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Alexis Peri

Former Title VIII Short-Term Scholar

    Term

    September 5, 2017 — September 28, 2017

    Professional affiliation

    Assistant Professor, Boston University

    Wilson Center Projects

    Fraternizing with the Enemy: The National Council of American-Soviet Friendship, 1945-60

    Full Biography

    Alexis Peri focuses on the history of modern Russia and Eastern Europe, especially the Soviet period. She has strong interests in the history of modern warfare, terror and terrorism, intimacy and private life, women and gender, US-Soviet relations, diaries, letters, and the importance of literature in history. Peri has published a monograph entitled The War Within:  Diaries from the Siege of Leningrad (Harvard University Press2017) which won the 2018 Pushkin House Book Prize, the 2018 University of Southern California Book Prize in Literary and Cultural Studies, and received an Honorable Mention for the 2018 Reginald Zelnik Book Prize in History. 

    Peri has published articles in KritikaThe Russian Review, and The Soviet and Post-Soviet Review as well as chapters in the following edited volumes: Hunger and War: Food Provisioning in the Soviet Union During World War II (Indiana University Press, 2015), Chelovek i lichnost’ v istorii Rossii konets XIX-XX vek  (Nestor-Istoriia, 2013), and Zhizn’ in byt’ blokirovannogo Leningrada (Nestor-Istoriia, 2010). Her work has been supported by grants from the Fulbright Program, the Kennan Institute, the International Research & Exchanges Board, the American Philosophical Society, the Mabelle McLeod Lewis Memorial Fund, Phi Beta Kappa, the Foreign Language & Area Studies Program, Boston University’s Center for the Humanities, and the Office of the Chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley.

    Peri’s current research examines hundreds of  pen-friendships that Soviet and American women formed during WWII, and it traces how they struggled to maintain those friendships during the Cold War and McCarthyism. The project is tentatively titled: Dear Unknown Friend: Soviet and American Women Discover the Power of the Personal (under contract with Harvard University Press).