Revolutionary Aftereffects

Material, Social, and Cultural Legacies of 1917 in Russia Today

Edited by Megan Swift
Categories: History, World History, Literature & Language Studies, World Literature, Literary Criticism
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Hardcover : 9781487529567, 260 pages, June 2022
Ebook (PDF) : 9781487529574, 260 pages, May 2022
Ebook (EPUB) : 9781487529581, 260 pages, May 2022

Table of contents

Introduction: Reverberations from the Past
Megan Swift

Part I: Material and Mnemonic Aftereffects

1. The Silent Jubilee, the Blank Space: Spatial and Commemorative Practice around the 1917 Centenary
Megan Swift

2. Gentrification, Post-Tourism, and Trauma: Uses of the 1917 Revolution’s Memory Places in 2017 Russia
Maria Silina

3. Revolutionary Architecture in Putin’s Russia: The Avant-Garde as a Disputed Heritage
Julie Deschepper

Part II: Social and Environmental Aftereffects

4. The Stalled Soviet Gender Revolution: Normalized Crisis in Russia
Jennifer Utrata

5. “Etnos-thinking” in 1917 and Today
David G. Anderson

6. Building the National Park System after 1917: Environmental and Political Empowerment in Territorial Constructs
Michael W. Tripp

Part III: Artistic and Conceptual Aftereffects

7. The Hero and the Revolution in the Works of Boris Akunin and Akunin-Chkhartishvili
Elena Baraban

8. Screening the Revolution: Transformations of the Revolutionary Narrative in Russian Film since the 1960s
Mark Lipovetsky

Description

Thirty years after the fall of the Soviet Union, the 1917 Revolution still looms large: not only because Russians remain divided over whether the revolution arrived forcibly or inevitably and whether it was a colossally tragic or colossally generative event, but also because its social, cultural, scientific, and even moral residues remain everywhere in Putin’s Russia.

Revolutionary Aftereffects looks at the ways in which 1917 has been and continues to be commemorated in Russia. Although post-Soviet Russia has emphasized its complete break with the past, this study of the memorialization and legacy of 1917 explores a fundamental continuity underlying an apparent discourse of discontinuity in post-socialist Russia. Contributors provide insight into the continuing reverberations of the revolution from a variety of disciplinary perspectives, including history and literary studies as well as heritage studies, anthropology, geography, and sociology. Collectively, these essays demonstrate the changing nature of the revolution’s memorialization in the Soviet Union and post-Soviet Russia and the ambivalence and contradictions within those narratives.

Reviews

"The disciplinary breadth of Revolutionary Aftereffects provides a compelling set of entryways into the interesting question of what might constitute a useable Bolshevik and Soviet past that could renovate national memory in contemporary Russia."

- David Fisher, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley

“Essential reading for academics interested in Russia’s past and present.”

- Elizabeth White, University of West England