Stalin’s Ghosts
Gothic Themes in Early Soviet Literature
©2013
Monographs
XI,
331 Pages
Series:
Russian Transformations: Literature, Culture and Ideas, Volume 4
Summary
Stalin’s Ghosts examines the impact of the Gothic-fantastic on Russian literature in the period 1920-1940. It shows how early Soviet-era authors, from well-known names including Fedor Gladkov, Mikhail Bulgakov, Andrei Platonov and Evgenii Zamiatin, to niche figures such as Sigizmund Krzhizhanovskii and Aleksandr Beliaev, exploited traditional archetypes of this genre: the haunted castle, the deformed body, vampires, villains, madness and unnatural death. Complementing recent studies of Soviet culture by Eric Naiman and Lilya Kaganovsky, this book argues that Gothic-fantastic tropes functioned variously as a response to the traumas produced by revolution and civil war, as a vehicle for propaganda, and as a subtle mode of unwriting the cultural monolith of Socialist Realism.
Details
- Pages
- XI, 331
- Publication Year
- 2013
- ISBN (PDF)
- 9783035304060
- ISBN (Softcover)
- 9783034307871
- DOI
- 10.3726/978-3-0353-0406-0
- Language
- English
- Publication date
- 2012 (November)
- Keywords
- war vampires madness death propaganda
- Published
- Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2012. 331 pp.
- Product Safety
- Peter Lang Group AG