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13 When Comintern and Cominform Aesthetics Meet: Socialist Realism in Eastern Europe, 1956 and Beyond
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Evgeny Dobrenko
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Illustrations ix
- Chronology: Comintern Aesthetics – Between Politics and Culture xiii
- Editors’ Note xxiii
- Introduction: Comintern Aesthetics – Space, Form, History 1
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Part One. Space: Geopoetics, Networks, Translation
- 1 World Literature as World Revolution: Velimir Khlebnikov’s Zangezi and the Utopian Geopoetics of the Russian Avant-Garde 31
- 2 Berlin–Moscow–Shanghai: Translating Revolution across Cultures in the Aftermath of the 1927 Shanghai Debacle 81
- 3 India–England–Russia: The Comintern Translated 109
- 4 Seeing the World Anew: Soviet Cinema and the Reorganization of 1930s Spanish Film Culture 133
- 5 The Panorama and the Pilgrimage: Brazilian Modernism, the Masses, and the Soviet Union in the 1930s 170
- 6 Polycentric Cosmopolitans: Writing World Literature in Indonesia and Vietnam, 1920s to 1950s and Beyond 199
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Part Two. Form: Beyond Realism-versus-Modernism and Art-versus-Propaganda
- 7 Culture One and a Half 227
- 8 Street Theatre and Subject Formation in Wartime China: Origins of a New Public Art 255
- 9 In the Shadow of the Inquisition: The Spanish Civil War in Yiddish Poetry 281
- 10 “Beaten, but Unbeatable”: On Langston Hughes’s Black Leninism 313
- 11 A Comintern Aesthetics of Anti-racism in the Animated Short Film Blek end uait 352
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Part Three. History: Beyond the Interwar Years – Afterlives of Comintern Aesthetics
- 12 The Revolutionary Romanticism of Alice Childress’s “Conversations from Life” 391
- 13 When Comintern and Cominform Aesthetics Meet: Socialist Realism in Eastern Europe, 1956 and Beyond 420
- 14 Visions of the Future: Soviet Art, Architecture, and Film during and after the Comintern Years 449
- 15 Comintern Media Experiments, Leftist Exile, and World Literature from East Berlin 474
- 16 Workers of the World, Unite! 505
- Coda 529
- Contributors 537
- Index 541
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Illustrations ix
- Chronology: Comintern Aesthetics – Between Politics and Culture xiii
- Editors’ Note xxiii
- Introduction: Comintern Aesthetics – Space, Form, History 1
-
Part One. Space: Geopoetics, Networks, Translation
- 1 World Literature as World Revolution: Velimir Khlebnikov’s Zangezi and the Utopian Geopoetics of the Russian Avant-Garde 31
- 2 Berlin–Moscow–Shanghai: Translating Revolution across Cultures in the Aftermath of the 1927 Shanghai Debacle 81
- 3 India–England–Russia: The Comintern Translated 109
- 4 Seeing the World Anew: Soviet Cinema and the Reorganization of 1930s Spanish Film Culture 133
- 5 The Panorama and the Pilgrimage: Brazilian Modernism, the Masses, and the Soviet Union in the 1930s 170
- 6 Polycentric Cosmopolitans: Writing World Literature in Indonesia and Vietnam, 1920s to 1950s and Beyond 199
-
Part Two. Form: Beyond Realism-versus-Modernism and Art-versus-Propaganda
- 7 Culture One and a Half 227
- 8 Street Theatre and Subject Formation in Wartime China: Origins of a New Public Art 255
- 9 In the Shadow of the Inquisition: The Spanish Civil War in Yiddish Poetry 281
- 10 “Beaten, but Unbeatable”: On Langston Hughes’s Black Leninism 313
- 11 A Comintern Aesthetics of Anti-racism in the Animated Short Film Blek end uait 352
-
Part Three. History: Beyond the Interwar Years – Afterlives of Comintern Aesthetics
- 12 The Revolutionary Romanticism of Alice Childress’s “Conversations from Life” 391
- 13 When Comintern and Cominform Aesthetics Meet: Socialist Realism in Eastern Europe, 1956 and Beyond 420
- 14 Visions of the Future: Soviet Art, Architecture, and Film during and after the Comintern Years 449
- 15 Comintern Media Experiments, Leftist Exile, and World Literature from East Berlin 474
- 16 Workers of the World, Unite! 505
- Coda 529
- Contributors 537
- Index 541