Konstantin Anatolevich Bogdanov is a Russian anthropologist and philologist whose areas of investigation covers Russian culture, including folklore, rhetoric, and the history of science and humanities. He has also researched the history of social thought in 18-20th Century Russia.
He has taught at various Russian Universities courses on Greco-Roman Culture, Russian literature of 18th and 20th century, survey courses on Russian culture. During the long association with the University of Constance he has also had courses in Russian literature and culture over the entire range of Russian history in English and in Russian. He has vast experience in teaching Greek, Latin, and Russian language courses. His major scholarly interests focused on historical and theoretical aspects of 18th-20th Russian literature and culture. The main area of investigation was still Russian Literature and Folklore, History of Social Thought, History of Russian and European Rhetoric, Cultural History of Russian and Soviet Humanities.
Professional Activities
Since 1992 Bogdanov is Leading Researcher at The Institute of Russian Literature, Russian Academy of Sciences in St. Petersburg, Russia. Since 2001 he is Visiting Professor at the Department of Slavic Studies at the University of Constance, Germany. 2001-2003 he has a two years Research Project on History of Translation and Adaptation of European Rhetoric in 17-18th Century Russia. After that from he has a two years Research DFG Project on Soviet Sciences of the 1920-1930. 2007 was started a new research project of Konstantin Bogdanov supported by DFG about the History of Mathematik and Humanities in the Soviet Union. Since January 2008 he is Head of the Research Group “Ziffer und Buchstabe. Diskursive, ideologische und mediale Transformationen in den sowjetischen Humanwissenschaften der 1950er und 60er Jahre”, University of Constance. Dr. Bogdanov is an active organizer of professional conferences, most notably being active in the annual conference on “Mythology and Day-to-day Life” by the Russian Academy of Science in St. Petersburg. He has also been instrumental in planning the Round Table on Rhetorics of Soviet Science in 2006 and 2007 at the University of Constance in Germany, in addition to their 2003 conference on Russian literature and medicine. ;Monographs
Vox Populi. The Folklore Genres of Soviet Culture. Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie. Moscow. 2009.
Crocodiles in Russia. A History of Exoticism and Loan Words. Moscow: NLO, 2006. 352 pp.
Rec.: Andrew Khan, in: Anthropological Forum, Nr. 8, 2008; Andrei Martynov in : NG ex libris, 21.09.1006; S.D. in: Literatura, Nr. 09, 2006. Sergey Prokhorov in: Nevskoye Vremya, 24.05.06; Sergey Shpalov in: Kultura, Nr. 21, 1-7.07.06; Olga Kadikina in: Krug Chteniya, 30.05.06; Vsevolod Brodsky in: Expert On-line: http://www.expert.ru/printissues/expert/2006/19/book_reptiliiya.
Physicians, Patients, Readers: Pathographical Texts of Russian Culture of 18 -19th Centuries. Moscow: OGI, 2005, 520 pp.
Rec.: Andrei Topotrkov in: NLO, Nr. 85, 2007; Zakharine, Dmitri in: Anthropological Forum, Nr. 6, 2006, P. 381-386; Anna Kusnecova in: Znamya, Nr. 11, 2005.
Everyday Life and Mythology: Studies on Semiotics of Folklore Reality. St. Petersburg: Iskusstvo, 2001, 438 pp.
Aratus. Phaenomena. Ancient Greek Text with Russian Translation, Introduction and line-by-line Commentary. St. Petersburg: Aleteia, 2000, 252 pp.
Homo Tacens. Anthropology of Silence. St. Petersburg: Russian Christian Institute for the Humanities Press, 1998, 354 pp.
Money in Russian Folklore, St. Petersburg: Bell, 1995, 125 pp.
The full publication list is on the Homepage University of Contance:https://web.archive.org/web/20110604214934/http://www.uni-konstanz.de/FuF/Philo/LitWiss/Slavistik/Bogdanov/Bibliographie.html