Mass Culture in Soviet Russia – Tales, Poems, Songs, Movies, Plays, and Folklore, 1917–1953
Autor James Von Geldern, Richard Stitesen Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 dec 1995
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780253209696
ISBN-10: 0253209692
Pagini: 544
Ilustrații: 78 b&w photographs
Dimensiuni: 170 x 245 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.82 kg
Editura: MH – Indiana University Press
ISBN-10: 0253209692
Pagini: 544
Ilustrații: 78 b&w photographs
Dimensiuni: 170 x 245 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.82 kg
Editura: MH – Indiana University Press
Cuprins
Note: Performances of entries marked with an asterisk are on the accompanying cassette tape.
Acknowledgments
Introduction by James von Geldern
Note on Transliteration
I. The Revolution and New Regime, 1917-1927
Aleksei Gastev, We Grow Out of Iron (1918)
Vladimir Kirillov, The Iron Messiah (1918)
Mikhail Gerasimov, We (1919)
The War of Kings (1918)
Demyan Bedny, Send Off: A Red Army Song (1918)
Solemn Oath on Induction into the Worker-Peasant Red Army (1918)
Little Apple (1918)
Aleksandr Bezymensky, The Young Guard (1918)
Larisa Reisner, Letters from the Eastern Front (1918)
Pavel Arsky, For the Cause of the Red Soviets (1919)
Toward a World Commune (1920)
Marietta Shaginyan, Mess-Mend (1923)
Kornei Chukovsky, Buzzer-Fly (1924)
Mikhail Zoshchenko, The Lady Aristocrat (1923)
Dmitry Furmanov, Chapaev (1923)
Valentin Kruchinin and Pavel German, The Brick Factory (1920s)*
Bublichki (1920s)*
Songs of the Underworld (1920s)
Vitaly Zhemchuzhny, Evening of Books (1924)
Blue Blouse Skit (1924)
Vladimir Mayakovsky, Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (1924)
Innokenty Zhukov, Voyage of the ÒRed StarÓ Pioneer Troop to Wonderland (1924)
A.I. Ulyanova, V.I. Ulyanov (N. Lenin) (1925)
Heard in Moscow (1925)
K. Podrevsky and B. Fomin, The Long Road (1926)*
Anecdotes
II. The Stalinist Thirties
The Cultural Revolution, 1928-1932
Leninist Fairy Tales
Ivan Zhiga, The Thoughts, Cares, and Deeds of the Workers (1928)
MakhnoÕs Bank (ÒGulyai-PoleÓ) (1930)
Shock Brigade of Composers and Poets, Swell the Harvest (1930)
Fyodor Panfyorov, Rammed It Through (1930)
Vladimir Kirshon, Bread (1930)
Mikhail Doroshin, Pavlik Morozov (1933)
Shock Workers, The First Cruise (1931)
Nikolai Ostrovsky, How the Steel was Tempered (1932-1934)
M. Ilin, The Story of the Great Plan (1930)
Aleksei Garri, A Storm off Hope (1928)
The Stalin White Sea-Baltic Canal (1934)
Samuil Marshak, Mister Twister (1933)
Anecdotes
High Stalinism, 1932-1936
Gr. Bortnik, Granddaddy Sebastian Went Godless (1934)
Sergei Tretyakov, Nine Girls (1935)
Anton Makarenko, The Road to Life (1932-1934)
Vasily Lebedev-Kumach and Isaac Dunaevsky, March of the Happy-Go-Lucky Guys (1934)*
Vasily Lebedev-Kumach and Isaac Dunaevsky, SportsmanÕs March (1936)*
Vasily Lebedev-Kumach and Aleksandr Aleksandrov, LifeÕs Getting Better (1936)*
Aleksei Stakhanov, The Stakhanov Movement Explained (1936)
Yury Zhukov and Roza Izmailova, Chronicle of Komsomolsk-on-the-Amur (1937)
Pavel German and Yuly Khait, Ever Higher (1920)
Radio Speech of K.E. Tsiolkovsky (1935)
B. Galin, Valery Chkalov (1937)
I.T. Spirin, Dinner at the Pole (1938)
Vasily Lebedev-Kumach and Isaac Dunaevsky, Song of the Motherland (1935)*
Vadim Kozin, Autumn (1930s)*
Mikhail Koltsov, In Praise of Modesty (1936)
Sergei Mikhalkov, Uncle Steeple (1935-1939)
The Storyteller Korguev, Chapaev (1936)
Anecdotes
The Purges and Preparation for War, 1937-1940
Marfa Semyonovna Kryukova, Tale of the Pole (1937)
Konstantin Fedin, The Living Lenin (1939)
An Old Worker of the ÒBolshevikÓ Factory, I Heard Lenin (1939)
Lazar Lagin, Goose Gets a Transfer (1937)
Dzhambul Dzhabaev, Narkom Yezhov (1937)
Two Purge Poems (1937)
Arkady Gaidar, Timur and His Squad (1938)
Mikhail Isakovsky and Matvei Blanter, Katyusha (1938)*
Vasily Lebedev-0Kumach and the Pokrass Brothers, If Tomorrow Brings War (1938)*
Boris Laskin and the Pokrass Brothers, Three Tank Drivers (1937)*
Lengend of Voroshilov 91939)
History of the C.P.S.U. (Short course) (1939)
The Chuvash Peasant and the Eagle (1937)
Anatoly DÕAktil and Isaac Dunaevsky, March of the Enthusiasts (1940)*
Ancedotes
III. Russia at War
E. Dolmatovsky and M. Blanter, My Beloved (1939)
Jerzy Peterburgsky and Yakov Galitsky, The Blue Kerchief (1940)*
Konstantin Simonov, Wait for Me (1941)
Konstantin Simonov, Smolensk Roads (1941)
Aleksei Surkov, Scout Pashkov (1941)
Vasily Lebedev-Kumach and Aleksandr Aleksandrov, Holy War (1941)*
Pavel Lidov, Tanya (1942)
Aleksandr Korneichuk, The Front (1942)
Aleksandr Tvardovsky, Vasily Tyorkin (1942-1945)
N. Bogoslovsky and V. Agatov, Dark Is the Night (1943)*
Olga Berggolts, Conversation with a Neighbor (1941)
Vasily Grossman, Good Is Stronger Than Evil (1944)
Aleksandr Fadeev, Immortal (1943)
Aleksandr Dovzhenko, The Night before Battle (1944)
Ilya Ehrenburg, The Justification of Hate (1942)
Soviet State Anthem (1944)*
Anecdotes
IV. The Postwar Era
N. Pogodin, Cossacks of the Kuban (1949)
Boris Polevoi, The Story of a Real Man (1947)
Sergei Mikhalkov, ChildrenÕs Verse (1946)
Konstantin Simonov, The Russian Question (1947)
Gennady Fish, The Man Who Did the Impossible (1948)
Semyon Babaevsky, Cavalier of the ÒGold StarÓ (1948)
D. Belyaev, Stilyaga (1949)
V. Lebedev, MichurinÕs Dream (1950)
Boris Polevoi, To Stalin from the Peoples of the World (1950)
Stephan Shckipachov, Pavlik Morozov (1950)
Konstantin Paustovsky, In the Heart of Russia (1950)
ÒAviationÓ (from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia) (1950)
Ancedotes
Selected Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Introduction by James von Geldern
Note on Transliteration
I. The Revolution and New Regime, 1917-1927
Aleksei Gastev, We Grow Out of Iron (1918)
Vladimir Kirillov, The Iron Messiah (1918)
Mikhail Gerasimov, We (1919)
The War of Kings (1918)
Demyan Bedny, Send Off: A Red Army Song (1918)
Solemn Oath on Induction into the Worker-Peasant Red Army (1918)
Little Apple (1918)
Aleksandr Bezymensky, The Young Guard (1918)
Larisa Reisner, Letters from the Eastern Front (1918)
Pavel Arsky, For the Cause of the Red Soviets (1919)
Toward a World Commune (1920)
Marietta Shaginyan, Mess-Mend (1923)
Kornei Chukovsky, Buzzer-Fly (1924)
Mikhail Zoshchenko, The Lady Aristocrat (1923)
Dmitry Furmanov, Chapaev (1923)
Valentin Kruchinin and Pavel German, The Brick Factory (1920s)*
Bublichki (1920s)*
Songs of the Underworld (1920s)
Vitaly Zhemchuzhny, Evening of Books (1924)
Blue Blouse Skit (1924)
Vladimir Mayakovsky, Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (1924)
Innokenty Zhukov, Voyage of the ÒRed StarÓ Pioneer Troop to Wonderland (1924)
A.I. Ulyanova, V.I. Ulyanov (N. Lenin) (1925)
Heard in Moscow (1925)
K. Podrevsky and B. Fomin, The Long Road (1926)*
Anecdotes
II. The Stalinist Thirties
The Cultural Revolution, 1928-1932
Leninist Fairy Tales
Ivan Zhiga, The Thoughts, Cares, and Deeds of the Workers (1928)
MakhnoÕs Bank (ÒGulyai-PoleÓ) (1930)
Shock Brigade of Composers and Poets, Swell the Harvest (1930)
Fyodor Panfyorov, Rammed It Through (1930)
Vladimir Kirshon, Bread (1930)
Mikhail Doroshin, Pavlik Morozov (1933)
Shock Workers, The First Cruise (1931)
Nikolai Ostrovsky, How the Steel was Tempered (1932-1934)
M. Ilin, The Story of the Great Plan (1930)
Aleksei Garri, A Storm off Hope (1928)
The Stalin White Sea-Baltic Canal (1934)
Samuil Marshak, Mister Twister (1933)
Anecdotes
High Stalinism, 1932-1936
Gr. Bortnik, Granddaddy Sebastian Went Godless (1934)
Sergei Tretyakov, Nine Girls (1935)
Anton Makarenko, The Road to Life (1932-1934)
Vasily Lebedev-Kumach and Isaac Dunaevsky, March of the Happy-Go-Lucky Guys (1934)*
Vasily Lebedev-Kumach and Isaac Dunaevsky, SportsmanÕs March (1936)*
Vasily Lebedev-Kumach and Aleksandr Aleksandrov, LifeÕs Getting Better (1936)*
Aleksei Stakhanov, The Stakhanov Movement Explained (1936)
Yury Zhukov and Roza Izmailova, Chronicle of Komsomolsk-on-the-Amur (1937)
Pavel German and Yuly Khait, Ever Higher (1920)
Radio Speech of K.E. Tsiolkovsky (1935)
B. Galin, Valery Chkalov (1937)
I.T. Spirin, Dinner at the Pole (1938)
Vasily Lebedev-Kumach and Isaac Dunaevsky, Song of the Motherland (1935)*
Vadim Kozin, Autumn (1930s)*
Mikhail Koltsov, In Praise of Modesty (1936)
Sergei Mikhalkov, Uncle Steeple (1935-1939)
The Storyteller Korguev, Chapaev (1936)
Anecdotes
The Purges and Preparation for War, 1937-1940
Marfa Semyonovna Kryukova, Tale of the Pole (1937)
Konstantin Fedin, The Living Lenin (1939)
An Old Worker of the ÒBolshevikÓ Factory, I Heard Lenin (1939)
Lazar Lagin, Goose Gets a Transfer (1937)
Dzhambul Dzhabaev, Narkom Yezhov (1937)
Two Purge Poems (1937)
Arkady Gaidar, Timur and His Squad (1938)
Mikhail Isakovsky and Matvei Blanter, Katyusha (1938)*
Vasily Lebedev-0Kumach and the Pokrass Brothers, If Tomorrow Brings War (1938)*
Boris Laskin and the Pokrass Brothers, Three Tank Drivers (1937)*
Lengend of Voroshilov 91939)
History of the C.P.S.U. (Short course) (1939)
The Chuvash Peasant and the Eagle (1937)
Anatoly DÕAktil and Isaac Dunaevsky, March of the Enthusiasts (1940)*
Ancedotes
III. Russia at War
E. Dolmatovsky and M. Blanter, My Beloved (1939)
Jerzy Peterburgsky and Yakov Galitsky, The Blue Kerchief (1940)*
Konstantin Simonov, Wait for Me (1941)
Konstantin Simonov, Smolensk Roads (1941)
Aleksei Surkov, Scout Pashkov (1941)
Vasily Lebedev-Kumach and Aleksandr Aleksandrov, Holy War (1941)*
Pavel Lidov, Tanya (1942)
Aleksandr Korneichuk, The Front (1942)
Aleksandr Tvardovsky, Vasily Tyorkin (1942-1945)
N. Bogoslovsky and V. Agatov, Dark Is the Night (1943)*
Olga Berggolts, Conversation with a Neighbor (1941)
Vasily Grossman, Good Is Stronger Than Evil (1944)
Aleksandr Fadeev, Immortal (1943)
Aleksandr Dovzhenko, The Night before Battle (1944)
Ilya Ehrenburg, The Justification of Hate (1942)
Soviet State Anthem (1944)*
Anecdotes
IV. The Postwar Era
N. Pogodin, Cossacks of the Kuban (1949)
Boris Polevoi, The Story of a Real Man (1947)
Sergei Mikhalkov, ChildrenÕs Verse (1946)
Konstantin Simonov, The Russian Question (1947)
Gennady Fish, The Man Who Did the Impossible (1948)
Semyon Babaevsky, Cavalier of the ÒGold StarÓ (1948)
D. Belyaev, Stilyaga (1949)
V. Lebedev, MichurinÕs Dream (1950)
Boris Polevoi, To Stalin from the Peoples of the World (1950)
Stephan Shckipachov, Pavlik Morozov (1950)
Konstantin Paustovsky, In the Heart of Russia (1950)
ÒAviationÓ (from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia) (1950)
Ancedotes
Selected Bibliography
Recenzii
". . . a substantial and enlightening compendium of Russian culture from the Soviet era." - Canadian Slavonic Papers ". . . an unique collection of translations that should be on the bookshelf of everyone interested in the Soviet Union. . . . I especially recommend it for use in the classroom . . .This volume is a valuable addition to our field." - Slavic and East European Journal
"This imaginative anthology will give the study of Soviet culture a definite boost and may even raise its profile in university courses. The editors should be congratulated for having unearthed so much fascinating material." - Slavonica
"This volume samples Russian popular culture from the Revolution to the death of Stalin. Here can be found tales of loyal comrades and self-sacrificing patriots, paeans to industrialization and hard work, subversive jokes and even the occasional bit of (politically charged) humor . . . " - Washington Post Book World
". . . this very useful book makes an important contribution to a long-neglected field." - The Russian Review
"This volume is like a dream come true . . . this book is a must for scholars with an interest in Russian cultural history and a unique and stimulating teaching aid for students. The editors are to be congratulated on a fine and original achievement." - The Slavonic Review
"This massive collection of nearly 500 pages paints a fascinating picture of the propaganda, entertainment, attitudes, reactions- indeed the life blood- of the masses during the Soviet regime. . . . superb . . ." - Journal of American Culture
"... a substantial and enlightening compendium of Russian culture from the Soviet era." - Canadian Slavonic Papers "... an unique collection of translations that should be on the bookshelf of everyone interested in the Soviet Union... I especially recommend it for use in the classroom ...This volume is a valuable addition to our field." - Slavic and East European Journal "This imaginative anthology will give the study of Soviet culture a definite boost and may even raise its profile in university courses. The editors should be congratulated for having unearthed so much fascinating material." - Slavonica "This volume samples Russian popular culture from the Revolution to the death of Stalin. Here can be found tales of loyal comrades and self-sacrificing patriots, paeans to industrialization and hard work, subversive jokes and even the occasional bit of (politically charged) humor ... " - Washington Post Book World "... this very useful book makes an important contribution to a long-neglected field." - The Russian Review "This volume is like a dream come true ... this book is a must for scholars with an interest in Russian cultural history and a unique and stimulating teaching aid for students. The editors are to be congratulated on a fine and original achievement." - The Slavonic Review "This massive collection of nearly 500 pages paints a fascinating picture of the propaganda, entertainment, attitudes, reactions- indeed the life blood- of the masses during the Soviet regime... superb ..." - Journal of American Culture
"This imaginative anthology will give the study of Soviet culture a definite boost and may even raise its profile in university courses. The editors should be congratulated for having unearthed so much fascinating material." - Slavonica
"This volume samples Russian popular culture from the Revolution to the death of Stalin. Here can be found tales of loyal comrades and self-sacrificing patriots, paeans to industrialization and hard work, subversive jokes and even the occasional bit of (politically charged) humor . . . " - Washington Post Book World
". . . this very useful book makes an important contribution to a long-neglected field." - The Russian Review
"This volume is like a dream come true . . . this book is a must for scholars with an interest in Russian cultural history and a unique and stimulating teaching aid for students. The editors are to be congratulated on a fine and original achievement." - The Slavonic Review
"This massive collection of nearly 500 pages paints a fascinating picture of the propaganda, entertainment, attitudes, reactions- indeed the life blood- of the masses during the Soviet regime. . . . superb . . ." - Journal of American Culture
"... a substantial and enlightening compendium of Russian culture from the Soviet era." - Canadian Slavonic Papers "... an unique collection of translations that should be on the bookshelf of everyone interested in the Soviet Union... I especially recommend it for use in the classroom ...This volume is a valuable addition to our field." - Slavic and East European Journal "This imaginative anthology will give the study of Soviet culture a definite boost and may even raise its profile in university courses. The editors should be congratulated for having unearthed so much fascinating material." - Slavonica "This volume samples Russian popular culture from the Revolution to the death of Stalin. Here can be found tales of loyal comrades and self-sacrificing patriots, paeans to industrialization and hard work, subversive jokes and even the occasional bit of (politically charged) humor ... " - Washington Post Book World "... this very useful book makes an important contribution to a long-neglected field." - The Russian Review "This volume is like a dream come true ... this book is a must for scholars with an interest in Russian cultural history and a unique and stimulating teaching aid for students. The editors are to be congratulated on a fine and original achievement." - The Slavonic Review "This massive collection of nearly 500 pages paints a fascinating picture of the propaganda, entertainment, attitudes, reactions- indeed the life blood- of the masses during the Soviet regime... superb ..." - Journal of American Culture
Notă biografică
edited by James Von Geldern, Richard Stites
Descriere
A unique anthology of Soviet Russian popular culture under Lenin and Stalin.