From the 1890s, the Russian Empire saw an outburst of interest in vegetarianism, especially since it was being propounded by famous figures like the novelist Leo Tolstoi and the painter Il'ia Repin. In this episode, I talk about the spread of vegetarianism, the opening of new vegetarian eateries, splits within the movement, and its external opponents.
Sources for information and quotes:
J. Malitska, ‘Mediated Vegetarianism: The Periodical Press and New Associations in the Late Russian Empire’, Media History (2021) (Early Access)
J. Malitska, ‘The Peripheries of Omnivorousness: Vegetarian Canteens and Social Activism in the Early Twentieth-Century Russian Empire’, Global Food History, vol. 7, no. 2 (2021): 140-175
J. Malitska, ‘Meat and the City in the Late Russian Empire: Dietary Reform and Vegetarian Activism in Odessa, 1890s-1910s’, Baltic Worlds, no. 2–3 (2020): 4–24.
R. D. LeBlanc, ‘Vegetarianism in Russia: The Tolstoy(an) Legacy’, The Carl Beck Papers in Russian & East European Studies. no. 1507 (2001), pp. 1-39
P. Brang, Rossiia neizvestnaia. Istoriia kul’tury vegeterianskikh obrazov zhizni ot nachala do nashikh dnei (Moscow: Iazyki slavianskoi kul’tury, 2006)
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