The Development of Soviet Folkloristics

The Development of Soviet Folkloristics
Author: Dana Prescott Howell
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2015
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781315731384

Crucial to the world history of folkloristics is this key study, first published in 1992, of the development of folklore study in the Soviet Union. Nowhere else has political ideology been so heavily involved with folklore scholarship. Professor Howell has examined in depth the institutional development of folkloristics in the Soviet Union in the first half of the twentieth century, concentrating especially upon the transition from pre-revolutionary Russian to Soviet Marxist folkloristics. The study of folklore moved from narrator studies to the description of the relationship of lore to larger contexts of social groups and social classes. Showing an exceptional knowledge of Russian, political theory and folkloristics, Dana Howell provides a valuable window into the rise of folkloristics in a country undergoing almost unprecedented changes in social and political conditions.

The Development of Soviet Folkloristics (RLE Folklore)

The Development of Soviet Folkloristics (RLE Folklore)
Author: Dana Prescott Howell
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 406
Release: 2015-02-11
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1317551818

Crucial to the world history of folkloristics is this key study, first published in 1992, of the development of folklore study in the Soviet Union. Nowhere else has political ideology been so heavily involved with folklore scholarship. Professor Howell has examined in depth the institutional development of folkloristics in the Soviet Union in the first half of the twentieth century, concentrating especially upon the transition from pre-revolutionary Russian to Soviet Marxist folkloristics. The study of folklore moved from narrator studies to the description of the relationship of lore to larger contexts of social groups and social classes. Showing an exceptional knowledge of Russian, political theory and folkloristics, Dana Howell provides a valuable window into the rise of folkloristics in a country undergoing almost unprecedented changes in social and political conditions.

Mass Culture in Soviet Russia

Mass Culture in Soviet Russia
Author: James Von Geldern
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Total Pages: 552
Release: 1995
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780253328939

Offers an array of documents, short fiction, poems, songs, plays, movie scripts, and folklore to offer a look at the mass culture that was consumed by millions in Soviet Russia between 1917 and 1953. This work focuses on the entertainment genres that both shaped and reflected the social, political, and personal values of the regime and the masses.

Russian Folklore

Russian Folklore
Author: Юрий Матвеевич Соколов
Publisher: Gale Cengage
Total Pages: 784
Release: 1971
Genre: Social Science
ISBN:

Russian Folklore

Russian Folklore
Author: Y. M. Sokolov
Publisher: Wildside Press LLC
Total Pages: 770
Release: 2011-09
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781434432032

Professor Yuri M. Sokolov 's 1938 Russian Folklore, originally a Soviet era textbook, was translated as part of a series of significant works on Russian works on the humanities and social sciences.

Soviet Heroic Poetry in Context

Soviet Heroic Poetry in Context
Author: Margaret Ziolkowski
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 239
Release: 2013-08-15
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1611494575

Key issues surrounding the composition and recording of folklore include its frequently intensely political aspect and it preoccupation with chimerical cultural authority. These issues are dramatically displayed in Soviet epic compositions of the 1930s and 1940s, the so-called noviny (“new songs”), which took their formal inspiration to a great extent from traditional Russian epic songs, byliny (“songs of the past"), and their narrative content from contemporary political and other events in Stalinist Russia. The story of the noviny is at once complex and comprehensible. While it may be tempting to interpret the excrescences of Stalinism as unique aberrations, the reality was often more complicated. The noviny were not simply the result of political fiat, an episode in an ideological vacuum. Their emergence occurred in part because of specific trends and controversies that marked European folklore collection and publication from at least the late eighteenth century on, as well as because of developments in Russian folkloristics from the mid-nineteenth century on that assumed perhaps exaggerated proportions. The demise of the noviny was equally mediated by a host of political and theoretical considerations. This study tells the story of the rise and fall of the noviny in all its cultural richness and pathos, an instructive tale of the interaction of aesthetics and ideology.