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  1. Alexandra "Sasha" Kropotkin (1887–1966) was a New York-based writer and Russian language translator. Born in British exile to the Russian scientist and anarchist Peter Kropotkin, the socially prominent family returned to Russia from the 1917 revolution through his death several years later.

  2. Alexandra "Sasha" Kropotkin (1887–1966) was a New York-based writer and Russian language translator. Born in British exile to the Russian scientist and anarchist Peter Kropotkin, the socially prominent family returned to Russia from the 1917 revolution through his death several years later.

  3. Alexandra Kropotkin is the author of Crime and Punishment (4.27 avg rating, 921525 ratings, 38000 reviews, published 1866), The Brothers Karamazov (4.37 ...

  4. 25 Apr 2020 · Get the International Collectors Library Kropotkin translation of Crime and Punishment. To the best of my understanding, this is Alexandra Kropotkin's edited, abridged version of the Garnett translation. This edition includes a color frontispiece and black and white illustrations by Marian Larer, silk ribbon bookmark, and decorative endpapers.

  5. Alexandra Petrovna "Sasha" Kropotkin (April 15, 1887 - July 4, 1966) was the daughter of Peter Kropotkin. Emma Goldman knew her in the U.S.S.R. She later wrote articles about Russia for New Outlook magazine, edited by Alfred Emmanuel Smith.

  6. Alexandra Kropotkin (b. 1887) had known Shaw since she was a child through her father, the Russian revolutionary and social philosopher, Prince Peter Kropotkin. An associate of William Morris, he became a leader of the anarchist movement after he settled in London in 1886.

  7. Alexandra Kropotkin’s talk at a 9 May 1961 memorial marking the fortieth anni- versary of her father’s death: The Bolsheviks wanted to make political capital out of Kropotkin’s popularity.