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Russian folk tale book cover of Snegurochka (1916). A version of a folk tale about a girl made of snow and named Snegurka (Snezhevinochka; Снегурка (Снежевиночка)) was published in 1869 by Alexander Afanasyev in the second volume of his work The Poetic Outlook on Nature by the Slavs, where he also mentions the German analog, Schneekind ("Snow Child").
"The Gigantic Turnip" or "The Enormous Turnip" (Russian: Репка, Repka, IPA:, literally "small turnip"; ATU 2044, ‘Pulling up the turnip') is a cumulative Russian fairy tale, collected in Arkhangelsk Governorate and published in 1863 by folklore researcher Alexander Afanasyev in his collection Russian Fairy Tales (tale number 89), a collection not strictly Russian, but which included ...
Adelaida Semyonovna Simonovitch. Adelaida Semyonovna Simonovitch (Russian: Аделаида Семёновна Симонович 1844-1933) was a Russian educator and the founder of the first kindergarten in Russia. She also was the first Russian theorist of public preschool education and published books and journals advocating early childhood ...
The Wizard of the Emerald City. Categories: Children's books by nationality. Russian children's literature. Russian books.
Masha and the Bear (Russian: Ма́ша и Медве́дь, romanized: Másha i Medvéd', pronounced [ˈmaʂə ɪ mʲɪdˈvʲetʲ]) is a Russian preschool comedy animated television series created by Oleg Kuzovkov and produced by Animaccord Animation Studio, loosely based on the oral children's folk story of the same name.
Kit and Kate (stylised as Kit ^n^ Kate; Russian: Котики, вперёд!) is a Russian [1] [2] preschool children's educational series of educational animated shorts for children aged 0-7, produced by Russian company Toonbox (whose animation studio and ABC Kids office were later respectively relocated to Cyprus [3] [4]), in conjunction with a team of American, French and Russian artists.
Russian science fiction emerged in the mid-19th century and rose to its golden age during the Soviet era, both in cinema and literature, with writers like the Strugatsky brothers, Kir Bulychov, and Mikhail Bulgakov, among others. Soviet filmmakers produced a number science fiction and fantasy films. With the fall of the Iron Curtain, modern ...
Defunct. 1930. Country of origin. Soviet Union. Headquarters location. Bolshoy Gostiny Dvor, Nevsky Prospect, St. Petersburg. Publication types. Children's books. Raduga Publishers (Russian: радуга, English: "rainbow") was a Soviet publishing house of innovative children's books, which has been described as "one of the most important book ...