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The Utopian Tradition of Russian Science Fiction
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Table of Contents v
- Introduction: A Possible Strangeness: Reading Russian Science Fiction on the Page and the Screen viii
-
Part One. From Utopian Traditions to Revolutionary Dreams
- The Utopian Tradition of Russian Science Fiction 1
- Red Star: Another Look at Aleksandr Bogdanov 30
- Generating Power 51
- Imagining the Cosmos: Utopians, Mystics, and the Popular Culture of Spaceflight in Revolutionary Russia 79
-
Part Two. Russia’s Roaring Twenties
- Soviet Science Fiction of the 1920s: Explaining a Literary Genre in its Political and Social Context 117
- The Plural Self: Zamiatin’s We and the Logic of Synecdoche 147
- Science Fiction of the Domestic: Iakov Protazanov’s Aelita 166
- Eugenics, Rejuvenation, and Bulgakov’s Journey into the Heart of Dogness 178
-
Part Three. From Stalin to Sputnik and Beyond
- Stalinism and the Genesis of Cosmonautics 201
- Klushantsev: Russia’s Wizard of Fantastika 214
- Towards the Last Fairy Tale: The Fairy-Tale Paradigm in the Strugatskys’ Science Fiction, 1963–72 231
- Tarkovsky, Solaris, and Stalker 281
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Part Four. Futures at the End of Utopia
- Viktor Pelevin and Literary Postmodernism in Soviet Russia 290
- The Forces of Kinship: Timur Bekmambetov’s Night Watch Cinematic Trilogy 306
- The Antiuopia Factory: The Dystopian Discourse in Russian Literature in the Mid-2000s 328
- Index 371
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Table of Contents v
- Introduction: A Possible Strangeness: Reading Russian Science Fiction on the Page and the Screen viii
-
Part One. From Utopian Traditions to Revolutionary Dreams
- The Utopian Tradition of Russian Science Fiction 1
- Red Star: Another Look at Aleksandr Bogdanov 30
- Generating Power 51
- Imagining the Cosmos: Utopians, Mystics, and the Popular Culture of Spaceflight in Revolutionary Russia 79
-
Part Two. Russia’s Roaring Twenties
- Soviet Science Fiction of the 1920s: Explaining a Literary Genre in its Political and Social Context 117
- The Plural Self: Zamiatin’s We and the Logic of Synecdoche 147
- Science Fiction of the Domestic: Iakov Protazanov’s Aelita 166
- Eugenics, Rejuvenation, and Bulgakov’s Journey into the Heart of Dogness 178
-
Part Three. From Stalin to Sputnik and Beyond
- Stalinism and the Genesis of Cosmonautics 201
- Klushantsev: Russia’s Wizard of Fantastika 214
- Towards the Last Fairy Tale: The Fairy-Tale Paradigm in the Strugatskys’ Science Fiction, 1963–72 231
- Tarkovsky, Solaris, and Stalker 281
-
Part Four. Futures at the End of Utopia
- Viktor Pelevin and Literary Postmodernism in Soviet Russia 290
- The Forces of Kinship: Timur Bekmambetov’s Night Watch Cinematic Trilogy 306
- The Antiuopia Factory: The Dystopian Discourse in Russian Literature in the Mid-2000s 328
- Index 371