Russian Utopia: A Century of Revolutionary Possibilities: Russian Shorts
Autor Professor Mark D. Steinbergen Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 oct 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350127210
ISBN-10: 1350127213
Pagini: 152
Ilustrații: 9 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.15 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Russian Shorts
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350127213
Pagini: 152
Ilustrații: 9 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.15 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Russian Shorts
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Brings together key events, biographies, art, ideology, and politics; elites and commoners; the halls of power and the streets of resistance
Notă biografică
Mark D. Steinberg is Professor of History, Director of Graduate Studies and Associate Chair at the University of Illinois, USA. He is the author of several books, including A History of Russia (9th Ed., 2018; co-authored with Nicholas V. Riasanovsky), The Russian Revolution, 1905-1921 (2017) and Petersburg Fin de Siècle (2011). His books have been translated into Portuguese, Japanese and Russian. He is also the co-editor of volumes such as Interpreting Emotions in Russia and Eastern Europe (2011; with Valeria Sobol) and Religion, Morality, and Community in Post-Soviet Societies (2008; with Catherine Wanner).
Cuprins
List of Figures AcknowledgementsIntroduction1. Wings of Utopia 2. The New Person3. The New City4. The New StateSelected Further ReadingIndex
Recenzii
[I]ntellectually engaging ... and a stimulating read.
Steinberg's rich and masterful new book revivifies the utopian mindset. It gives voice to the utopians and utopian impulses that helped shape Russian history. Steinberg refuses to dismiss the ideas and actions of utopians as naive or insincere. 'Utopia' is not presented as a dirty word. It is not understood as a fantastical 'no-place,' but as an inspirational 'not-yet.' Treating utopia as a critical method-as a means questioning and seeking to transform the present state of affairs-Steinberg offers a new lens through which to assess the making of modern Russia. The lure of the future and alternative possibilities held particular sway in the seemingly unchanging and unchangeable world of late autocratic Russia. Utopian visions pertaining to flight, the new person, the urban world, and new types of state provide the thematic nodes around which Steinberg structures this wonderfully original study. He presents these nodes as the jumping points from which his subjects made a leap into the great unknown-into an alternative, daring, and audacious future. Steinberg takes us on a delightful and rewarding journey through Russian utopia. The reader is reminded that the present should not be mistaken for the future. Possibilities continue to abound.
Mark Steinberg masterfully unearths the utopian impulse in Russian history, showing how the dream of grasping that which lies just beyond reach motivated tsars as well as commissars, ordinary people alongside famed revolutionaries. In the process, he offers an inspiring rehabilitation of the utopian impulse. Utopia, for Steinberg, is not a quixotic goal, but a critical practice that rejects complacency and defeatism, demanding the promise of a better future in the present. This intelligent and often beautiful book offers a stirring message for our troubled times.
Mark Steinberg breathes new life into utopianism --often dismissed as naïve or dangerous-- by showing it to be a more grounded belief in possibilities for improving the world in the face of circumstances ranging from difficult to disastrous. This engaging and illuminating study locates utopian thinking across the political spectrum in modern Russia, in the everyday experiences of ordinary, unsung people as well as in works by more famous visionaries. Rather than fixate on the ultimate failures of some of these ideas, Steinberg shows us the ways that utopianism opened up new avenues for social and political practices of all kinds.
Steinberg's rich and masterful new book revivifies the utopian mindset. It gives voice to the utopians and utopian impulses that helped shape Russian history. Steinberg refuses to dismiss the ideas and actions of utopians as naive or insincere. 'Utopia' is not presented as a dirty word. It is not understood as a fantastical 'no-place,' but as an inspirational 'not-yet.' Treating utopia as a critical method-as a means questioning and seeking to transform the present state of affairs-Steinberg offers a new lens through which to assess the making of modern Russia. The lure of the future and alternative possibilities held particular sway in the seemingly unchanging and unchangeable world of late autocratic Russia. Utopian visions pertaining to flight, the new person, the urban world, and new types of state provide the thematic nodes around which Steinberg structures this wonderfully original study. He presents these nodes as the jumping points from which his subjects made a leap into the great unknown-into an alternative, daring, and audacious future. Steinberg takes us on a delightful and rewarding journey through Russian utopia. The reader is reminded that the present should not be mistaken for the future. Possibilities continue to abound.
Mark Steinberg masterfully unearths the utopian impulse in Russian history, showing how the dream of grasping that which lies just beyond reach motivated tsars as well as commissars, ordinary people alongside famed revolutionaries. In the process, he offers an inspiring rehabilitation of the utopian impulse. Utopia, for Steinberg, is not a quixotic goal, but a critical practice that rejects complacency and defeatism, demanding the promise of a better future in the present. This intelligent and often beautiful book offers a stirring message for our troubled times.
Mark Steinberg breathes new life into utopianism --often dismissed as naïve or dangerous-- by showing it to be a more grounded belief in possibilities for improving the world in the face of circumstances ranging from difficult to disastrous. This engaging and illuminating study locates utopian thinking across the political spectrum in modern Russia, in the everyday experiences of ordinary, unsung people as well as in works by more famous visionaries. Rather than fixate on the ultimate failures of some of these ideas, Steinberg shows us the ways that utopianism opened up new avenues for social and political practices of all kinds.