'enfance et l'adolescence
- Littérature soviétique pour enfants
- Nouvelles soviétiques
- La science russe et ses hommes
- Série Anticipation
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See also
- Foreign Languages Press, Beijing – similar state-run publisher in China
- Foreign Languages Publishing House, Pyongyang – similar state-run publisher in North Korea
- Foreign Languages Publishing House, Hanoi – similar state-run publisher in Vietnam, now known as Thế Giới Publishers
- Revekka Galperina – prolific translator for the Soviet publisher
References
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