
Towards The End Of The Khrushchev Era, A Major Soviet Initiative Was Launched To Rekindle Popular Enthusiasm For The Revolution, Which Eventually Gave Rise To Over 150 Biographies And Historical Novels (the Fiery Revolutionaries/plamennye Revoliutsionery Series), Authored By Many Key Post-stalinist Writers And Published Throughout Late Socialism Until The Soviet Collapse. What New Meanings Did Revolution Take On As It Was Reimagined By Writers, Including Dissidents, Leading Historians, And Popular Historical Novelists? How Did Their Millions Of Readers Engage With These Highly Varied Texts? To What Extent Does This Brezhnev-era Publishing Phenomenon Challenge The Notion Of Late Socialism As A Time Of 'stagnation', And How Does It Confirm It? By Exploring The Complex Processes Of Writing, Editing, Censorship, And Reading Of Late Soviet Literature, Revolution Rekindled Highlights The Dynamic Negotiations That Continued Within Soviet Culture Well Past The Apparent Turning Point Of 1968, Through To The Late Gorbachev Era. It Also Complicates The Opposition Between 'official' And Underground Post-stalinist Culture By Showing How Soviet Writers And Readers Engaged With Both, As They Sought Answers To Key Questions Of Revolutionary History, Ethics And Ideology. Polly Jones Reveals The Enormous Breadth And Vitality Of The 'historical Turn' Amongst The Late Soviet Population. Revolution Rekindled Is The First Archival, Oral History, And Literary Study Of This Unique Late Socialist Publishing Experiment, From Its Beginnings In The Early 1960s To Its Collapse In The Early 1990s. It Draws On A Wide Range Of Previously Untapped Archives, Including Those Of The Publisher Politizdat, Of Soviet Institutions In Charge Of Propaganda, Publishing, And Literature, And Of Many Individual Writers. It Also Uses In-depth Interviews With Brezhnev-era Writers, Editors, And Publishers, And Assesses The Generic And Stylistic Innovations Within The Series' Biographies And Novels.
How did the Soviet state's initiative to revitalize revolutionary enthusiasm through the 'Fiery Revolutionaries' book series shape the cultural and political landscape of late socialism? Polly Jones, a scholar specializing in Soviet culture and history, utilizes a multidisciplinary approach to examine the intersection of state propaganda, literary production, and public reception. By analyzing the evolution of these biographies and novels, the author argues that the Brezhnev era was not merely a period of stagnation, but a time of dynamic negotiation between official ideology and the evolving interests of Soviet writers and readers.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of late Soviet culture, noting its success in challenging simplistic narratives of stagnation. Readers frequently highlight the depth of the archival research and the author's ability to bridge the gap between literary analysis and political history.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192526472
ISBN-13:
9780192526472
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