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*”Leadership of Antireligious Propaganda in the Soviet Union” Studies in Soviet Thought 12:3 (1972)<ref name=ob/> |
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*“Khrushchev’s Anti‐religious Policy and the Campaign of 1954” Soviet Studies 24:3 (1973)<ref name=ob/> |
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Revision as of 11:51, 23 September 2025
Joan Delaney Grossman (December 12, 1928-February 2025) was an American professor, author, and scholar who travelled to Russia during the Cold War and wrote about Russian topics.[1]
She graduated from Visitation Academy in Dubuque and joined the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
She graduated from Clarke College in Dubuque with a B.A. in English in 1952 and taught English at Immaculata High School in Chicago, Illinois from 1952 to 1957 and at Clarke College in Dubuque from 1957-1959. She studied Russian at Fordham University’s and Middlebury College’s summer schools and the graduate program at Columbia, earning an M.A. in Russian literature in 1962. She received a PhD in Slavic languages and Literatures in 1967 from Harvard.[1]
Writings
=Articles
- “Leadership of Antireligious Propaganda in the Soviet Union” Studies in Soviet Thought 12:3 (1972)[1]
- “Khrushchev’s Anti‐religious Policy and the Campaign of 1954” Soviet Studies 24:3 (1973)[1]

