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            Welcome to Been there. Your tips on the places you know - that you love,
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                <title>Literary associations of Petersburg</title>
                
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                <description><![CDATA[St Petersburg is a great literary city.<br><br>Walk the streets of Dostoevsky, like in Crime and Punishment, following the footsteps of Raskolnikov. There are even special tours which visit the places. See the fading yellow buildings, looming large, driving to madness. The squalor and poverty he personally experienced is reflected in his novels. There is also a Dosteovsky museum where he used to live.<br><br>Walk alongside the mighty Neva, with it's granite embankments, so glorified by Pushkin. Or the Bronze horseman depicting city founder Peter the Great looming large over the city. Pushkin house is a museum.<br><br>Walk down Nevsky Prospekt.<br>'All powerful Nevsky Prospekt' said Gogol in his sketch bearing the name of this famous street. <br>Imagine yourself in Petersburg to be in a Gogolian nightmare. This is the little man pittted against the big artificial city with it's structures of power and insane obedience to rank and status. <br><br>Watch the sheer artificiality and pre planning of old Petersburg as Tsar Peter dragged Russia forward with a European capital as a window on the west, the facades, ensembles, baroque and the squares. Built on cold rationale as a complete antithesis to the Russian soul. As Dostoevsky said--'the most abstract and artificial city on earth'<br><br>Anna Akhmatova was a Soviet poet, who variously lost husband and son to the Gulag camps. You can visit her apartment.<br><br>Petersburg- city of words. This is a map of the city with literary quotations from people associated with it.<br><a target="_new" href="http://mtblog.newyorker.com/online/blogs/books/St_pete_map_web-1.jpeg">mtblog.newyorker.com/online/blogs/books/St_pete_map_web-1.jpeg</a>]]></description>
                
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